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posted by janrinok on Monday July 25 2022, @03:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the what-about-the-road-less-traveled? dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:

We all became familiar with the idea of "bending a curve" thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic. Now it seems another US curve needs bending: that of US traffic fatalities, which have been up strongly and abnormally over the last couple of years. The low-hanging fruit when it comes to changing that might not be in the car as much as around it.

[...] Thanks in large part to in-car safety tech like airbags, antilock brakes, stability control and, more recently, automatic emergency braking, US traffic fatalities have generally been on a long decline since 1970. The 52,000 such deaths recorded 52 years ago shrank to 36,000 in 2019 even as the US population and vehicle miles driven both increased dramatically. But 2020 and 2021 saw the biggest spike in over 50 years to a total of almost 43,000 per year, turning the roadway fatality clock back to 2002. In short, something's not working as well as it did.

"We need regulations related to vehicle design and street design," says Yonah Freemark, senior research associate at the Urban Institute, a nonprofit think tank focused on urban mobility and equity. "Those two play a really important role in how likely people are to get killed in streets, especially pedestrians (and cyclists) that are struck by cars." 

Speed cameras are common in several countries outside the US, often using technology that calculates average speed of a given vehicle based on the time stamps when it passes two or more places on the roadway.

In-vehicle safety technologies that protect occupants have only become more prevalent over the last couple of years, so Freemark looks at pedestrian and cyclist fatalities in collisions with cars as the next key area for improvement. Three-quarters of US auto buyers select a light truck that is typically heavier and larger than the sedan or coupe they may have chosen as their previous purchase, a formula for a more brutal impact with someone outside of the vehicle. In the future, many more electric cars will be sold and their well-known weight problem could exacerbate the seriousness of collisions.

[...] That difference plays out when you compare roadway fatality stats outside the US. "Over the last 20 years or so we've seen quite a divergence between other developed countries, like France," Freemark said of a comparison he's focused on. He noted other countries' taxation schemes that disincentivize the purchase of large, heavy vehicles as well as automatic speeding cameras and the presence of far more traffic circles that still befuddle most US drivers.


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by sjames on Monday July 25 2022, @07:11PM (2 children)

    by sjames (2882) on Monday July 25 2022, @07:11PM (#1262865) Journal

    And block touchscreens when the car is in motion. Provide real physical controls for anything that should be frobbable while driving.

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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by fraxinus-tree on Monday July 25 2022, @08:23PM

    by fraxinus-tree (5590) on Monday July 25 2022, @08:23PM (#1262886)

    Some 10 years ago I fixed my wife's erratic driving by swapping our cars. Absolutely identical cars, except mine didn't have radio / cassette / cd player. 3 cars later the recipe works flawlessly: the radios aren't removed easily anymore, but their fuses are just as easy to find and pull out.

  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Opportunist on Monday July 25 2022, @09:16PM

    by Opportunist (5545) on Monday July 25 2022, @09:16PM (#1262903)

    Put effin' BUTTONS back into the damn cars!

    You reach over to the button and you can feel where it is. The second button from the left does X, the next one does Y. You know that after using the care for a week. Tops. You don't need to take your eyes off the road anymore, you just KNOW what the button does, and you can simply brush your fingers across them and count to the second, then press it. You even get tactile feedback that the button was pressed and you know you pressed the right one.

    Touchscreens REQUIRE you to look at them to find the button and also to visually verify that you actually pressed it.

    Get rid of the damn touchscreens. They're bad enough on phones, we sure as fuck don't need them in cars!