 
     David Crawford takes a look at innovations to reduce crashes at rural intersections.    
     
Intersection crashes continue to represent a worryingly large share of deaths and serious injuries across US highway networks. Statistics from the US Department of Transportation’s 
     
Rural STOP (static-only) sign-controlled intersections are accident blackspots across the country. A NHTSA study found that in crashes at these intersections, 62% of the drivers involved had stopped to look before proceeding but did not see the vehicle that was approaching on the main route. A further 20% misjudged the gap that this vehicle was leaving; 14% had an obstructed view of the other vehicle; and 4% were the victims of ice-covered roads. In one sample, 90% even failed to see the STOP sign.
     
In the past, US highways agencies have relied in tackling the issue largely on physical measures, such as better intersection lighting, enhanced static signing and geometric improvements to road layouts. The growing adoption of ITS-based solutions is a relatively recent response to the toll of deaths and serious injuries that continues in spite of these measures, with injuries in rural areas more likely to result in death than those incurred in an urban context. 
     
One of the main reasons is that rural crashes are more likely to occur at higher speeds as lower traffic levels and fewer intersections mean drivers are more comfortable travelling at speed, so the damage resulting from a collision is therefore greater. The rural victims of the fatal crashes are also more likely than their urban-driving counterparts to be unbelted which in 17 states is only an offence when combined with another traffic violation.  
 
 Additionally it may take first responders longer to  arrive at rural crash sites, meaning casualties wait longer for medical  attention. Finally, patients’ needs may exceed the capabilities of  conveniently accessible rural health care setups. 
     
The  wellspring of current activity is the FHWA’s 1991 intersection conflict  warning system (ICWS) project, which introduced the concept of a dual  assembly of traffic-actuated warning signs linked to pavement loops and a  traffic signal controller. Claimed by the administration as a ‘first-of  its-kind, anywhere’, this led to the December 2011 issue of its Design  and Evaluation Guidance, produced under the US Enterprise programme.   
     
The  underlying principle is that drivers approaching on a major through  road receive a warning when a vehicle is preparing to enter an  intersection from the cross street. At the same time, drivers waiting at  STOP signs on the minor approach see a ‘crossing traffic’ sign when  vehicles are approaching along the major route. Overall, results to date  have shown reductions in fatal crashes and serious injuries by 30% and  80% respectively.
     
The  thinking behind the scheme responds to the fact that, while safety at  unsignalised intersections remains a major national concern, a  fully-equipped crossing can be hard to justify, particularly in rural  areas, not least due to the costs of installation and maintenance.   Apart from these, there is also evidence that traffic signals are not  necessarily the best way of reducing crashes. 
     
A  November 2012 report for the North Carolina Department of Transportation  (NCDOT) cites two main reasons. The first of these was that when  mainline traffic is forced to stop under high-speed, low-volume  conditions, numbers of rear-end crashes may increase. Secondly, while  signals can reduce delays on the lower-volume roads, they can increase  delays on the mainline ones carrying greater traffic volumes.
     
Minnesota’s experience supports this conclusion.
There  is also concern about another type of  intervention, the use of   continuously flashing signs at STOP-controlled  intersections, designed   to heighten driver awareness generally.   These, say NCDOT, fail to   address the crucial issue of traffic  gap-acceptance (as highlighted by   NHTSA) and can therefore deliver only  modest safety improvements.
      
Its   report stresses that motorists entering two-way, unsignalised   controlled intersections - having previously stopped at a static sign -   have to make “complex decisions” on the speed and direction of   approaching vehicles. In response, US states including Minnesota and   North Carolina are actively engaged in developing ITS-based solutions   that do not depend on the use of traffic signals and are researching the   issue in greater depth.  
     
Speaking   at the November 2014 Toward Zero Deaths conference staged by Minnesota   Department of Transportation (MnDOT), safety planning engineer Derek   Leuer highlighted the vulnerability of older drivers (45% of all victims   in the state). He also highlighted the higher incidence of crashes in   the further lanes of through routes, involving vehicles that have   already reached the median and an apparently increased risks for drivers   on minor roads where traffic volumes are between 500 and 1,500  vehicles  per day. 
     
However, he concluded by calling for greater focus on the risks generated by heavy commercial trucks.  
     
MnDOT   is now well into a 2012-2015 Rural ICWS project designed to cover up  to  50 intersections, using technologies including GTT’s Canoga vehicle   sensing which has delivered accuracy levels of up to 99.997%. The DOT’s   solar-powered ALERT system combines detection, wireless communication   and flashing LEDs to warn drivers on both major and minor roads.
     
Early   results from a pilot installation in the city of  Duluth showed  that   when signs were flashing, speeds on the major road  decreased,  drivers on   the minor road waited longer, and minor road  roll-throughs  (when a   driver treats a STOP sign as merely a YIELD  sign) ceased.  However, a   major unintended consequence was that drivers  on the minor  road came to   depend completely on the ALERT warning.
     
They     ignored the STOP sign; so that, when there was no flashing sign,  they    went on over and increased levels of roll throughs. The issue is   under   scrutiny in the ALERT-2 phase. 
     
Minnesota’s     efforts have been acknowledged at national level. In 2013, the White     House named state traffic engineer and TZD programme co-chair Sue   Groth   as a transportation ‘champion of change’ for MnDOT’s work on     intersection safety.  
The state’s targets for 2020    are fewer than 300 road traffic accident deaths per year and fewer than    850 cases of serious injury (compared with 387 and 1213 respectively  in   2013). 
     
    
Flashing
In    a parallel initiative, NCDOT has now deployed some 80 ‘vehicle   entering  when flashing’ conflict warning systems at stop-controlled    intersections. These are typically sited where frontal impact crash    patterns can be traced to poor gap acceptance and/or issues of sight    distance (the length of a road surface which a particular driver can see    with adequate clearness).
     
The    stopped motorist still has to judge the gaps in traffic and the point    at which it is safe to proceed. NCDOT says, however, that the through    motorist is made more aware of the risk.  
     
A    2012 evaluation showed that two out of four versions trialled, one   with  advance post-mounted signs on the major road, another combining   major-  and minor-road alerts, have proved promising in reducing crashes   at  intersections where each road has two lanes, one in either   direction. 
     
NCDOT  has   also identified the need for further research to improve the    effectiveness of ‘vehicle entering when flashing’ intersections    including traffic volume thresholds and analysis of intersection lane    geometry. Other issues requiring research include the sign sizes and    messages, the potential contribution of combined messaging on both major    and minor approaches to intersections. On the technical side it will    look at the distance between loop detectors and the intersection, the    number of loops on the minor approach (some have lead-in loops) and  the   variability of detector timing settings.
     
The    DOT also looks forward, ‘in the near future’ to multiple initiatives   at  cross-state level, that will take a ‘more comprehensive’ look at    standardisation issues.
     
Its    list highlights the lack of common specifications for systems, which    means that a number of different approaches are in use, often without    specific guidance.
     
In    response, the FHWA is pursuing an Enterprise pooled-fund programme to    create a framework for the more consistent deployment and further    evaluation of systems, with its Design and Evaluation Guidance as a key    step.
 
     
         
         
        



