Skip to main content

Racial imbalance in US traffic fatalities

American Indian/Alaskan Native people have highest per capita rate of traffic fatalities
By Ben Spencer June 28, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
GHSA recommends developing research-based interventions to prevent traffic crashes (© Boarding1now | Dreamstime.com)

A Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) report has found traffic crash fatalities disproportionately affected Black and indigenous people and people of colour (BIPOC) between 2015-19.

The report - showing the total traffic deaths per 100,000 population by race and ethnicity – found American Indian/Alaskan Native people had a substantially higher per capita rate of total traffic fatalities of 145.6 compared with all other racial groups. 

An Analysis of Traffic Fatalities by Race and Ethnicity says Black people had the second highest rate of total traffic deaths (68.5). It is followed by White (55.2) , Native Hawaiian/ Other Pacific Islander (51.1) and Hispanic (46.9) and Asian (15.3) persons.

GHSA executive director Jonathan Adkins, says: “Our nation’s historic inequalities have contributed to an unacceptable imbalance in traffic safety."

“GHSA is focused on promoting racial justice and finding solutions that advance just results in the country’s behavioural highway safety programmes. This problem didn’t happen overnight, and it won’t be fixed overnight – but we have to begin taking meaningful steps forward every day to make our roads safe for all people and communities.”

The report identifies actions actions states and communities can undertake when considering traffic enforcement, safety education and community outreach to better serve minority communities and reduce crashes, injuries and deaths. 

These include prioritising planning and investment in infrastructure safety countermeasures in under served/lower socioeconomic communities and neighbourhoods that have suffered from years of bias and disinvestment.

The GHSA also recommends developing research-based interventions that prevent traffic crashes before they occur while also tailoring safety education campaigns with BIPOC input.

It advises extensive engagement with local BIPOC leadership to determine if and how an equitable traffic enforcement programme can be implemented in their community.

The initiative builds on steps outlined by the association that it can take along with State Highway Safety Offices (SHSO) and their partners to promote equitable traffic enforcement. 

SHSOs are responsible for addressing speeding, impaired driving and other behavioural safety issues that contribute to traffic crashes, and work with their engineering counterparts to address the role of infrastructure in crashes. 

Additionally, the GHSA is conducting a separate assessment of state approaches to racial equity to identify and promote best practices and solutions.

At its 2021 Annual Meeting, GHSA is to bring together national and state leaders in Denver in the autumn to discuss steps the highway safety community can take to achieve greater equity in traffic enforcement and engagement.

It will also hold a webinar in July on how to build trust and foster positive engagement between law enforcement and BIPOC communities.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Change in the air for Brazil WiM
    May 7, 2021
    Recent changes to weighing standards and legislation in Brazil allow for expansion of Weigh in Motion technology in an attempt to address some familiar challenges
  • Global Road Safety Week focuses on 'little choices'
    June 25, 2024
    Education and awareness campaign designed to promote safe driving behaviour
  • Transport planning consultation is culturally important
    February 2, 2012
    Andrew Bardin Williams explores the efforts under way in North Dakota to consult with native tribes during the early stages of transportation project development. These efforts have led to the signing of a Programmatic Agreement between the state DOT and local tribes and the creation of a tribal consultation committee that allows Native Americans to advise on the identification, evaluation and treatment of historic properties, including those of religious and cultural significance
  • New research says anti-drunk driving campaigns should include pedestrians, cyclists
    April 13, 2017
    State Highway Safety Offices and their partners should broaden their anti-drunk driving campaigns to encourage cyclists and pedestrians to consider safer transportation alternatives after heavy drinking. The US Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) has reported that the ratios of fatally injured alcohol-impaired bicyclists and pedestrians has not fallen as dramatically as the proportion of impaired motor vehicle drivers killed and this remains a significant problem. In fact more than one-third o