Skip to main content

Road deaths: 'something must change' - GHSA

The ‘grim and tragic milestone' of a total four million deaths in the US requires renewed road safety action, says the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA).
By Adam Hill March 4, 2024 Read time: 3 mins
More law enforcement and better road design are key areas in which improvements can be made, according to Jonathan Adkins, chief executive of the GHSA (image © Waraphot Wapakphet/Dreamstime)

This year, the US will reach a total four million deaths on the road since 1899, according to the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA).

To mark this 'grim and tragic milestone', the organisation's chief executive, Jonathan Adkins, is calling for a renewed sense of urgency to tackle this "safety crisis". He says more enforcement and better road design are key areas in which improvements can be made.

"This year, the US will mark a grim and tragic milestone: four million roadway deaths since 1899,” said the GHSA in a written statement. “Every single one of these people left behind countless family members, friends, colleagues and neighbours. It’s impossible to fully comprehend the grief and tragedy caused by a single death, let alone four million. Something must change."

The US Department of Transportation’s National Roadway Safety Strategy provides a roadmap for preventing crashes, injuries and deaths by using a holistic approach of interconnected countermeasures. While roadway fatalities have declined slightly in the past year, this modest progress pales in comparison to the large increases we saw at the start of and during the height of the pandemic, noted the GHSA. “The road to zero traffic deaths is long, but we know how to get there – doubling down on the strategies that improve safety.”

The GHSA wants to see a more equitable enforcement focused on dangerous driving behaviours, infrastructure that slows down speeding drivers and protects people outside of vehicles, community outreach and engagement programmes, improved vehicle technology and better post-crash care.

"We also must renew our sense of urgency in addressing this safety crisis,” said the association. “The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has been without a confirmed leader for much of the past seven years. Since January 2017 – a span of more than 2,500 days – the agency has had a Senate-confirmed Administrator for a total of only 96 days. GHSA continues to call for the swift confirmation of a proven safety leader to help guide the agency during this critical time for roadway safety."

The GHSA said it continues to prioritise equity in traffic safety and the need to address the risky driving behaviours that kill people on our roads every day.

Over the past year, the association has updated its Policies and Priorities to reflect GHSA’s support for lower state Blood Alcohol Content limits for impaired drivers, commitment to advancing equity in every aspect of traffic safety and dedication to the Safe System approach. Last year, GHSA formed an Equity and Engagement Committee to address key barriers to greater equity, promote outreach and engagement in underserved communities, and guide efforts to prioritize equity in all association initiatives.

Meanwhile, the GHSA has raised public awareness of the pedestrian safety crisis and how to make roads safer for people on foot. Drivers struck and killed more than 7,500 people walking in 2022 – the most since 1981 and an average of 20 deaths every day – according to GHSA’s data analysis. GHSA will release a preliminary look at pedestrian fatality data for the first half of 2023 later this month.

The GHSA has also offered competitive grants to State Highway Safety Offices to support access to safe, equitable mobility and youth active transportation safety projects in underserved areas, prevent alcohol and drug-impaired driving during the holidays (when ‘driving under the influence’ rates rise) and throughout the year and combat the widespread but preventable problem of distracted driving.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Course for First Responders on How to Provide Trauma Care
    September 15, 2015
    During his recent radio programme “Mann Ki Baat,” Narendra Modi, The Prime Minister of India, expressed concern regarding the road safety situation on Indian roads and the number of lives being lost as a result of traffic accidents. Modi said, “The statistics on road accidents in our country are shocking. There is an accident every minute. And due to road accidents there is a death every four minutes." He further noted that lives can be saved by taking the injured to hospital within the first hour, also kno
  • IRF World Congress: Safety through sustainability
    October 17, 2024
    Be sustainable, but above all be safe, was the theme of the first day of the three-day IRF World Congress in Istanbul, Turkiye. David Arminas reports.
  • Eyes on the road – the distraction problem
    June 23, 2016
    The news that Europe’s road safety drive stalled in 2015 is a cause for concern. The actual causes of this stutter in the road with regard to boosting safety have yet to be identified. But it is highly likely that driver distraction plays a role, at least in part. There is plenty of research showing just how much of a risk the use of cellphones pose for drivers. And yet far too many drivers are blasé about the risks these pose for driver distraction. The sight of someone using a cellphone at the wheel i
  • UN campaign starts on World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
    November 20, 2023
    #moments2live4 supports those involved in road safety and runs until 12 December.