Skip to main content

ATS report highlights school zone safety

A report by American Traffic solutions (ATS), How to Help Eliminate Dangers of Traveling to and from School (and Keep Kids Safe), highlights the dangers children face as they travel to and from school and details some of the successes schools and cities are having with new solutions to both change driver behaviour and enhance student safety. Every year, on average, 100 children are killed and 25,000 are injured walking to and from school. Many of these tragedies can be attributed to drivers who are distr
August 29, 2014 Read time: 2 mins

A report by 17 American Traffic solutions (ATS), How to Help Eliminate Dangers of Traveling to and from School (and Keep Kids Safe), highlights the dangers children face as they travel to and from school and details some of the successes schools and cities are having with new solutions to both change driver behaviour and enhance student safety.

Every year, on average, 100 children are killed and 25,000 are injured walking to and from school. Many of these tragedies can be attributed to drivers who are distracted, speeding through school zones or illegally passing stopped school buses as children move toward or away from the bus. Enforcing traffic laws can help reduce these hazards, but the demands on officers make it impossible for them to maintain a constant presence on school buses and in school zones on a daily basis.

According to the ATS report, automated enforcement is a proven deterrent to excessive speeding in school zones and the practice of illegally passing school buses that are stopped to let children on or off.

The report claims: In Des Moines, WA, the number of motorists speeding in front of Woodmont Elementary School decreased by 82 per cent in the first six months of the city’s school zone speed safety camera program; The city of Seattle has seen a 27 per cent reduction in the number of violations issued since their school zone speed safety camera program started in December 2012; In Georgia, the state with highest number of school bus passing violations in the US, ATS’ CrossingGuard school bus stop arm safety cameras are reducing the threat to children from illegal passes. Violations decreased between 42 and 50 per cent in three areas after cameras were installed on buses to record illegal passes.

“This report should help remind all of us of the persistent dangers that students face,” said Charles Territo, ATS Senior President of Communications, Marketing and Public Affairs. “Around the country law enforcement and school districts are looking for new ways to increase student safety. We’re proud of how our school zone speed cameras and school bus stop arm safety solutions are helping keep children safe every day.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • GHSA wants more action on distracted driving 
    May 5, 2021
    Some US state laws have not kept pace with tech, says lobby group StopDistractions.org
  • Survey finds one third of parents witness near misses outside schools
    October 8, 2014
    A detailed survey carried out by international tyre manufacturer Bridgestone, road charity Brake and internet-based market research firm YouGov has revealed that a third of primary school parents have witnessed near misses outside the school gates. More than half of parents are also worried about their child’s safety near roads on the school run, as autumn arrives and the nights get darker. The survey also revealed that: Two thirds see 4-11 year olds crossing the road without holding the hand of an a
  • Report: 'Red-light cameras have reduced crashes’
    February 27, 2013
    From the beginning, the SafeLight and SafeSpeed programs in the Louisiana city of Lafayette have met with controversy and resistance. However, a newly released report shows that the programs, which began in 2007, have reduced crashes at monitored intersections and improved the city's finances. A new contract with Redflex, the company that runs the program, will provide cameras at four new locations and will deploy two more speed vans by 2016. “We believe that SafeLight and SafeSpeed, the so-called red-light
  • New York launches work zone safety campaign
    April 10, 2014
    New York City’s Department of Transportation (DOT) has launched its new and improved Zone Watch program as part of National Work Zone Awareness week, which runs from 7-11 April. The enhanced program will include nine camera-equipped trailers designed to better document and deter reckless driving through work zones and aligns with Mayor de Blasio’s Vision Zero initiative to make streets safer. In addition to the nine custom trailers, DOT will also purchase additional camera equipment that can be mounted t