Skip to main content

New York’s safety drive is saving lives on the road

New York City is now working towards cutting out traffic deaths, as part of a Vision Zero programme. The strategy is already seeing major benefits with traffic fatalities having been reduced by 23% since 2013. An official report reveals that the city’s road safety programme is having a positive effect, due in part to the use of data to identify prime factors in road deaths from crashes.
March 10, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
New York City is now working towards cutting out traffic deaths, as part of a Vision Zero programme. The strategy is already seeing major benefits with traffic fatalities having been reduced by 23% since 2013. An official report reveals that the city’s road safety programme is having a positive effect, due in part to the use of data to identify prime factors in road deaths from crashes.

In 2015, New York City Department of Transportation (DOT) and New York Police Department (NYPD) began working together to develop a strategy to address pedestrian issues. This concentrated on factors such as street redesign, enforcement, education and engagement resources and focussed on intersections and stretches of road with the highest crash rates for each borough. The policy is now proving its worth and safety improvements at these locations are now outpacing the overall reduction in traffic deaths across the city.

In the five years prior to Vision Zero there were 141 deaths annually at the priority locations. This has now been lowered to 100 fatalities, a reduction of 29% decline. Meanwhile pedestrian fatalities have also been lowered from around 99/year in the period from 2009-2013, to 72 in 2016, a drop of 27%.

The DOT and NYPD also carried out an analysis of crash trends in 2016 and revealed that the earlier onset of darkness in the fall and winter is correlated with a 40% jump in fatal and severe injury crashes involving pedestrians in the early evening hours.

To tackle this problem the Vision Zero Task Force developed a multi-agency enforcement and education strategy that increased evening and nighttime enforcement by NYPD officers and Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) inspectors. Following this effort traffic fatalities dropped 30%.

Protection for other vulnerable road users has also been implemented and the DOT has carried out 242 projects aimed at boosting safety. These include simplifying complex intersections, narrowing lanes, adding 30km of bicycle paths, making pedestrians and cyclists more visible, and shortening pedestrian crossing distances.

Related Content

  • Road safety of concern in Sweden and Israel
    January 8, 2015
    Worrying data on road safety has been released from Sweden and Israel. Sweden’s record on road safety is one of the best in the world, with a combination of tough enforcement and stiff penalties along with effective driver education and training having helped lower the country’s fatality rate. However the latest official figures from the Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket) show that 275 people were killed on Swedish roads in 2014, compared with 260 people in 2013. This may yet prove to be a stat
  • Concern over decline in Europe’s road safety
    March 31, 2016
    An increase in road fatalities and serious injuries has been recorded for 2015. This has become clear following the publication of the European Commission’s 2015 provisional road safety figures. The data reveals an increase in fatalities compared to the previous year. And even in 2014, there was only a 0.6% reduction, and it had been the first year for some time without a significant drop in deaths and injuries. This stagnation means that the EU is further away from its goal of halving road deaths by 2020.
  • Europe’s road safety is not improving as previously
    April 3, 2012
    The latest official figures on road safety in Europe are giving cause for concern, with data showing casualty reduction has slowed. EU Transport Commissioner Siim Kallas recently announced a disappointing progress on casualty reduction on Europe's roads. The joint European police association, TISPOL, has added that it is also concerned that improvements in cutting fatalities on Europe’s roads significantly slowed in 2011.
  • Europe’s road safety challenge for the future
    March 2, 2022
    Europe’s road safety challenge is to reduce casualties for the future.