Title: Safety Performance Measures
1Safety Performance Measures
Thomas M. Welch, P.E. State Transportation Safety
Engineer Office of Traffic and Safety Iowa
Department of Transportation 515
239-1267 tom.welch_at_dot.iowa.gov
Midwest / Iowa Highway Safety Data
Summit September 15-16, 2008
22003 Shared National Goal AASHTO, FHWA, NHTSA,
GHSA, FMCSA
- Reduce fatalities by 1/3 by 2008 from 43,000
to 29,000/ year - Reduce the national fatality ratefrom 1.48 to
1.0 - One state at a time
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4Fatality Rates Can Be Misleading
2.12
SD
1.27
CA
South Dakotas roads are safer than Californias
5This phenomenon is known asSimpsons Paradox
62006 Fatality Rates
- National Iowa Difference
- Overall 1.41 1.40 None
- Rural
- Roads 2.30 1.80
-22 - Urban
- Streets 0.95 0.80
-16
7Expected Fatality Rates (Weighted by Distribution
of VMT) Compared to Actual Fatality Rates
(0.76)
(0.16)
(1.26)
(0.54)
0.64
(0.65)
(0.46)
(0.39)
(0.30)
(0.39)
(0.25)
0.06
0.19
(0.08)
0.13
(0.23)
(0.07)
(0.02)
(0.52)
(0.17)
(0.17)
(0.17)
0.81
(0.57)
(0.29)
(0.02)
0.02
0.05
0.23
0.29
(0.33)
0.10
0.19
(0.15)
0.21
0.01
0.29
DC
0.17
(0.06)
0.79
0.23
0.30
0.44
(0.18)
0.12
0.46
0.23
0.34
0.19
0.41
(0.10)
Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands
8Iowa Crash Fatalities5-Year Running Averages
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11State of IowaFatalities and Major Injuries
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13Traffic Safety Performance Measures for
States and Federal Agencies
Jim Hedlund, Highway Safety North Preusser
Research Group, Inc.
GHSA 2008 Annual Meeting Scottsdale, AZ Sept. 8,
2008
14Need for Safety Performance Measures
- Required for each state traffic safety activities
(23CFR 1200.20(a)(1) - (a) A Performance Plan, containing the following
elements - (1) A list of objectives and measurable highway
safety goals, within the National Priority
Program Areas and other program areas, based on
the highway safety programs identified by the
State during the processes under paragraph (a)(2)
of this section. Each goal must be accompanied by
at least one performance measure that enables the
State to track progress, from specific baseline
152007 US DOT NHTSA Program Audit Reported
- Better performance measures are needed to fully
gauge the impact that future Federal resources
will have on State programs.
162007 GAO Raised the Question (Government
Accountability Office)
- In some states, performance measures do not
always contain sufficient detail or do not
explain the specific actions that the state will
take to achieve final targeted outcomes. What
steps, if any, can NHTSA take to improve the
quality of state performance measures?
17- Theses examples illustrate the importance of
establishing a common set of performance measures
that cover key traffic safety program areas and
that will be used by all States and NHTSA (as
wells as other federal agencies dealing with
traffic safety.)
18Objective
- Develop voluntary guidance on a minimum set of
performance indicators that could be used by
federal, State, and local governments in the
development and implementation of their highway
safety plans and programs.
- Key features of performance measures
- Consensus federal and State
- Both general and specific subject area measures
- Both outcome (bottom line) and intermediate
- Timeliness, accuracy, feasibility, costs and
benefits
19Project Organization
- PRG Contractor
- Jim Hedlund, Highway Safety North Project
Director - GHSA Subcontractor
- Barbara Harsha and staff
- liaison with States
- facilities for panel meetings
- Expert panel advice and counsel
20Expert panel
- 5 NHTSA Chakiris, Weiser Geraci, Michael, Oates
- 5 State GRs Depue MO, Murphy CA, Poole TN,
Porter/Lind WA, Sandoval NM - 1 State DOT Welch IA
- 1 FHWA Halladay
- 1 IACP McMahon
- 1 State data expert Presbury MD
- 1 TRB perf measure committee chair Neumann
- 5 research Dellinger CDCP, Fell PIRE, McCartt
IIHS, Shinar Israel, Weiss PAR - 1 wild card McNamara
21Purposes of Performance Measures
- Set goals
- Allocate resources
- Connect goals to actions
- Monitor and evaluate progress
- Communicate results
22Criteria for Performance Measures
- Important and valid substantial impact on
traffic safety - Uniform across States (for measures to be
aggregated) - Sensitive to actual State-level trends
- Long-term can be used for years
- Acceptable to stakeholders, consensus
- Operational definition clear how to obtain
measure - Accurate, reliable, repeatable
- Understandable easy to communicate to public
- Timely
- Reasonable cost for value of information
- Not too many stick to most important
23Types Of Performance Measures Considered
- Outcome measures
- Crashes, injuries, fatalities
- Behavior measures
- Observed (belt use)
- Self-reported (survey)
- Activity measures
- Law enforcement (citations)
- Media
- Other key activities
24State Uses for Performance Measures
- Outcome measures
- Set goals in highway safety plans
- Track and report progress
- Call these core outcome measures
- Behavior and activity measures
- No goals required in highway safety plans, except
for seat belt use - Track and report progress
- Establish necessary data collection and reporting
systems
25NHTSA Uses for Performance Measures
- Use the core outcome measures as an integral part
of reporting to Congress and the public
26State Responsibilities
- Set performance goals for each core outcome
measure track and report on goals and progress
in annual highway safety plans and annual
reports - Track and report on progress for each behavior
and activity measure report to NHTSA annually - Collect, analyze, and report data on all measures
- may require funds to establish and operate data
collection and reporting systems that are not now
in place
27NHTSA Responsibilities
- In cooperation with the States, develop uniform
definitions, protocols, and reporting
requirements for each performance measure - Assist States in establishing necessary data
collection and reporting systems that are not
now in place
28Potential Areas for Performance Measures
- Overall
- Seat belt use
- Child occupants
- Alcohol
- Speeding and aggressive driving
- Motorcyclists
- Young drivers
- Older drivers
- Pedestrians
- Bicyclists
29Initial Performance Measure Sources
- State Strategic Highway Safety Plans
- State HSPs (402 plans)
- GHSA highway safety plan template for States
- PIRE report Traffic Safety Measures for States
and Communities July 2004 - GASB performance measures for States
- Suggestions from NHTSA, States, expert panel
- Information summarized in final report
30Measures in the Minimum Set
- 10 core outcome measures
- 1 core behavior measure
- 3 activity measures
- 4 areas with measures under development
- Numbered by type
- A activity,
- B behavior,
- C core outcome
- Data source in parentheses
- e.g. (FARS), (survey)
31Overall measures
- Core outcome measures
- C-1)
- Number of traffic fatalities (FARS)
- C-2)
- Number of persons seriously injured in traffic
crashes (State crash data files) - C-3)
- Fatalities/VMT (FARS, FHWA)
32Seat Belt Measures
- Core outcome measure
- C-4) Number of unrestrained passenger vehicle
occupant fatalities, all seat positions (FARS)
- Core behavior measures
- B-1) Observed belt use (passenger vehicles, front
seat outboard) (survey) - Activity measure
- A-1) Number of seat belt citations issued during
grant-funded enforcement activities (grant
activity reporting)
33Alcohol Measures
- Core outcome measure
- C-5) Number of fatalities in crashes involving a
driver or motorcycle operation with BAC .08
(FARS) - Activity measures
- A-2) Number of impaired driving arrests made
during grant- funded enforcement activities
(grant activity reporting)
34Speeding And Aggressive Driving Measures
- Core outcome measure
- C-6) Number of speeding-related fatalities (FARS)
- Activity measure
- A-3) Number of speeding citations issued during
grant-funded enforcement activities (grant
activity reporting)
35Motorcyclist Measures
- Core outcome measure
- C-7) Number of motorcyclist fatalities (FARS)
- C-8) Number of unhelmeted motorcyclist fatalities
(FARS)
36Young Driver Measures
- Core outcome measure C-9)
- Number of drivers age 20 or younger involved in
fatal crashes (FARS)
37Pedestrian Measures
- Core outcome measure
- C-10)
- Number of pedestrian fatalities (FARS)
38No Measures Proposed
- Child occupants
- Aggressive driving (aside from speeding)
- Older drivers
- Bicyclists
39Measures Under Development NHTSA-GHSA
- Traffic injury data
- best way to report serious injuries using each
States current crash data file - move toward common and improved definitions,
reporting - Telephone or similar surveys
- develop and test basic survey questions on seat
belt use, impaired driving, speeding - States will begin reporting in 2010 HSPs and
Annual Reports - Speed monitoring (with FHWA)
- develop guidance for speed reporting
- work toward establishing speed monitoring and
reporting systems
40Measures Under Development NHTSA-GHSA
Law enforcement activities
- report citations and arrests from grant-funded
activities for alcohol, seat belts, and speeding
in 2010 HSPs and Annual Reports - extend reporting as technologies and systems are
developed and implemented (electronic citations) - current NHTSA contract to develop more
comprehensive performance measures for
enforcement activities (PIRE)
41Report Available from NHTSA or GHSA
- Traffic Safety Performance Measures for States
and Federal Agencies
www.ghsa.org/
42 The care of human life and
happiness is the first and only
objective of good government. -Thomas Jefferson
43Safety Performance Measures
Thomas M. Welch, P.E. State Transportation Safety
Engineer Office of Traffic and Safety Iowa
Department of Transportation 515
239-1267 tom.welch_at_dot.iowa.gov
Midwest / Iowa Highway Safety Data
Summit September 15-16, 2008