#Collisions
Study: Permanent Daylight Saving Time Good for Bambi, Bad for Roadkill Venison
A new study suggests that a shift to permanent daylight saving time would prevent 37,000 car and deer collisions on American roads every year.

Does It Have to Be Said? Getting Hit by an SUV Is Worse Than Getting Hit by a Car, Study Finds
From the “No Shit” files comes a new study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. In it, researchers reach an obvious conclusion that should surprise no one: tall, blunt-faced vehicles are far more likely to damage your sensitive, delicate body than low-riding passenger cars.
Pick that jaw up off the floor.

Pedestrian Deaths Skyrocketed Over the Past Decade, But Which Cities Have It Worse?
Late last year, we delivered some upbeat news — U.S. motorist deaths fell 1.8 percent in 2017, after two years of steep increases. This decline in fatalities came in a year where the number of miles travelled by American drivers actually increased 1.2 percent. It’s progress, albeit meager, but it’s still nowhere near the ideal of zero fatalities.
But what about people killed in vehicle collisions who weren’t riding in a car? Thousands of pedestrians and cyclists die each year at the hands of motorists, and some 5,977 met their end this way in 2017. What can we learn from the available data?

Recent Comments