NTSB Chair Homendy Calls for New Approach to Highway Safety

9/13/2021

NTSB Chair Jennifer L. Homendy speaking to the Governors Highway Safety Association conference in Denver Monday.

​NTSB Chair Jennifer L. Homendy speaking to the Governors Highway Safety Association conference in Denver Monday (NTSB photo by Leah Walton).​

​​DENVER (Sept. 13, 2021) — National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer L. Homendy is calling for a fundamental change in the nation’s approach to highway safety in the face of increasing crash and fatality numbers.

In a keynote address to the Governors Highway Safety Association conference today, Homendy said the “Safe System” approach to highway safety embraced by other nations has led to reduced fatalities and crashes. Moving to a Safe System approach is on the NTSB’s Most Wanted List of transportation improvements. More information on Safe System: https://go.usa.gov/xMjP8

“The carnage on our roads has to stop. You know it, and I know it,” Homendy told safety advocates Monday. “The current approach, which favors automobiles and punishes only drivers for crashes, is clearly not working. If we are going to get to zero fatalities, we will have to do something different.” Link to speech here: https://go.usa.gov/xMjwT

​Homendy, sworn in last month as the 15th chair of the NTSB, has long championed the Safe System approach. Homendy is hosting a series of roundtable discussions on the approach this year. More information on series of roundtables: https://go.usa.gov/xMjp9

Homendy said national highway safety numbers from last year showed we are going in the wrong direction: Alcohol-involved crashes up 9 percent, speeding-related crashes up 11 percent, motorcycle fatalities up 9 percent and occupant ejections up 20 percent.

“The Safe System approach is a shift in the way we think about traffic safety,” Homendy said. “We’ve spent decades planning, designing, building, and operating our road system for the efficient movement of people and goods, rather than safety. And we’ve spent decades developing countermeasures and behavioral interventions that are targeted at individuals, rather than the entire system. Let’s take speeding. Does the responsibility for speeding just fall on the driver or did the system, as a whole, fail that driver? Did the road design encourage high speeds? How about ill-conceived federal guidance that leads to ever-increasing speed limits in states? How about states which fail to give local authorities the ability to set lower speed limits? Vehicle manufacturers who design vehicles that can exceed 100 mph or that have no speed limiters. The Safe System approach considers all this and more.”

To report an incident/accident or if you are a public safety agency, please call 1-844-373-9922 or 202-314-6290 to speak to a Watch Officer at the NTSB Response Operations Center (ROC) in Washington, DC (24/7).


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