Skip to main content

NSC to prioritise VRU safety

Emphasis on pedestrians as US safety group admits: 'What we're doing isn't working'
By Adam Hill July 4, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
NSC will 'advocate for the need for infrastructure and policy to reduce points of conflict between modes' (image credit: James Robbins)

In a potentially significant move for road safety outcomes in the US, the country's National Safety Council (NSC) has moved to push the needs of people who are not in vehicles to the fore.

"American roadways are more dangerous today than they have been in decades – especially for those who are not inside a motor vehicle," NSC says in a statement.

It points out that, even before the surge in traffic deaths during the pandemic, US fatalities on the road rose 17% from 2010 to 2019 - with deaths of vulnerable road users (VRUs) such as cyclists and pedestrians rising almost three times faster.

"What we’re doing isn’t working," NSC continues. "As a leading organisation in the traffic safety community, NSC recognises that we need to continue to learn, expand our partnerships and act decisively on causes of the violence on our roadways."

It says that recognition of the "rapid ways vehicles and mobility technology are changing" is required, which has led it to focus on three main areas:

● Advocate for the need for infrastructure and policy to reduce points of conflict between modes
● Confront the safety implications of vehicle design
● Collaborate with the roadway safety community to reverse the traffic safety culture that accepts thousands of deaths each year

It is using a report, Mobility, Technology and Safety: The Next 20 Years, to inform its work around roadway safety and expects to release another report next month.

NSC has also set up a Mobility Safety Advisory Group (MSAG) of non-NSC people from the private sector, government, non-profit organisations and academia which will advise the NSC Roadway Safety Practice on tactics and strategies that can best fulfill its mission. 

Members of the Inaugural MSAG Include:

● Jordan Davis, Executive Director, Smart Columbus
● Seth LaJeunesse, Senior Research Associate, University of North Carolina Highway Safety Research Center
● Michael Kelley, Policy Director, BIkeWalkKC
● Corinne Kisner, Executive Director, National Association of City Transportation Officials 
● Philip Koopman, Associate Professor, Carnegie Mellon University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
● Peter Norton, Associate Professor, University of Virginia Department of Engineering and Society 
● Kelcie Ralph, Associate Professor, Rutgers Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy 
● Kristina Swallow, Director, Nevada Department of Transportation 
● Brad Thomas, CEO, First Transit and NSC Board Member
● Shin-Pei Tsay, Director of Policy for Cities and Transportation, Uber
● David Zipper, Visiting Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School Taubman Center for State and Local Government 
● Anna Zivarts, Director of the Disability Mobility Initiative Program, Disability Rights Washington
● Veronica O. Davis, PE, Director of Transportation & Drainage Operations, Houston, Texas

One of the group members, Peter Norton, says: "At least on paper, NSC is now committed to protecting people outside of vehicles. And today it proved that it is willing to listen to harsh critics of the safety establishment (including NSC), is prepared to admit mistakes, and is ready to change long-established assumptions."

While Norton wanted "an even stronger position in favour of the right of the safe use of streets by pedestrians (including children), cyclists, and other people who are not in cars", he says he is "happy to give them a fair chance to act".

He is withholding judgment but concludes: "As a historian, I can say that this is the best development in traffic safety that I’ve seen from NSC since 1935."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK government backtracking on biennial vehicle tests plan
    April 18, 2012
    The current UK government, which pledged to cut bureaucracy, had set its sights on the annual MOT vehicle inspections. “Cars are more reliable and the annual test has not changed in 50 years,” transport secretary Philip Hammond announced. The plan was for vehicle testing every two years instead of annually.
  • Public transport key to climate change, says report
    September 19, 2014
    A new report, released in advance of United Nations Secretary-General’s Climate Summit on 23 September, claims that more than US$100 trillion in cumulative public and private spending could be saved and 1,700 megatons of annual carbon dioxide (CO2) - a 40 percent reduction of urban passenger transport emissions - could be eliminated by 2050 if the world expands public transportation, walking and cycling in cities. The report, A Global High Shift Scenario, from the Institute for Transportation Development
  • Breaking the bias: Making public transport safer for women
    October 3, 2022
    Understanding the lived experiences of women using mass transit systems worldwide will help drive positive change, argue Louise Ribet and Naomi Grant from WhereIsMyTransport
  • ITE announces three new honorary members
    February 23, 2018
    Washington’s Institute of Transportation (ITE) has elected Marsha Anderson Bomar, John J. Kennedy and W. Hibbett Neel as honorary members. The membership is presented to individuals of notable and outstanding professional achievement. Bomar is the executive director of the Gateway85 Community Improvement District, where her focus is on mobility, infrastructure, safety, security, and economic development. She was previously founder and president of Street Smarts and Data Smarts and is an international past