Group urges road enhancements to prevent traffic deaths
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[May 08, 2023]
By Zeta Cross | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – When it comes to car crashes and traffic deaths,
some say smart road design can save lives.
Dave Simmons, executive director of bike rider advocacy group Ride
Illinois, said 1,280 people died in traffic crashes in Illinois in 2022.
Across the United States in 2022, 42,795 people died in motor vehicle
crashes.
“A stunning number of deaths,” Simmons said. “Our friends at Families
for Safe Streets say that that is equivalent to the crash of a
medium-sized passenger jet every single day.”
The good news is that 54 fewer people died in Illinois traffic crashes
in 2022 than were killed in 2021. The news that fatalities declined last
year is welcome, Simmons said, but with so many fatalities overall,
there is no cause for celebration.
“If we pause and look at the big picture, it is still way too many
people,” he said.
For many years now, roads in the United States have been designed based
on traffic flow and the efficiency of motor vehicles, Simmons said.
“That’s led to where we are at,” he said.
Other countries that have taken a slightly different approach to
infrastructure don’t have the sky-high traffic fatality numbers that we
have, he said.
“It is a uniquely American thing. We have a lot of people dying and
being injured on our roads,” he said.
Ride Illinois believes that better road design prevents traffic deaths
by encouraging drivers to pay more attention. If a speed limit sign says
35 mph but the road is designed as a straightaway where vehicles can go
45 or 50 mph, most people will wind up going faster, even if they don’t
realize it, Simmons said.
“People are going to go too fast. People are going to text. Pedestrians
are going to cross the streets outside of crosswalks. We are all human
beings,” he said.
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A crashed semi-truck in central Illinois
Illinois State Police
Simmons asked “how do we prevent crashes even though people are people?”
One answer is designing roads that make it easier for American drivers
to pay better attention, he said. Bump-outs at intersections slightly
extend the curb into the road, making pedestrians waiting to cross the
street easier for drivers to notice.
Side paths are bidirectional shared-use paths that give pedestrians and
bike riders a safe pathway next to busy traffic lanes.
A road verge is a strip of grass or plants, and sometimes also trees,
located between a roadway and a sidewalk. A road verge can define a bike
path and give pedestrians on the sidewalk a barrier between them and
traffic.
“Adding greenscapes, whether it is trees or a bump-out or narrower
lanes, can serve to calm traffic,” Simmons said. “Maybe the road does
not have to be straight as an arrow? Design it with a few little winding
turns.”
Better designed roads make downtowns more attractive and pedestrian
friendly, he said.
Give people a high-quality walking experience with sidewalks and side
paths and greenscapes and they are much more likely to walk rather than
take the car. Simmons said walking on the edge of traffic is less
enjoyable.
More than $800 million in federal taxpayer funds is available to help
communities with projects in high-crash areas. Ride Illinois encourages
communities to apply for funding and follow the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s Complete Streets guidelines to make roads safer for all
users. |