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  • CSX calls for public and private sector cooperation to meet infrastructure needs
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  • Georgia's 411 Connector reaches major milestone
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  • AGC launches Education Excellence Awards
  • ITS America announces departure of William Anderson
  • Transportation secretary announces decreasing revenues in Virginia
  • FHWA warns about the need for new revenue source
  • New York State unveils plan to replace Tappan Zee Bridge
  • Mass. Turnpike Authority may merge with other state agencies
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  • Illinois lawmakers again debating infrastructure program
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  • W.Va. still waiting for that boom
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  • Private resistance in Florida
  • Not even close
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  • All Current News
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  • Roads can be safer, official says

    Acting Federal Highway Administrator issues "call to arms" on safety
    July 30, 2008

    Acting Federal Highway Administrator Jim Ray issued a "call to arms" on highway safety July 24, urging state Departments of Transportation to adopt more coordinated, systemwide approaches to reduce crashes.

    "Safety is our top priority and, while the fatality rate on our nation's roads is the lowest in history, we are always seeking new ways to prevent tragedies where lives are lost," said Ray, the nation's top highway official. "We owe it to the traveling public to work even more creatively." Each year, nearly 43,000 people–motorists, passengers and pedestrians–die on America's roads. Though the fatality rate–1.41 per 100 million vehicle miles traveled–is the lowest in the nation's history, the number of fatalities has hovered at about the same point for nearly five years.

    FHWA safety officials met with transportation officials and safety experts July 24 in an online conference–a "webinar"–as part of a new effort to improve roadway safety nationally. In it, the agency strongly recommended better use of nine tools that are key to reducing roadway fatalities each year:

  • Roadway Safety Audits–State DOTs should formalize the use of these audits, which are comprehensive evaluations of existing or planned roads or intersections to identify potential safety improvements.
  • Rumble Strips and Rumble Stripes–Used in centerline and shoulders, these cost-effective devices have shown demonstrable improvement in warning drivers of lane departure, reducing by 14% head-on collisions and opposite-direction sideswipe crashes. Shoulder rumble strips and stripes have shown a 38% reduction in run-off-road crashes on freeways, and between 13-18% on rural roads.
  • Median Barriers –Used to separate opposing traffic on divided highways, these barriers have a long track record of reducing cross-median collisions. States are encouraged to consider using cable median barriers where appropriate to further heighten roadway safety.
  • Safety Edge–This paving technique, giving a 30° to 35° slope to the road's edge, reduces the risk to drivers if their tire inadvertently falls over an otherwise near-vertical road-edge leading to loss of vehicle control and rollover crashes. Safety Edge makes such notoriously severe crashes far less likely.
  • Roundabouts–Roundabouts have demonstrated a 60-87% reduction in crashes.
  • Turning Lanes at Stop-Controlled Intersections–At intersections with significant turning volume, turning lanes for right and left turns on major road approaches can dramatically reduce crashes–in some cases, by as much as 55%.
  • Yellow Change Intervals–Red-light running crashes at intersections, which too frequently result in fatalities, can be reduced by properly setting yellow-light signals. Studies show a one-second increase in the yellow signal interval can reduce red-light violations by as much as 50%.
  • Medians and Pedestrian Refuge Areas in Urban and Suburban Areas–Raised medians or pedestrian refuge areas at pedestrian crossings at marked crosswalks have shown a 46% reduction in pedestrian crashes. FHWA recommends that medians be between 4 and 8 ft wide to improve pedestrian safety.
  • Walkways–Ensuring a sidewalk or pathway exists near a roadway can reduce pedestrian crashes by as much 88%. FHWA recommends a pathway of at least 4 ft wide of stabilized or paved surface in areas routinely used by pedestrians.
  • To review the FHWA's new policy, please visit Guidance Memorandum.

    Source: Federal Highway Administration   July 30, 2008




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