I-95 Corridor-wide safety data analysis and identification of existing successful safety programs. Traffic Injury Research Foundation April 22, 2010

Similar documents
I-95 high-risk driver analysis using multiple imputation methods

COUNTERMEASURES THAT WORK:

IIHS activities on alcohol-impaired driving

Effects of all-offender alcohol ignition interlock laws on recidivism and alcohol-related crashes

Target Zero: Underutilized Strategies in Traffic Safety That Work

Effects of all-offender alcohol ignition interlock laws on recidivism and alcohol-related crashes

Traffic Safety Facts 2002

Highway Safety Countermeasures

Traffic Safety Facts 1995

A) New zero tolerance drug presence laws for young and novice drivers. Create a new regulation to define and permit the use of federally

SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL PATTERNS OF FATIGUE RELATED CRASHES IN HAWAII

Strategies That Work to Reduce Alcohol-Impaired Driving

Reducing Alcohol-impaired Driving: Can We Regain the Momentum?

JOB LOSSES BY STATE, State Industry US total AK AL AR AZ CA CO CT Agriculture, forestry, fisheries -15, ,

Alberta Speeding Convictions and Collisions Involving Unsafe Speed

Alcohol-Impaired Driving Facts

Reducing deaths, injuries, and loss from motor vehicle crashes

NHTSA / ANSTSE. Traffic Safety for Teen Drivers Presenter:

Stronger road safety. in South Australia. Presented by Tamra Fedojuk Senior Statistician Road Safety Policy

Richard Carrier Trucking, Inc. P.O. Box 718, Skowhegan, ME

APPA Presentation Feb. 28, 2012 San Diego, CA. Intensive DWI Supervision Program

Speeding and Speed Enforcement: Turning Knowledge Into Action

ITSMR Research Note. Motorcyclists and Impaired Driving ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION KEY FINDINGS. September 2013

Course Syllabus. Time Requirements. Course Timeline. Grading Policy. Contact Information Online classroom Instructor: Kyle Boots

Florida Strategic Highway Safety Planning Florida Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP) Update and Performance Overview

North Carolina. Joel Sheltrown VP of Governmental Affairs Elio Motors, Inc

NEW JERSEY LAW ENFORCEMENT LIAISON NEWSLETTER

Motorcycle Safety Program Assessments

TEST SUMMARY AND FRAMEWORK TEST SUMMARY

Chapter 6 Drinking & Drugs

City State Zip. Mistake 1 Mistake 2 Mistake 3 Mistake 4 Mistake 5. Mistake 6 Mistake 7 Mistake 8 Mistake 9 Mistake 10

FHWA Motorcycle Crash Causation Study

Alcohol Ignition Interlocks: Research, Technology and Programs. Robyn Robertson Traffic Injury Research Foundation NCSL Webinar, June 24 th, 2009

GRADUATED LICENSING. KITCHEN TABLE DISCUSSION GUIDE Have your say on Your PLates reforms

NCDOT Report on Improving Safety on Secondary Roads

The Impact of Primary Enforcement Laws on Seat Belt Use. NCSL Injury Prevention Meeting

2015 Community Report White Rock

2016 Community Report Los Alamos County

Reducing Alcohol-impaired Driving: Can We Regain the Momentum?

HEALTH GRADE 10 - DRIVER EDUCATION

Agenda. Puerto Rico s Highway System. An Overview of Puerto Rico

2016 Community Report Portales

2016 Community Report Torrance County

2015 Community Report Torrance County

2015 Community Report Grants

2016 Community Report De Baca County

Acknowledgements. n Research team: Dr. Bingham (PI), Dr. Carter, Dr. Flannagan, Mr. Bowman, Ms. Almani

2015 Community Report Las Vegas

2016 Community Report Santa Fe County

2015 Community Report Tularosa

Understanding and Identifying Crashes on Curves for Safety Improvement Potential in Illinois

2016 Community Report San Juan County

2015 Community Report San Juan County

2016 Community Report New Mexico

2015 Community Report Doña Ana County

2015 Community Report Chaparral

2016 Community Report Aztec

2015 Community Report Aztec

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT STRATEGIES

Collect and analyze data on motorcycle crashes, injuries, and fatalities;

2015 Community Report Los Lunas

2014 Community Report Portales

Unit 1 - Driving, Mobility and Laws. Chapter 1 - Driving and Mobility

Refining Ignition Interlock Laws and Programs: Increasing State Interlock Program Participation

BRANDON POLICE SERVICE th Street Brandon, Manitoba R7A 6Z3 Telephone: (204)

2017 MDTSEA Manual - How it Corresponds to the ADTSEA 3.0 Curriculum for Segment 1 and 2 Classroom Education

NEW MEXICO S EFFORTS AGAINST DWI

2014 Community Report Luna County

DOT HS April 2013

R U A GOOD DRIVER? TOPICS 10/24/2012 OR LIKE THIS? DO YOUR VEHICLES LOOK LIKE THIS? REQUIREMENTS FOR A FLEET MANAGEMENT PROGRAM

2014 Community Report Las Vegas

2014 Community Report Truth or Consequences

2014 Community Report Tularosa

Regional Safety Action Plan and Safety Investigation Program

Electronic Monitoring in DWI Courts

2014 Community Report Aztec

Driver Improvement and Control. Program

2014 Community Report Los Lunas

CSA State of the Union

TRAFFIC SAFETY FACTS. Overview Data

Keeping your new driver safe.

TRAFFIC SAFETY CONFERENCE. John A. Barton, P.E. Deputy Executive Director

Impaired Driving and Ignition Interlocks

A Question of Size: Involvement of Large Trucks in Road Crashes

The owner notification will commence in late July, 2006, approximately one week after the dealer notification.

Young drivers. Drivers involved in fatal or injury crashes. Drivers involved in fatal/injury crashes per 100. per licence holders (lines)

NEW JERSEY LAW ENFORCEMENT LIAISON NEWSLETTER

ADTSEA 3.0 Driver Education Curriculum Outline

Policy considerations for driving automation technology

SEGMENT 2 DRIVER EDUCATION Risk Awareness

Tools of the Trade. Victoria Hauan, Impaired Driving Program Manager, Office of Traffic Safety

Research on Control and Prediction of Alcohol Impaired Driving with Ignition. Interlocks

DRIVER S EDUCATION REVIEW

Learning Objectives. Become familiar with: Elements of DWI offenses Implied consent Chemical test evidence Case law

18. Where should you position the car to make a left turn from a two-way street? The lane nearest the center of the road. 19. What is a good practice

EA Closing Report Page 1 of 9

A RISE IN MOTORCYCLE RIDER FATALITIES SINCE 2000

Road fatalities in 2012

STUDIES ON THE EFFECTIVENESS OF IGNITION INTERLOCKS

In this Think Safety, we will

Transcription:

I-95 Corridor-wide safety data analysis and identification of existing successful safety programs Traffic Injury Research Foundation April 22, 2010

Overview Background Methodology Purpose Crash analysis Program survey Timelines 2

Background Multiple factors contribute to motor vehicle crashes. Jurisdictions have multiple competing priorities and limited resources to address these priorities. Need to prioritize interventions and solutions to maximize the effectiveness of programs and policies. Need evidence-based approach to target interventions. 3

Background Purpose of the Safety Data Analysis: to identify the primary causes of fatal and serious injury crashes; and, to provide an inventory of effective traffic safety programs that can be implemented across the I-95 Corridor. Goal is to improve safety for the motoring public. Objective is to produce a set of best practices for dealing effectively with the major causes of fatal and serious injury crashes that occur on the roads. 4

Methodology Characteristics of fatal and serious injury crashes FARS analyses Jurisdictional crash data analyses Inventory of effective traffic safety programs Program survey Best practice recommendations Webinar 5

Purpose To come up with a set of best practices for dealing with crash characteristics identified in the analyses. The project s preliminary findings will be presented. We invite you to discuss these findings and provide input into the development of recommendations based on the study findings. 6

Crash analysis FARS analyses (fatal collisions) Five regions New England (ME, NH, VT, MA, CT, RI) North (NY, NJ, PA) Central (DE, MD, DC, VA) South (NC, SC, GA) Florida (FL) State data analyses (fatal and serious injury collisions) One state from each region GA, PA, VA, FL, and MA 7

Crash analysis Type of collision Single vehicle crashes were common (39%) Many involved angle impacts (24%) Rollovers were frequent (9%) Hitting a fixed object was common (39%) The majority involved frontal impacts (62%) 8

Crash analysis Driver characteristics Drivers were frequently aged 21-34 (31%) The majority were male (74%) Negotiating a curve was common (14%) Most used no avoidance maneuver (57%) Many involved unbelted driver (30%) Drinking drivers were common (19%) Drug use was frequent (10%) Many drivers were speeding (20%) Many were improperly licensed (12%) 9

Crash analysis Road and vehicle characteristics The majority occurred on 1-2 lane roads (79%) Most were also on undivided roads (64%) Many were located on the roadside (33%) Most were on principal or minor arterials (58%) Most occurred in a rural area (54%) Many crashes were on curved roads (33%) Many also occurred at an intersection (29%) Late model vehicles (2004+) were common (21%) 10

Crash analysis Temporal and environmental characteristics Half of the collisions occurred Friday to Sunday (51%) Night-time collisions were common (36%) Many crashes occurred on weekends (42%) Many crashes also occurred when it was dark (44%) 11

Crash analysis In summary Most fatal and serious injury collisions involved a single vehicle, frontal impact, running off the road and hitting a fixed object. Drivers tended to be male, aged 16-34, unbelted, speeding, using no avoidance maneuvers, and under the influence of alcohol or drugs. These collisions occurred on one or two lane rural roads that were undivided, many with a curve. Collisions most often occurred on weekends, at night with dark lighting conditions. 12

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) Impaired driving Alcohol enforcement initiatives (FL s high visibility sustained DWI enforcement, NY s STOP-DWI and Last Drink Program) Speeding Speed cameras (FL, MD, DC) Speed campaigns (DE) Targeted speed enforcement (FL) 13

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) Fatigued driving Education drowsy/fatigued driving (NY s NYPDD) Drowsy driving law (NJ) Seat belt usage Primary seat belt laws Demerit points (DC) Education (FL s Street Smart) Targeted media seat belts (MD, NJ) 14

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) Improperly licensed drivers License plate recognition (CT, NY, VA) Collision avoidance Driver education (CT, NY, NJ, ME) Road engineering Paved shoulders Roundabouts Increased friction pavement 15

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) Impaired driving Targeted DWI enforcement (MI and MN) Road safety campaigns (Great Britain s Think!) Speeding Targeted speeding enforcement (SK s speed trailers and Great Britain s SPECS cameras) 16

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) Fatigued driving Fatigued driving enforcement (MN) Laws (MI, IL, OR) Seat belt usage Safety belt enforcement guidelines (MI) Enforcement blitz (AB) 17

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) Improperly licensed drivers Facial scanning biometrics (CA) Collision avoidance Driver education (AZ, SK, AB, ON) Road engineering Transverse rumble strips (BC) Upgraded sign materials (BC) Colored pavement markings (BC) Self explaining roads (Germany) 18

Program survey Program evaluations Many evaluations could not be located or were not accessible. Few evaluations were peer reviewed. Many involved process evaluations which examined the delivery of the programs, but not the outcomes of the programs. 19

Next steps We invite you to discuss these findings and provide input into the development of recommendations based on the study findings. End goal is a set of best practices for dealing with crash characteristics identified in the analyses. Please send us any additional comments via email within two weeks of the webinar. May 6, 2010 20

http://www.i95coalition.org http://www.i95coalition.org Staying informed 21 www.tirf.ca www.tirf.ca

I-95 Ten Percenters Traffic Injury Research Foundation April 22, 2010

Overview Background Methodology Purpose Crash analysis Program survey Timelines 23

Background High-risk drivers (HRDs) are often described as a relatively small group of persistent traffic violators (usually less than 10%). It is believed that these persistent offenders are responsible for a significant portion of the serious injury and fatal collisions on the highways. The high risk driver problem has not, until recently, received much attention. Data on the dimensions of the problem are limited. 24

Background Purpose of the Ten Percenter project: To identify the magnitude and characteristics of the high-risk driver (HRD) problem: and, To provide an inventory of effective traffic safety programs that can be implemented across the I-95 Corridor. Goal is to address the problem of the ten percenters or HRDs to improve the safety for the traveling public. Objective is to produce a set of best practices for dealing effectively with these offenders. 25

Methodology Magnitude and characteristics of HRDs FARS analyses FARS analyses with multiple imputation data Driver record data analyses Inventory of effective traffic safety programs Program survey Best practice recommendations Webinar 26

Purpose The project s preliminary findings will be presented. We invite you to share your perspective and experiences in relation to the findings and ask questions. This discussion and input will inform the development of best practices for dealing with ten percenters. 27

Crash analysis FARS analyses 3 or more of the following in the last 3 years impaired driving offense speed violation other violation collision license suspension FARS analyses with multiple imputation data Same as above plus BAC (0.16% and higher, or refused breath test) State driver record analyses (FL, VA, GA) 3 or more of the following in the last 3 years traffic convictions, charges or citations 28

Crash analysis using FARS In total, approximately 14% of drivers involved in fatal collisions were considered to be HRDs. The percentage ranged from a low of 3% in DC to a high of 19% in NJ. 29

Multiple imputation crash analyses using FARS In total, approximately 25% of drivers involved in fatal collisions were considered to be HRDs. The percentage ranged from a low of 15% in DC to a high of 33% in CT. The differences between HRDs and non-hrds are more pronounced when using multiple imputation data. 30

Crash analysis HRDs were more commonly involved in single vehicle collisions where the vehicle ran off the road and hit a fixed object. Drivers in these collisions tended to be male, aged 21-34, unbelted, speeding, under the influence of alcohol or drugs, and were likely to have an invalid license. Collisions most often occurred on weekends, at night, and when it was dark. HRDs represent a small proportion of drivers but account for a very substantial portion of fatal injury collisions. 31

State driver record analyses Percentage of HRDs FL (7%) GA (1%) VA (0.25%) The percentage of HRDs is smaller when examining all licensed drivers, whether involved in a crash or not, than the percentage involved in fatal crashes alone. 32

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) High-risk impaired drivers Laws and enforcement License revocations (FL s Operation Round- UP) Enforcement campaigns (ME NHTSA s Buzzed Driving in Drunk Driving) Saturation patrols (NY) High-visibility enforcement and heightened public awareness (RI s You Drink & Drive, You Lose) 33

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) High-risk impaired drivers Educational programs Level II DWI course (FL) Education, assessment and treatment programs (NY and ME s DEEP) Resource centers (NJ) Rehabilitation programs Individualized content (DE) Multiple phase treatment (MA) Others (NH, NY, SC) 34

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) High-risk other drivers Laws and enforcement Legal definition of a HRD (FL, GA, ME, MD, NJ, VA) Targeted campaigns (GA, NY) Special enforcement units (NH) Monitoring (NJ) Targeted enforcement (PA) 35

Program survey (I-95 Jurisdictions) High-risk other drivers Defensive driving courses Driving habits (FL) Defensive driving awareness/abilities (ME) Young drivers (MA) Driver retraining courses Behavioral (MA, NY, NJ) Rehabilitation (VA) 36

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) High-risk impaired drivers Laws and enforcement Targeted enforcement (MN, NS, SK) Year-long enforcement (ON) Educational programs Portion of rehab program (SK) Rehabilitation programs SK, ON 37

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) High-risk other drivers Laws and enforcement Enforcement and media campaign (AZ) Electronic enforcement (CA) Monetary assessments (MI) Campaigns (OR) Targeted education and enforcement (ON) Automatic license recognition (Victoria) 38

Program survey (Jurisdictions outside the I-95 I Corridor) High-risk other drivers Defensive driving courses HRD-specific (BC, NWT) Driver improvement (MB) Driver improvement counselors (ON) Driving theory and practical skills (UK) Behavioral (Victoria) Driver retraining courses Behavioral (AZ, CA, OH, OR) 39

Program survey Program evaluations Some evaluations are still ongoing. Many evaluations could not be located or were not accessible. Few evaluations were peer reviewed. Many involved process evaluations which examined the delivery of the programs, but not the outcomes of the programs. 40

Next steps We invite you to discuss these findings and provide input into the development of recommendations based on the study findings. End goal is a set of best practices for dealing with ten percenters, or HRDs that jurisdictions can use to strengthen existing practices. Please send us any additional comments via email within two weeks of the webinar. May 6, 2010 41

http://www.i95coalition.org http://www.i95coalition.org Staying informed 42 www.tirf.ca www.tirf.ca