TABLE J-1 Transportation Fatalities by Mode: 1995-2005,,,,,,,,,,, ,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005 Air,964,"1,093",724,671,681,764,"1,166",616,698,636,602 U.S. air carrier,168,380,8,1,12,92,531,0,22,14,22 Commuter carrier,9,14,46,0,12,5,13,0,2,0,0 On-demand air taxi,52,63,39,45,38,71,60,35,42,64,18 General aviation,735,636,631,625,619,596,562,581,632,558,562 Highway,"41,817","42,065","42,013","41,501","41,717","41,945","42,196","43,005","42,884","42,836","43,443" Passenger car occupants,"22,423","22,505","22,199","21,194","20,862","20,699","20,320","20,569","19,725","19,192","18,440" Motorcyclists,"2,227","2,161","2,116","2,294","2,483","2,897","3,197","3,270","3,714","4,028","4,553" "Truck occupants, light","9,568","9,932","10,249","10,705","11,265","11,526","11,723","12,274","12,546","12,674","12,975" "Truck occupants, large",648,621,723,742,759,754,708,689,726,766,803 Bus occupants,33,21,18,38,59,22,34,45,41,42,58 Pedestrians,"5,584","5,449","5,321","5,228","4,939","4,763","4,901","4,851","4,774","4,675","4,881" Pedalcyclists,833,765,814,760,754,693,732,665,629,727,784 Other,501,609,573,540,596,591,581,642,729,732,949 Pipeline,21,53,10,21,22,38,7,12,12,23,19 Hazardous liquid pipeline,3,5,0,2,4,1,0,1,0,5,2 Gas pipeline,18,48,10,19,18,37,7,11,12,18,17 Railroad,"1,146","1,039","1,063","1,008",932,937,971,951,868,897,888 Highway-rail grade crossing,579,488,461,431,402,425,421,357,334,371,357 Railroad,567,551,602,577,530,512,550,594,534,526,531 Transit ,274,264,275,286,299,295,267,280,234,248,U Highway-rail grade crossing,17,7,12,26,21,20,13,24,21,29,U Transit,257,257,263,260,278,275,254,256,213,219,U Waterborne,"1,016",906,989,"1,033",928,888,828,886,830,769,U Commercial vessel-related,53,55,48,69,58,53,53,62,53,36,U Not related to vessel,134,142,120,149,136,134,94,74,74,57,U Recreational boating,829,709,821,815,734,701,681,750,703,676,U KEY: U = data are not available.,,,,,,,,,,, "NOTES: The actual number of deaths for passengers on trains from 1995-2005 was: 1995 (0), 1996 (12), 1997 (6), 1998 (4), 1999 (14), 2000 (4), 2001 (3), 2002 (7), 2003 (3), 2004 (3), 2005 (16).",,,,,,,,,,, "Caution is needed in comparing fatalities across modes because of different definitions. In particular, rail and transit fatalities include incident-related (as distinct from accident-related) fatalities, such as fatalities from falls in transit stations or railroad employee fatalities from a fire in a workshed, while fatalities at airports not caused by moving aircraft or fatalities from accidents in automobile repair shops are not counted. ",,,,,,,,,,, "The Federal Railroad Administration defines a grade crossing as a location where a public highway, road, street, or private roadway, including associated sidewalks and pathways, crosses one or more railroad tracks at grade. The Federal Transit Administration defines two types of grade crossings: (1) At grade, mixed, and cross traffic crossings, meaning railway right-of-way over which other traffic moving in the same direction or other cross directions may pass. This includes city street right-of-way; (2) At grade with cross traffic crossings, meaning railway right-of-way over which no other traffic may pass, except to cross at grade-level crossings. This can include median strip rights-of-way with grade level crossings at intersecting streets.",,,,,,,,,,, "SOURCES: Various sources, as cited in U.S. Department of Transportation, Research and Innovative Technology Administration, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, National Transportation Statistics 2006, table 2-1 and table 2-35, available at http://www.bts.gov/, as of August 2006. ",,,,,,,,,,,