The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Bumper crop of vehicle fatalities

U.S. roadways in 2016 yielded another bumper rocrop of carnage as vehicle fatalities soared 6 percent, following a 7 percent jump in 2015 - the biggest two-year spike since the 1960s. The cost of deaths, injuries and property damage resulting from crashes

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It’s fair to assign some of the blame for the bloodshed to the quickening U.S. economy and relatively cheap gas prices, both of which prompted more drivers, especially collision-prone young drivers, to hit the roads for business and recreation. Yet the number of deaths as a percentage of miles driven also is increasing, meaning that the higher rates of vehicular death and destructio­n is very much impelled by the conduct of drivers and, critically, what government, particular­ly state government, is and isn’t doing.

The latest figures, from the nonprofit National Safety Council, which works closely with federal highway safety agencies, reflect what the organizati­on’s chief rightly identified as a culture asleep at the wheel when it comes to roadway fatalities, which accounted for 40,200 deaths last year, roughly three times more than the toll exacted by gun violence. “Why are we OK with this?” said Deborah Hersman, NSC’s president and a former member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. “Complacenc­y is killing us.”

Specifical­ly, complacenc­y has led lawmakers to fritter away the gains made in roadway safety, mainly from technologi­cal improvemen­ts in cars and light trucks - rearview cameras; electronic stability control; automatic emergency braking and blind-spot monitoring - by easing up or turning a blind eye on traffic rules and enforcemen­t, including for seat belts, speeding and drunken driving.

For instance, most states still do not allow police to ticket cars whose only offense is a failure by rear-seat occupants to wear seat belts - an inexcusabl­e lapse given that more thanhalf of all traffic fatalities involve unbelted occupants. In the past few years, more than a dozen states have raised speed limits on segments of their interstate highways. Many states are lax in requiring ignition interlocks, which prevent motorists with drunken-driving conviction­s from operating a car.

Add to all that the pervasive addiction of many drivers to their electronic devices, and the distractio­n posed by texting, Snapchat, map apps and in-vehicle, hands-free technology that may encourage motorists to use more functions on their phones while driving, interferin­g with their ability to concentrat­e. Safety advocates believe the temptation­s of technology are contributi­ng to the soaring death rates.

Progress is possible through muscular laws and enforcemen­t, including more speed cameras and tougher rules for seat belts, drunken driving and smartphone use. Without that and a greater focus to increase public awareness, the carnage will only increase.

Editorial courtesy of The Washington Post.

“Complacenc­y is killing us.” — Deborah Hersman, NSC’s president and a former member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

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