The Arizona Republic

Buttigieg cites ‘crisis’ as US road deaths rise 18%

- Tom Krisher and Hope Yen

DETROIT – The number of U.S. traffic deaths in the first six months of 2021 hit 20,160, the highest first-half total since 2006, the government reported Thursday, a sign of growing reckless driving during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The estimated number was 18.4% higher than the first half of last year, prompting Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg to call the increase an unacceptab­le crisis.

That percentage increase was the largest for a six-month period since the department began recording fatal crash data in 1975.

The department, which includes the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, announced that it will develop a national strategy for steps to save lives on the roads.

“We cannot and should not accept these fatalities as simply a part of everyday life in America,” Buttigieg said in a statement. “No one will accomplish this alone. It will take all levels of government, industries, advocates, engineers and communitie­s across the country working together toward the day when family members no longer have to say good-bye to loved ones because of a traffic crash.”

The NHTSA also said behavioral research from March through June showed that speeding and traveling without a seat belt remain higher than before the coronaviru­s pandemic. The agency has pointed to increasing road deaths, a trend for the last two years, on more reckless behavior on the roads.

Consumer groups have been urging the agency to move more quickly to boost road safety, pointing to increasing accidents and a yearslong backlog in implementi­ng safety rules. An Associated Press review earlier this month of rule-making by the NHTSA found at least 13 auto-safety rules past due, including a rear seat belt reminder requiremen­t passed by Congress in 2012 that was to be implemente­d by 2015.

“This public safety crisis requires decisive action by the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion, where progress on requiremen­ts and performanc­e standards for lifesaving vehicle safety technology has been overdue for far too long,” said Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, in a statement Thursday. “Motorists and road users are being killed needlessly while proven solutions are deferred, delayed or dormant.”

The latest spike in fatalities came as people drove more as pandemic shutdowns eased. Preliminar­y data from the Federal Highway Administra­tion showed that vehicle miles traveled in the first six months of the year rose by 173.1 billion miles, about a 13% increase from last year.

The death rate for the first half of this year rose to 1.34 per 100 million vehicle miles traveled. It’s up from 1.28 deaths per 100 million miles in the first half of 2020, the agency said.

The Transporta­tion Department said its strategy would follow a “safe system approach” to road safety that identifies safety action for drivers, roads, vehicles, speeds and post-crash medical care. The strategy will be released in January, the department said. It also has pointed to plans to start moving on some of the proposed safety regulation­s, although the agency has often missed deadlines, even those promised in federal court.

 ?? ALBERT CESARE/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? The number of U.S. traffic deaths in the first half of 2021 hit 20,160, the highest first-half total since 2006, the government reported Thursday.
ALBERT CESARE/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER The number of U.S. traffic deaths in the first half of 2021 hit 20,160, the highest first-half total since 2006, the government reported Thursday.

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