City Streets a Mortal Threat to Pedestrians
Transportation groups say states aren't spending enough to improve safety.
Nov. 11, 2009— -- Ditching the car in favor of walking may be good for your health, but it also can be deadly — especially if you live in one of Florida's major metro areas.
A report released this week finds more than 43,000 pedestrians nationwide have died this decade on roads the authors complain don't provide adequate crosswalks and other safety features.
The report, by Transportation for America and the Surface Transportation Policy Partnership, says states simply aren't spending enough to improve pedestrian safety and accessibility.
Less than 1.5 percent of total transportation funds are spent on such measures, even though pedestrians comprise 11.8 percent of all traffic deaths and nearly the same percentage of all trips taken.
"As Congress prepares to rewrite the nation's transportation laws, this report is yet another wake-up call showing why it is so urgent to update our policies and spending priorities," said James Corless, director of Transportation for America.
The report, Dangerous By Design: Solving the Epidemic of Preventable Pedestrian Deaths (and Making Great Neighborhoods), ranks the 10 most dangerous metropolitan areas for pedestrians. The top four are in Florida.
The 10 most dangerous metropolitan areas for pedestrians in 2007-2008 were Orlando, Tampa, Miami and Jacksonville, Florida; Memphis, Tennessee; Raleigh, North Carolina; Louisville, Kentucky; Houston; Birmingham, Alabama; and Atlanta.
The three safest cities were Seattle; Portland, Oregon; and Minneapolis-St. Paul.
The authors compiled the list after gathering data from all 360 metropolitan areas in the United States. The Surface Transportation Policy Partnership sorted the data using the Pedestrian Danger Index, an equation that takes a metropolitan area's population and divides it by the number of fatalities in that area.
Orlando came out on top with 2.9 pedestrian deaths per 100,000 residents. That's despite the fact just 1.3 percent of the area's residents walk to work, the report notes.
Many of the deaths occurred on streets that have few provisions for pedestrians, cyclists or those in wheelchairs. According to the report, of the 9,168 pedestrian fatalities in 2007-2008 where the location of the accident is known, more than 40 percent were killed in a spot where there was no crosswalk.
The report notes that only one in 10 pedestrian deaths occurred in a crosswalk. Sixty percent occurred on an arterial road where the speed limit was 40 mph or higher.