Skip to main content

US road safety challenge to tackle fatalities

Rising traffic fatalities and the challenges of driverless cars were the focus of recent hearing of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit in the US. Nearly 35,100 people were killed on US roadways in 2015, a 7.2% spike in traffic fatalities from the previous year. This was rather worryingly, largest single year percent increase in 50 years, according to testimony at the hearing. Officials said preliminary numbers appear to show that roadway fatalities increased further in 2016. “In addition to the
July 26, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Rising traffic fatalities and the challenges of driverless cars were the focus of recent hearing of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit in the US.


Nearly 35,100 people were killed on US roadways in 2015, a 7.2% spike in traffic fatalities from the previous year. This was rather worryingly, largest single year percent increase in 50 years, according to testimony at the hearing. Officials said preliminary numbers appear to show that roadway fatalities increased further in 2016.

“In addition to the tragic impact on human life, the economic and societal consequences of motor vehicle crashes reach over US$800 billion annually, further demonstrating the importance of investing in highway safety and achieving a better safety record on US highways,” the heads of the US 2410 Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), 4170 Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), 2467 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), and 4180 National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), said in joint statement to the subcommittee.

Automated driving systems are capable of addressing the critical cause of over 90% of serious crashes: human choices and errors, the agency chiefs said.

The Highway Safety Improvement Program (HISP) is the “cornerstone” of FHWA’s efforts to eliminate fatalities and injuries. Components of include the State Strategic Highway Safety Plans and the Model Inventory of Roadway Elements. Other federal government infrastructure safety efforts, include: Railway-Highway Crossings Programme; Local and Rural Road Safety Programme; Safety Performance Management Standards; Every Day Counts Initiatives; Highway, Bridge and Tunnel Inspection Programmes.

ARTBA has partnered with FHWA to advance transportation technology and innovation, including the matter of “proprietary products.” The association believes that many agency regulations initially intended to ensure competition have evolved to become an impediment to innovations that could lead to longer lasting, less costly infrastructure and safety improvements.

Related Content

  • Safer Roads by Design comes to Costa Rica
    November 14, 2012
    IRF’s itinerant cycle of training seminars aimed at helping countries eliminate needless deaths and meet their commitments to the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety made a notable stop in San Jose, Costa Rica on September 12-14. Safer Roads by Design - Costa Rica was hosted by the National Laboratory of Materials and Structural Models of the University of Costa Rica (Lanamme UCR), the country’s leading knowledge centre on road engineering, with additional support from the Inter-American Development Bank an
  • US traffic fatalities level off to remain flat
    October 11, 2023
    Despite rises over the past five years, fatalities recorded no increase from 2021 to 2022, according to QuoteWizard.com, an on-line insurance comparison platform.
  • The global road safety crisis needs to be addressed
    October 12, 2017
    The global road casualty rate continues to climb as motorisation levels grow and is particularly acute in the developing world. Developing countries suffer from a particularly high rate of crashes and around 90% of road fatalities. The impact, both in economic and human terms, is unsustainable. These countries cannot afford the loss to their economies of the young and economically active.
  • The global road safety crisis needs to be addressed
    October 12, 2017
    The global road casualty rate continues to climb as motorisation levels grow and is particularly acute in the developing world. Developing countries suffer from a particularly high rate of crashes and around 90% of road fatalities. The impact, both in economic and human terms, is unsustainable. These countries cannot afford the loss to their economies of the young and economically active.