Thursday,
July 17, 2003
Contact: Rae Tyson, 202-366-9550
NHTSA 32-03
USDOT
Releases 2002 Highway Fatality Statistics
Highway fatalities in 2002 reached the highest level since 1990 while
crash-related injuries hit an all-time low, the U. S. Department of
Transportation's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced today.
As highway crashes continue to claim the lives of thousands, the grim
statistics underscore the need for better state laws, stricter enforcement and
safer driving behavior.
Alcohol-related fatalities remained at 41 percent of the total with 17,
419 deaths in 2002, up slightly from 17,400 in 2001.
Historically, the majority of passenger vehicle occupants killed in
crashes were not wearing safety belts; that trend continued in 2002 with 59
percent unrestrained.
The number of injured dropped from 3.03 million in 2001 to 2.92 million
in 2002, a record low, with the largest decrease in injuries among occupants of
passenger cars. Among other
factors, the decline in injuries can be attributed to tougher federal safety
standards and improved vehicle design, NHTSA said.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta emphasized his commitment
to safety again today during an all-hands meeting with NHTSA, the Federal
Highway Administration and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.
"It is time to acknowledge that history is calling us to another
important task. It is the battle to
stop the deaths and injuries on our roads and highways," the Secretary
said.
"The Bush Administration is committed to improving safety on our
highways - safety is our highest transportation priority," said Secretary
Mineta. "We have proposed a
comprehensive series of initiatives to help make highways safer, and I
personally urge states to pass tough laws prohibiting drunk driving and
requiring the use of safety belts. Once
and for all we must resolve the national epidemic on our highways."
SAFETEA (Safe, Accountable, Flexible and Efficient Transportation Equity
Act of 2003), the Bush Administration's surface transportation legislative
proposal, would provide more than $15 billion over six years for highway safety
programs. This is more than double
the amount provided by its predecessor, TEA-21 (Transportation Equity Act for
the 21st Century). The majority of this funding would be through a new core
highway safety infrastructure program instead of the existing Surface
Transportation Program safety set-aside.
In addition, SAFETEA would create a new safety belt incentive program to
strongly encourage states to enact primary safety belt laws and achieve
substantially higher safety belt use rates.
SAFETEA also would combine the several safety programs administered by
NHTSA into a consolidated grant program.
Under
SAFETEA, states would have broad new flexibility to transfer safety funds among
diverse safety programs administered by the Department if they develop
performance-based comprehensive strategic highway safety plans that identify
their highest priority safety improvements.
"If you drink and drive or fail to wear your safety belt, taking
those risks may cost you your life," said NHTSA Administrator Jeffrey Runge,
MD. "On the other hand, driving sober and wearing a belt will significantly
increase your chance of survival on the highway."
Though overall fatalities increased to 42,815 in 2002 from 42,196 in
2001, the fatality rate per 100 million vehicle miles traveled (VMT) remained at
1.51, a historic low. According to
Federal Highway Administration estimates, VMT increased in 2002 to 2.83
trillion, up from 2.78 trillion in 2001.
NHTSA earlier estimated that highway crashes cost society $230.6 billion
a year, about $820 per person.
Fatalities in rollover crashes accounted for 82 percent of the total
fatality increase in 2002. In 2002,
10,666 people died in rollover crashes, up 5 percent from 10,157 in 2001. The
number of persons killed in sport utility vehicles (SUVs) that rolled over rose
14 percent. Sixty-one percent of all SUV fatalities involved rollovers.
NHTSA's
Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) also shows that, in 2002:
*
Motorcycle fatalities increased for the fifth year in a row following years of
steady improvement. A total of
3,244 riders died, up slightly from 3,197 in 2001. It was the smallest increase
in motorcycle fatalities in five years. However,
deaths among riders 50 and over increased 26 percent.
*
Alcohol-related fatalities have been rising steadily since 1999. However, deaths
in low alcohol-involvement crashes (.01-.07 blood alcohol concentration (BAC))
dropped 5.5 percent from 2001 to 2,401 deaths.
*
Fatalities from large truck crashes dropped from 5,111 in 2001 to 4,897 in 2002,
a 4.2 percent decline.
*
Fatalities among children seven and under dropped to historic low levels. In
2002, 968 children seven and under were killed, down from 1,059 in 2001.
*
Pedestrian deaths also declined, to 4,808, a 1.9 percent drop from 2001.
*
In fatal crashes between passenger cars and LTVs (light trucks and vans, a
category that includes SUVs), the occupants of the car were more often fatally
injured. When a car was struck in the side by an LTV, the fatality was 20.8
times more likely to have been in the passenger car. In a head-on collision between a car and an LTV, the fatality
was 3.3 times more likely to be among car occupants.
The Administration's SAFETEA proposal is at http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/reauthorization/
on the Internet.
NHTSA annually collects crash statistics from 50 states and the District
of Columbia to produce the annual report on traffic fatality trends. Summaries
of the FARS report are available on the NHTSA website at: http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/pdf/nrd-30/NCSA/Rpts/2003/Assess02.pdf
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