USDOT Updates National Safety Strategy

New York crosswalk
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Additional safety strategies for the nation鈥檚 mobility networks were recently announced by the U.S. Department of Transportation as part of its comprehensive plan.

A framework known as the 鈥淪afe System听Approach,鈥 was endorsed to create multiple layers of protection for the public via safer people, roads and vehicles, speed management, and improvements to post-crash care. 鈥淭he 鈥楽afe System Approach鈥 holistically builds and reinforces multiple layers of protection to both prevent crashes from happening in the first place, and minimize the harm caused to those involved when crashes do occur,鈥 per background USDOT provided.

The strategy was included in the department鈥檚 National Roadway Safety Strategy, which was unveiled at the start of the year.

鈥淎t a time when it is safer to fly across the country than it is to walk across town, we must all act to address the crisis on our nation鈥檚 roadways,鈥 Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement accompanying the update on Oct. 14. 鈥淲ith new resources from President [Joe] Biden鈥檚 bipartisan infrastructure law, we are taking critical steps to save lives on our roadways.鈥

Other updates to the safety strategy include enhanced safety monitoring of new technologies in motor vehicles by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, and the consideration of applications for $1 billion in roadway safety grants for regional, tribal and local governments. Additionally, the Federal Highway Administration recently encouraged states to implement 鈥渃omplete streets鈥 concepts prioritizing safety for every transportation mode.

In its report to Congress, FHWA indicated, 鈥淐omplete Streets provide users with essential access to the transportation network, regardless of mode choice. Access, or connectivity, determines how easily people can move throughout the transportation system. At its simplest level, network connectivity addresses how travelers can move safely and easily from place to place.鈥

鈥淪afety and comfort for those who use transit, walk, bike or roll are integral to the objective of providing connections and access for those who choose to use those modes,鈥 per FHWA鈥檚 report from March titled, 鈥淢oving to a Complete Streets Design Model: A Report to Congress on Opportunities and Challenges.鈥

Overall, USDOT鈥檚 strategy responds to NHTSA data estimating nearly 43,000 traffic fatalities in 2021, marking a 10.5% increase from the year prior. 鈥淎s the result of effective safety interventions and adoption of new technologies traffic fatalities had been on the decline in the [United States],鈥 according to USDOT. 鈥淏ut progress has stalled in the last decade, and during the first two years of the pandemic moved in the wrong direction.鈥

Last year鈥檚 $1 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), dedicated funds for resolving safety woes on the nation鈥檚 roadways. Specifically, the law proposes achieving USDOT鈥檚 goal of arriving at zero roadway fatalities. 鈥淎lthough it is heartening to see a projected decline in roadway deaths in recent months, the number of people dying on roads in this country remains a crisis,鈥 Ann Carlson, NHTSA acting administrator, said last month. 鈥淣ow is the time for all stakeholders, including states, local transportation entities, industry, nonprofits and others, to leverage the significant funding and tools provided under the president鈥檚 bipartisan infrastructure law and join with USDOT in implementing the National Roadway Safety Strategy鈥檚 safe system approach, so we can turn the tide on years of increasing deaths.鈥

The IIJA, referred to as the bipartisan infrastructure law, was enacted by President Joe Biden Nov. 15.

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