Skip to main content

ITSA2023: 'What is your plan to save lives?' Laura Chace asks ITS industry

Technology needs to be deployed - and this week's FCC decision creates 'momentum'
By Adam Hill April 25, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Laura Chace on big screen at the opening of ITS America Conference & Expo 2023 in Grapevine, TX

ITS America president & CEO Laura Chace urged the ITS sector to consider carefully how they would help to make US roads safer.

Around 40,000 people die on US roads each year.

"What is your plan to save lives?" Chace asked delegates at a packed first plenary session at ITS America's Conference & Expo in Grapevine, TX. "We're all in this together."

She welcomed the Federal Communications Commission decision to grant a joint waiver request to deploy cellular Vehicle to Everything (C-V2X) technology - which allows vehicles to communicate with one another and with road infrastructure - in the upper 20 MHz part of the 5.9 GHz band. 

This creates "new momentum to implement life-saving technology", she said. "All of our great technology is only going to be useful if we can deploy it."

She referenced a recent fatal crash, in which a 13-year old girl from Chace's home area, died.

"Technology could have prevented that crash and so many others," she suggested.

Also speaking at the plenary, Robin Hutcheson, administrator of the USDoT's Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, spoke of her organisation's "mission to reduce crashes, injuries and fatalities with large trucks and buses".

She also announced USDoT's Intersection Safety Challenge, which calls on companies to "help develop safety solutions for intersections".

They need to be "affordable enough to allow deployment at scale across the nation".

"The crisis on our nation's roadways is only solvable if we work together," she concluded.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    February 1, 2012
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr
  • Is GIS modelling the answer to the implications of age?
    January 26, 2012
    Geoff Zeiss of Autodesk talks about the convergence going on between GIS and other software systems which will revolutionise the design and construction of nations' utilities. The issue is that we're getting old. But forget the discovery of body hair in places it never used to be, whether or not to dye, contact lenses versus glasses - in fact, put aside entirely the decision to age gracefully or outrageously; the personal implications pale next to the effects on wider society. Faced with the problem of how
  • In-vehicle intersection violation Warning system
    January 31, 2012
    Mike Schagrin, ITS Joint Program Office, RITA, and John Harding, NHTSA, describe US progress towards an in-vehicle Intersection Violation Warning system. In 2008, there were 37,261 fatalities on US roadways. Of these, 7,772, some 20.8 per cent of the total, were defined as intersection crashes or intersection-related crashes. Through a multi-agency research initiative led by the Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA), the US Department of Transportation (USDOT) has developed a prototype In
  • Digital twin coming to Moscow 
    November 25, 2021
    Data from the project to be used when testing unmanned vehicles and V2I connection