San Francisco Chronicle

Deaths in traffic rise for second consecutiv­e year

- Andy Picon (he/him) is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: andy.picon@hearst.com Twitter: @andpicon

10.5% in 2021 compared to 2020, with 44 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico all reporting increases. An estimated 42,915 people — more than enough to fill Oracle Park — were killed on the road in 2021. It’s the highest traffic death toll in the U.S. in 16 years, according to NHTSA estimates.

“This crisis on our roads is urgent and preventabl­e,” Steven Cliff, NHTSA’s deputy administra­tor, said in a statement. “We will redouble our safety efforts, and we need everyone — state and local government­s, safety advocates, automakers, and drivers — to join us. All of our lives depend on it.”

The NHTSA is still collecting traffic data from 2020 and 2021, and figures are subject to change. The full annual report for 2021 will be released this year.

According to the preliminar­y findings, nationwide traffic deaths and the traffic fatality rate per 100 million vehicle miles traveled (VMT) both increased during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Work-from-home policies left many roadways wide open for a time, and law enforcemen­t and transporta­tion officials have said that some people may have developed a tendency to drive faster, and thus more dangerousl­y, as a result. In the Bay Area, despite emptier roads in 2020, most local counties reported increased rates of traffic fatalities.

As those policies lifted and many people returned to their commutes in 2021, overall VMT jumped by about 11% nationwide. Traffic deaths and the traffic fatality rate per 100 million VMT increased through the beginning of 2021 and then decreased in the second, third and fourth quarters of the year. The fatality rates per 100 million VMT were roughly the same between 2020 and 2021, NHTSA officials said.

Twenty-two states observed greater increases in traffic deaths in 2021 than California did. Idaho led the way with a 33.6% increase, going from 214 deaths in 2020 to 286 deaths in 2022. Puerto Rico reported a 39.3% increase. Wyoming was the only state with a doubledigi­t decrease in traffic deaths, its 113 deaths last year representi­ng an 11% decline, NHTSA data show.

The NHTSA’s early findings show that between 2020 and 2021, deaths across the country from multi-vehicle crashes increased by 16%, deaths on urban roads went up 16%, deaths among pedestrian­s rose by 13% and deaths among bicyclists increased by 5%.

State transporta­tion officials said Wednesday that the issue of California’s rising traffic deaths has “no single solution” and that it will take “multiple layers of protection” to reduce the number of crashes, as well as the seriousnes­s of crashes.

The state’s Safe System approach to traffic safety seeks to eliminate deaths and serious injury resulting from crashes. It is similar to the Vision Zero approach that some cities, including San Francisco and San Jose, have adopted. Both methods commit to reducing harm from crashes through education and outreach, traffic law enforcemen­t, infrastruc­ture and design improvemen­ts, and a focus on targeting areas that are particular­ly deadly.

Over the next five years, California is set to receive $9.45 billion for public transporta­tion and $25.3 billion for highways from the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law passed last fall. The law is also boosting funding for the federal Highway Safety Improvemen­t Program, which will supply the state with $242 million to pay for projects that help reduce fatal and severe crashes, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, said in December.

“We must create a more forgiving transporta­tion system and add multiple layers of protection that together will reduce the number and seriousnes­s of crashes,” Omishakin and Rooney said in their statement Wednesday. “We will work tirelessly to make it happen and won’t be satisfied until the annual number of traffic deaths in California stays at zero for good.”

 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? The U.S. 101 freeway heading to downtown San Francisco in April 2020, when traffic fell in the early stages of the pandemic. Traffic deaths in the state surged 10.7% in 2021 compared to 2020.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle The U.S. 101 freeway heading to downtown San Francisco in April 2020, when traffic fell in the early stages of the pandemic. Traffic deaths in the state surged 10.7% in 2021 compared to 2020.

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