One of my 10 safety focuses in 2017 is driving improvement.
This link hit home this weekend, as a good friend was in the pickup and is fighting for his life. You all are on the road for hours, and see these accidents probably weekly on 81, 95, 70, 78 and 76.
http://www.your4state.com/news/maryland/both-lanes-shut-down-due-to-accident-on-i-70-eb/659575170
Motor Vehicle Deaths in 2016 Estimated to be Highest in Nine Years
Open any newspaper, log on to your local news web site or tune into the evening news and it’s obvious we have a problem:
If it seems like you’re hearing about a lot of fatal vehicle crashes, it’s because you are. Preliminary 2016 data from the National Safety Council estimates that as many as 40,000 people died in motor vehicle crashes last year, a 6 percent increase over 2015 and a 14 percent increase over 2014. That is the most dramatic two-year increase in 53 years.
The preliminary estimate indicates 2016 was the deadliest year on the nation’s roads since 2007. An estimated 4.6 million roadway users were injured seriously enough to require medical attention in 2016, and estimated cost to society was $432 billion.
An NSC survey released Feb. 15 provides a glimpse at the risky things drivers are doing that contributed to the higher number of fatalities and injuries. Although 83 percent of drivers surveyed believe driving is a safety concern, a startling number say they are comfortable speeding (64 percent), texting either manually or through voice controls (47 percent), driving while impaired by marijuana (13 percent) or driving after they feel they’ve had too much alcohol (10 percent).
Motor vehicle fatality estimates are subject to slight increases and decreases as data mature. NSC uses data from the National Center for Health Statistics, an arm of the CDC, so that deaths occurring within 100 days of the crash and on both public and private roadways – such as parking lots and driveways – are included in the council’s estimates
Copy and paste (not while you are driving) link and take the quiz.
Take a screen shot of your score at the end and send it to me.
Safe travels!