News
Articles
Case Histories
White Papers
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
Industry Links
July 2008
June 2008
Asphalt Roads
Bridges
Concrete Roads
Safety
Traffic Management
Click here for a subscription to
Roads & Bridges
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
Executive News Summary e-Newsletter.

News this week sponsored by: Transoft Solutions

INDUSTRY NEWS
 Subscribe
Get the latest industry headlines conveniently in our email newsletter! Click here to subscribe.
 
 Share It
"../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=13600&linkLabel=AASHTO%20proposes%20program%20to%20reduce%20highway%20fatalities%20by%20half%20over%2020%20years" target="_new">   "../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=13600&linkLabel=AASHTO%20proposes%20program%20to%20reduce%20highway%20fatalities%20by%20half%20over%2020%20years" target="_new">Email this page to a friend
 
 More News
  • A big finish
  • Plans to toll I-93 dropped
  • Transportation projects named as finalists
  • U.S. DOT announces historic drop in highway fatalities
  • TDOT wins national transportation award
  • American driving reaches eighth month of steady decline
  • Top performer
  • Missouri continues to improve system
  • Traffic cameras on Illinois interstates may be an "uphill battle"
  • Missouri bridge program stalls
  • Construction material costs up 19% in June
  • President Bush issues order to expedite Columbia River Crossing
  • Flatiron to design and build new Edmonton ring road
  • Bureau of Transportation Statistics releases State Transportation Statistics 2007
  • Highway Trust Fund fix still in limbo
  • Madison confirmed by Senate committee to lead FHWA
  • Roads can be safer, official says
  • U.S. DOT unveils Bush Administration's new approach for transportation
  • OMB estimates Highway Trust Fund balance little changed
  • Chunk of concrete falls from Minnesota bridge
  • Report: Repairing U.S. bridges would cost $140 billion
  • Nearly 10 billion fewer miles driven in May 2008 than May 2007
  • ARTBA's 20th Annual PPV in Transportation Conference set
  • Pennsylvania bridge-work needs greater than funds
  • House OKs additional highway funding
  • I-95 plan may spare Miami Beach
  • Transportation public-private partnerships soar
  • Pa. Turnpike responds to FHWA request
  • Illinois lawmakers again debating infrastructure program
  • U.S. Chamber, associations launch "FasterBetterSafer" campaign
  • Report examines worsening travel infrastructure in Massachusets
  • Cat, Navistar join forces
  • Senators announce plan to address HTF shortfall
  • ODOT honored for I-5 environmental work
  • W.Va. still waiting for that boom
  • Transportation receives mixed reviews in Va.
  • Private resistance in Florida
  • Not even close
  • Attorney General demands end to free rides in New York
  • Georgia looking at toll option
  • Private group may run Turnpike
  • VDOT releases emergency response report
  • Debate on FAA reauthorization bill postponed
  • Oberstar presses for I-35W hearing
  • MoDOT engineers find no bridge damages so far after earthquake
  • Pennsylvania readies itself for privatization
  • Vermont agency may have to scale back $5 million
  • Florida may suspend its gas tax
  • AGC protests McCain’s proposed gas tax moratorium
  • Legislators reject one toll bill, accept another
  • Congressman subpoenas EPA for greenhouse gas waiver documents
  • California governor highlights need for trained workforce
  • Construction faces tumultuous year for projects, prices, labor, economist says
  • Consortium achieives financial close on Texas toll road project
  • CONTECH acquires European rights to CDS technology
  • Iowa bridges ranked fourth most deficient in nation
  • Court invalidates Ultimax patents
  • Kentucky governor: State resources not misused in traffic signal approval
  • U.S. Rep. Matheson stresses Utah’s need for road money
  • Capka steps down from FHWA chief post
  • Texas DOT opens new transportation management center
  • Budget office estimates $1.4B shortfall in Highway Trust Fund
  • Big Dig contractors to pay $458.2M
  • Econolite & PTV America integrate transportation technologies

  • All Current News
  • Archived News
  • AASHTO proposes program to reduce highway fatalities by half over 20 years

    Attainment of goal would save over 50,000 lives
    May 21, 2007

    The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) Board of Directors recently called for an aggressive highway safety program aimed at achieving a goal of reducing highway fatalities by half over the next two decades.

    The new goal replaces an earlier target of reducing highway deaths to 1.0 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles of travel by the end of calendar year 2008. In actuality, motor vehicle fatalities increased from 42,836 in 2004 to 43,443 in 2005, and the fatality rate rose from 1.44 to 1.45, representing the first rise in the highway fatality rate since 1986.

    The AASHTO Standing Committee on Highway Traffic Safety, which drafted the resolution approved by the board, maintains that stating the goal in terms of the "actual number of lives saved" will resonate with the public significantly better than the abstract notion of a rate measure. Achievement of the new goal would also result in a higher number of lives saved. Attainment of the new goal will require "new motor vehicle safety technologies, more aggressive state safety laws and enforcement, and improved highway infrastructure," the resolution states. But its attainment will result in a cumulative total of over 50,000 lives saved over the next decade, moving toward halving fatalities over the next 20 years.

    AASHTO is urging that other safety organizations also adopt the goal, and that the administration, Congress and states consider the goal as a guide as they work towards reauthorization of the highway and transit programs, which expire in September 2009.



    Source: AASHTO Journal   May 21, 2007


    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page