just east of the creek
Active Member
I found this report on a study dating to 2020 -
The headline and report on the study by Virginia Tech and Rutgers were found in STREETSBLOGUSA. Although Canada is not part of the report, and our countries are not the same in many ways, I am sure some conclusions can be drawn as well.
“The United States has failed to reduce pedestrian and cyclist fatalities as fast as comparably affluent European nations, a new study finds — and the authors think we must employ the same simple, effective policies that they did to catch up in the fight the bloodshed.
Researchers from Virginia Tech and Rutgers University compared the last 28 years of available transportation fatality data from the United States with data from the four countries with the most closely comparable national travel surveys and levels of affluence: Denmark, Germany, Netherlands and the United Kingdom. All four peer nations had reduced per capita pedestrian fatalities by at least 61 percent over the course of the study period — and standout Denmark did so by a whopping 69 percent — but the U.S. reduced ours by just 36 percent”
The complete report is here: https://usa.streetsblog.org/2020/10...fallen-behind-europe-in-four-bombshell-charts
Exactly How Far U.S. Street Safety Has Fallen Behind Europe, in Three Bombshell Charts
The headline and report on the study by Virginia Tech and Rutgers were found in STREETSBLOGUSA. Although Canada is not part of the report, and our countries are not the same in many ways, I am sure some conclusions can be drawn as well.
“The United States has failed to reduce pedestrian and cyclist fatalities as fast as comparably affluent European nations, a new study finds — and the authors think we must employ the same simple, effective policies that they did to catch up in the fight the bloodshed.
Researchers from Virginia Tech and Rutgers University compared the last 28 years of available transportation fatality data from the United States with data from the four countries with the most closely comparable national travel surveys and levels of affluence: Denmark, Germany, Netherlands and the United Kingdom. All four peer nations had reduced per capita pedestrian fatalities by at least 61 percent over the course of the study period — and standout Denmark did so by a whopping 69 percent — but the U.S. reduced ours by just 36 percent”
The complete report is here: https://usa.streetsblog.org/2020/10...fallen-behind-europe-in-four-bombshell-charts