Skip to main content

High Standards for Safety Professionals set by IRF Washington

IRF Sets International Benchmark for Road Safety Auditors The International Road Federation released a set of minimum qualification guidelines for professionals conducting road safety audits and inspections as part of a global road safety gathering in Brasilia.Speaking at the 2nd Global High Level Conference on Road Safety, IRF Executive Vice President Mike Dreznes noted that design standards alone cannot guarantee road safety in all conditions. “The IRF strongly supports the extended and expanded use of ro
December 23, 2015 Read time: 2 mins

IRF Sets International Benchmark for Road Safety Auditors

The International Road Federation (3918 IRF Washington) released a set of minimum qualification guidelines for professionals conducting road safety audits and inspections as part of a global road safety gathering in Brasilia.

Speaking at the 2nd Global High Level Conference on Road Safety, IRF Executive Vice President Mike Dreznes noted that design standards alone cannot guarantee road safety in all conditions. “The IRF strongly supports the extended and expanded use of road infrastructure safety management procedures using locally drawn talent trained to the highest standards,” Mr. Dreznes added.

Poorly performed or badly documented road safety audits can have negative effects on safety. Unqualified team leaders could miss obvious safety concerns resulting in an unsafe road. Worse yet, the road authority would be using its limited financial resources to conduct these audits with less than acceptable results.

“The ultimate goal is to use locally-drawn expertise to conduct these audits and/or inspections wherever possible. This in turn requires road authorities to have a clear definition detailing who can conduct audits and inspections,” Dreznes said.

The requirements provide a benchmark for countries wishing to establish national accreditation systems. They cover key criteria such as professional experience, as well as safety audit training & field experience verified by a third party organisation. In countries where no national certifying body currently exists, the IRF will provide a list of reputed road safety audit training centres that could be used to certify auditors until the national certifying body is established.

On this occasion, the IRF also renewed an earlier call for the mandatory introduction of, and associated funding for, road safety audits linked to all new road investment loans by multilateral development banks.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Addressing a silent disaster
    September 24, 2012
    As India's economy registers 9% annual growth, promising material super-power status by mid-century, the nation is barely beginning to address a silent disaster, that of road casualties It was Dr. P K Sikdar [a director of International Consultants and Technocrats/ICT and a former director of the Central Road Research Institute/CRRI] who coined the phrase "silent disaster."
  • New head of IRF road safety programme
    April 11, 2012
    IRF is pleased to announce the addition of Michael G Dreznes to the IRF Washington staff. Dreznes will serve as executive vice president with global leadership on training, policy and capacity-building activities across IRF's road safety programmes. "Mike has spent the last 26 years working to make roads safer around the world," said Patrick Sankey, president & CEO, IRF Washington. "He is recognised as one of the world's leading experts on roadside safety, pioneering the concept of Forgiving Highways, and w
  • The IRF India Regional Conference is seeing its 9th edition this year
    July 7, 2015
    The IRF Geneva said that India has the dubious distinction of claiming the highest number of fatalities by road crashes. More than 10% of road-related deaths occur in India alone, and this poses a serious challenge, being the major killer of young and productive lives. While India’s infrastructure programme is being lauded all over the world and high rate of growth has been achieved for the 1.25 billion strong democracy, a significant 3% of the GDP is lost every year due to the uncontrolled and unmanaged
  • IRF appoints new global road safety champion
    March 2, 2012
    The International Road Federation has a new spearhead for its global road safety programme. Michael Dreznes will serve as the Federation's (IRF) executive vice president with worldwide leadership on training, policy and capacity-building activities.