Skip to main content

Deriving data to tackle tribal road crashes

David Crawford looks at a new initiative to deal with high crash and fatality rates on America’s tribal roads. According to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, on average two members of the country’s indigenous communities - American Indians or Alaskan Natives (AI/AN) - die every day in motor vehicle crashes. This represents a far higher percentage than that of the country’s general population. Historically, the US states with the worst records are Wyoming, South Dakota, Montana, North Dakot
June 14, 2017 Read time: 4 mins
Cutting tribal road crashes is a priority.
David Crawford looks at a new initiative to deal with high crash and fatality rates on America’s tribal roads.


According to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, on average two members of the country’s indigenous communities -  American Indians or Alaskan Natives (AI/AN) - die every day in motor vehicle crashes. This represents a far higher percentage than that of the country’s general population. Historically, the US states with the worst records are Wyoming, South Dakota, Montana, North Dakota and Arizona.

Over the three decades to 2014, numbers of fatal crashes on Native Indian reservations rose sharply compared with national trends. Both US federal agencies and tribal transportation leaders agreed that the issue had become critical, but were hampered by the paucity of research findings to support strategic policymaking and justify the necessary investments.

Among those that have responded to the need is a long-running partnership between mapping and spatial analytics specialist 50 Esri, the Geographic Information systems (GIS) Laboratory at Claremont Graduate University in California and the 584 University of Minnesota’s Roadway Safety Institute (RSI). These three are focussing on using GIS and mapping technologies to deliver much-needed improvements in  the collection and use of traffic injury data in and around tribal areas.

Another initiative is the Tribal Road Safety Project at the University of Berkeley, California’s Safe Transportation Research and Education Center (SafeTREC). Work to date has identified the need for the closer examination of the causes of road-departure collisions, one of the most frequent crash types occurring on and around tribal lands.

Claremont’s Professor Tom Horan told 1846 ITS International: “The annual number of tribal road deaths is fairly low, so it can be hard to ascertain consistent patterns. However, broadening the scope to include severe crashes as well allows for more robust analyses.

“We have used GIS to help quantitatively in analysing ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ accident spots; and qualitatively in telling the safety narrative through ‘story maps’. Our interest is in extending GIS capability to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of data analysis throughout the tribal safety planning and implementation process.

“Smaller tribal regions have limited staff capacity to spend time in learning about, and using, GIS for increasing traffic safety. Part of our work has therefore involved creating templates that they  can use to manage their own data more easily.”

Many tribes, he continued, are deploying GIS not just for transportation, but also for wider management functions, such as land use. “Multiple use is important.”

Speaking at the RSI in November 2016, SafeTREC co-director Professor David Ragland highlighted current work, in conjunction with the US National Indian Justice Center, on a new tribal road safety tool. This will enable the area-specific analysis of data derived from sources such as California’s statewide integrated traffic records system as the basis for clearly identifying traffic collisions in tribal locations.

It will also establish the scope for incorporating data from other sources. These could include tribal areas’ own law enforcement agencies (out of California’s 110 tribes, 33 have police departments), first responders and emergency management services.

One issue has proved to be jurisdictional as the integrated traffic records system lacks the necessary codings for locating events on roads owned by tribes, unlike the roads owned by other public agencies. In response, SafeTREC has developed an approach to identifying collisions on tribal areas by first geocoding them and then overlaying each with a tribal area shapefile (an Esri-developed geospatial vector data format for geographic information system software).

Another factor to emerge is that it can take twice as long for the emergency services to deliver the victims of crashes in tribal areas to their nearest trauma centres, which has highlighted the need for better communications and despatch systems.  

Looking further ahead, Ragland is considering the feasibility of developing a dedicated version of a strategic highway safety plan for use on tribal road networks. Under the US’ Federal Highway Safety Improvement Program, a strategic highway safety plan is a required state instrument which aims to secure substantial reductions in traffic deaths and serious injuries on public roads through implementing infrastructure-based upgrades.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Stronger penalties needed for texting drivers says IAM
    September 18, 2013
    Drivers convicted of causing death by dangerous driving should be given stronger and more consistent penalties, according to road safety charity the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM). An IAM analysis of eleven recent prosecutions involving mobile and smartphone use revealed that the average sentence for causing death by dangerous driving is four-and-a-half years in prison and a disqualification from driving for seven years. In all of the cases analysed, the convicted drivers were found to have lost the
  • An analysis of real-world crashes involving self-driving vehicles
    October 30, 2015
    A study by the University of Michigan performed a preliminary analysis of the cumulative on-road safety record of self-driving vehicles for three of the ten companies that are currently approved for such vehicle testing in California (Google, Delphi, and Audi). The analysis compared the safety record of these vehicles with the safety record of all conventional vehicles in the US for 2013 (adjusted for underreporting of crashes that do not involve a fatality).
  • Overture is open to the bigger picture
    June 18, 2024
    Four of the biggest players in the world of mapping have joined forces to create easy-to-use, interoperable open data that will power the next generation of maps. Kevin Borras talks collaborative interoperability with Overture Map Foundation’s Marc Prioleau and TomTom’s Willem Strijbosch
  • Econolite & Derq team up in Orange County
    September 2, 2024
    AI-powered safety solution in place at 52 signalised intersections in California