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| Dr. Daniel S. Turner |
By Dr. Daniel S. Turner
Red light running in Alabama is common, too common. It is also
dangerous, too dangerous.
The Federal Highway Administration estimates that red light running
causes 200,000 crashes per year and 1,100 deaths. Unfortunately,
Alabama is among the national leaders in these statistics.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety reviewed crash data
for a six year period in the late 1990s, and determined that Alabama
had the fifth worst red-light-running fatality rate in the United
States. In the same study, Birmingham had the sixth worst fatality
rate in the nation from red light running.
A study recently conducted by the University Transportation Center
for Alabama found similar statistics. Between 1993 and 2001, there
were 47,501 traffic crashes caused by red light running in Alabama
(about 5,500 per year). There were about 16,500 injuries and 194
fatalities in these accidents. These horrible statistics were consistent
through the entire period, varying up or down each year by less
than 5 percent. In other words, the situation is not getting any
better.
All of us have seen people run red lights, usually at a busy intersection
when they try to get through the signal before it turns red, rather
than sit and wait for the green to come around again. We are disgusted
by the careless, calloused nature of those who disregard the signal,
because they disregard the safety of others as well. Unfortunately,
these risk takers cause “T-bone” accidents, which are
very severe because most automobiles offer little protection when
hit from the side. That is why red-light running accidents have
a higher percentage of people killed and injured than normal accidents.
Red light running is not socially acceptable. More than 16,000
families were devastated in Alabama during nine years because their
loved ones were killed or injured in these wrecks. This is a problem
that needs to be stopped.
Now is the time for stronger legislation for violators, for additional
enforcement efforts, and perhaps for automated enforcement (cameras),
which has been shown to be very effective in many cities in the
United States in reducing red light running and the crashes they
cause.
Yes, it is time to seriously consider cameras for enforcement.
They are legal and quite effective in curtailing red-light running,
and in reducing crashes. The cities of Tuscaloosa, Mobile and Montgomery
have all expressed interest in using cameras to help reduce red
light running. If cameras had been in place, surely the 16,500 people
injured or killed in such crashes in our state would have saved
a lot of pain and suffering.
Dr. Daniel S. Turner is a professor of civil and
environmental engineering at The University of Alabama and his research
focuses on traffic safety and transportation management. Turner
also is the director of the University
Transportation Center for Alabama (UTCA), which conducts transportation
education, research and technology transfer activities using faculty
members and students from The University of Alabama, The University
of Alabama at Birmingham, and The University of Alabama in Huntsville.
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