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2007
ROADMAP TO STATE HIGHWAY SAFETY LAWS
JANUARY
2007
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report highlights gaps in Advocates' list of 15 essential and
lifesaving highway safety laws and is a call to action for Governors
and state legislators. Motor vehicle crashes continue to cause
over 43,000 deaths and 3 million injuries per year and cost the
nation over $230 billion. Passage of the 15 laws identified in
Advocates' report will help prevent these tragedies and, at the
same time, will save the states billions of dollars in economic
costs associated with highway crashes. |
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January 2004, Advocates published its first State Roadmap Report
to provide guidance to each state on where it stood relative to
the rest of the nation in implementing highway safety laws. This
year, with few new laws to report, Advocates urges states to set
an aggressive highway safety legislative agenda to stem the tide
of deaths and injuries on our nation's roadways. More than any
other action, public policy interventions change behavior and
have immediate impact on improving outcomes. The laws recommended
by Advocates save lives and save money.
Deaths from
motor vehicle crashes changed very little this past year, (43,443
in 2005, from 42,636 in 2004) and motor vehicle crashes are
still the leading cause of death for all Americans ages four
to 34, killing 119 people every day. By any definition, this
is truly a public health epidemic. If each highway safety law
is considered a vaccine to inoculate our children, our friends,
and our communities against a leading cause of death, every
law listed in our Roadmap report should be at the top of each
state's legislative agenda in 2007.
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Occupant
Protection
Seat
Belts:
Only three states, Alaska, Kentucky, and Mississippi adopted
a primary enforcement seat belt law; 25 states still need to
adopt this important law.
Motorcycle
Helmets: Currently, 30 states do not require all-rider
helmet law protection. In most of the 20 states and DC with
the optimal law, anti-helmet groups battle each year to repeal
the all-rider helmet requirement. There were six unsuccessful
repeal attempts in 2006. No state passed a motorcycle helmet
law in 2006.
Booster
Seats: While five states passed booster seat laws (AL,
HI, KS, MO, WI), only two of the states enacted Advocates'
recommended booster seat law that covers children up to age
eight (HI, KS, MO, WI). Out of 38 states and the District
of Columbia (DC) with booster seat laws, only 15 states and
DC have the recommended optimal booster seat law.
Graduated
Driver Licensing (GDL)
Minimal improvement
occurred in the enactment of laws to improve teen driver safety.
A total of 12 new laws, covering five major GDL provisions,
were passed nationwide. Only one nighttime restriction (KY),
three passenger restriction (DE, KY, MO), five 30-50 hours
supervised driving (DE, GA, IL, KY, MO), one 6-month holding
period provisions (UT), and two cell phone restrictions (NC,
WV) were passed nationwide. Only one state, Delaware, has
adopted all five of Advocates' optimal GDL provisions.
Impaired
Driving
Only two impaired driving laws recommended by Advocates were
passed among all 50 states: two High BAC laws(HI, NE).
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Please Read the Full Report to Find Out More About:
- Advocates'
Grading Criteria
- Complete
State Listing of Existing Highway Safety Laws
- Definitions
of the 15 Lifesaving Laws
- In-depth
State-by-State Highway Safety Information
- Emerging
Trends in Highway Safety Legislation
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For more
information on this report, please contact Jaime Alvis at jalvis@saferoads.org
or (202) 408-1711.
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©
2008 Advocates for Highway & Auto Safety
750 First St. NE, Suite 901, Washington, DC 20002 Phone: 202
/ 408-1711 Fax: 202 / 408-1699
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