Las Vegas Review-Journal

Traffic roundabout­s are the better solution

- JOHN STOSSEL COMMENTARY John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

Ihate waiting at traffic lights. There’s a solution: traffic circles or roundabout­s. Traffic circles terrified me when I first confronted them in Europe. A movie, “National Lampoon’s European Vacation,” captured my experience when it portrayed Chevy Chase driving in London, unable to exit a rotary all day.

Besides being hard to navigate, I also assumed roundabout­s cause problems. But a Freakanomi­cs podcast woke me to their advantages.

Roundabout­s are a reason Britain’s rate of traffic deaths is less than half the rate in the United States.

“We’ve converted almost all of our traffic lights to roundabout­s because we save lives,” said Jim Brainard, the mayor of Carmel, Indiana. His little town now has 133 roundabout­s.

A University of Wisconsin-madison study confirmed that roundabout­s save lives. Roundabout­s increased crashes a bit, but deaths and injuries dropped by 38 percent.

It’s because of the angle of the cars, Brainard said. “Instead of a T-bone, you got a sideswipe.”

Roundabout­s also slow cars down a little, giving drivers more time to react. “That makes it seem like it’ll take longer for cars to get through intersecti­ons,” I said to Brainard.

“It really doesn’t” he responded. “A roundabout moves 50 percent more traffic than a traffic light.”

More than a four-way stop sign intersecti­on, too, according to a test ran by the TV show “Mythbuster­s.”

Roundabout­s are also better for the environmen­t. “You never come to a complete stop,” Brainard pointed out. “Tremendous amounts of fuel are saved.”

Indianapol­is real estate agent Jason Compton says roundabout­s even increase the value of homes “because they just flat out look better (by adding) more green space.” Sometimes communitie­s put artwork in the middle.

Bottom line: Roundabout­s are safer, cost less, move more traffic and are better for the environmen­t. Yet, most Americans still say, “I don’t want these things,” I told Brainard. “They’re confusing. I’m more likely to have an accident!”

“Well, it takes public education,” he responded. “Chevy Chase didn’t do us any favors.”

Brainard points out that Chase was stuck in a large rotary, not a roundabout. Some traffic circles and rotaries have many lanes. The one by Paris’ Arc de Triomphe connects 12 roads.

“Those are dangerous,” Brainard said. “That’s not what we’re building. Modern roundabout­s are small; the smaller they are, the safer they become. They’re very different.”

Europe learned that lesson. European countries are building lots of small roundabout­s. “America is way behind,” I told Brainard.

“America is catching up,” he replied. “When I started, we probably had under a couple of hundred in the United States. Today, we’re pushing five or six thousand.”

That’s progress. Still, his little town, with just 97,000 residents, has 2 percent of all the roundabout­s in America.

A University of Wisconsin-madison study confirmed that roundabout­s save lives.

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