Title: Road Safety Strategies - the most fruitful directions
1Road Safety Strategies- the most fruitful
directions
- Ian Johnston
- Director
- Monash University
- Accident Research Centre
2S.A. 1950-2000
3We have come a long wayBUThow well will our
current strategies serve us in the future?
4We have done most of the easy thingsANDwe are
not even talking about the hard things
5Why is there such a large gap between road safety
knowledge and action?
- fundamentally because we value personal
time/mobility far above community safety - which has created a personal transport milieu
that is ultimately incompatible with a minimal
road toll
6Exhibit 1 - Community acceptance of a quantum
of road toll
- the single largest cause of death in the first
five decades of life - we value personal safety, not community safety
- but we worry only about departures from the norm
7Exhibit 2- The human failure myth
- our system of blame
- lack of understanding of system design role
- aided and abetted by sectional interest
8Exhibit 3- The regulatory stick era
- mandated protection - seat belts - helmets
- tough laws
- intense enforcement
- high penalties
9Great valuebut
- alcohol - still 20-25
- 97 belt wearing but
- more anti-social in a smaller road toll
10Whats left in the regulatory kit bag?
- drugs? possibly
- fatigue? unlikely
- speed? absolutely, but
11Exhibit 4 - The speed management controversy
- speed or speeding?
- enforcement tolerances
- camera rage
- revenue raising
12Exhibit 5- The illusion of vehicle safety
- excellent gains in crashworthinessBUT only
modest levels of absolute protection - 30 km/h for pedestrians
- 30-50 km/h for side impacts
- 65-70 km/h for head on
13Exhibit 6 - The market dominance of power and
performance
- we design, build and market cars with performance
potential way beyond what is legal or even
feasible in traffic
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16Red Zone
17Exhibit 7 - The illusion of safe road
infrastructure
- long lengths per taxpayer mean cost premium
- little of road stock at high design standard
- almost none at high roadside safety standard
18Exhibit 8- Our failure to deal with run off
road
- 4 in 10 deaths
- alcohol, fatigue, distraction, speed
- causes not consequences
- the 8020 rule
19What have we done?
- improved alignment
- sealed shoulders
- tactile edgelines
but these are spot treatments not system wide
approaches
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22Hope beyond standards?
- NCAP
- AusRAP
- BUT consumer leadership is still in its infancy
23We need a sea change
- We have most of the benefits from the regulatory
stick - Crashworthiness gains are fewer and smaller
- We dont have the benefits of road infrastructure
safety, particularly roadside safety
24My Big
5
- two for now
- three for the future
25NOW
- Reduce urban travel speeds by 3-5 km/h
- how?
- value of forcing social change
26NOW
- Programmaticimprovement in rural roadside safety
27FUTURE
- Confront the car culture
- the way cars are marketed
- the way driving is viewed
28FUTURE
- Strengthen the institutional accountabilities
- to provide a safe infrastructure
- have to break down the blame mentality
29FUTURE
- Develop real leadership
- by government / industry
- analogous to environment?
- a social responsibility model