USA TODAY US Edition

Deaths from cars running red lights hit 10-year high

Distracted driving may be one cause for increase

- Nathan Bomey

Deaths from drivers running red lights reached a 10-year high in 2017, according to a new study.

The number of people killed when someone plowed through a light reached 939 in 2017, the last full year numbers were available, according to the study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.

That was up 31% from a low of 715 in 2009. And the fatalities in those redlight collisions increased for a fifth straight year in 2017.

The study tracks anyone who was killed, including the driver, passengers, people in another vehicle or people outside the vehicle.

“This is at least two people killed every day at the hands of drivers blowing through red lights,” said Jake Nelson, director of traffic safety advocacy and research for AAA.

The study, which tracked the figures back to 2008, did not try to ascertain the reasons for the spike, but AAA experts proposed a few possible factors.

One clear contributo­r is that Americans are driving more, said Brian Tefft, senior researcher at the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. The number of miles traveled rose 5% during the period tracked by AAA, according to the Federal Highway Administra­tion.

“We know that had a major impact on the total number of people injured or killed,” Tefft said.

But that doesn’t explain the full extent of the increase.

Another possible factor: distracted driving. The rise of smartphone­s, which have exploded in popularity since Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, and distractin­g in-vehicle infotainme­nt systems, could be contributi­ng to the surge in collisions.

American drivers are increasing­ly distracted on the road, which experts say is one likely reason that total traffic deaths of 37,133 in 2017 were up 13% from the all-time low of 32,744 in 2014.

Nelson said it’s a “reasonable assumption” that distractio­n is one cause of the red-light-running crisis. But he said it’s difficult to provide a full explanatio­n of the reasons for the increase.

In any case, the crisis is particular­ly deadly for people who aren’t riding in the offending car.

“More than half of all the people (killed) in these crashes were not the red-light running drivers, not their passengers, but (were) other people who they hit,” Tefft said.

What’s more, many Americans readily acknowledg­e that they disregard red lights from time to time. Nearly 1 in 3 said they had run a red light in the last 30 days, according to the AAA Foundation’s Traffic Safety Culture Index.

Nelson advocated red-light cameras at intersecti­ons where traffic data suggests there’s a problem.

“The reality is that cops can’t be everywhere,” he said.

He also said that more roundabout­s would help. They are safer than redlight intersecti­ons because crashes that occur there happen at lower speeds and less severe angles, he said.

Other technology that could help combat the crisis includes vehicle-tored-light communicat­ion systems, but Nelson said it’s unrealisti­c to expect cash-strapped, polarized government­s to invest in such technology.

Self-driving cars also could one day help prevent intersecti­on crashes, he said.

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