Road Safety Fundamentals: Concepts, Strategies

Road Safety Fundamentals: Concepts, Strategies

Road Safety Fundamentals Concepts, Strategies, and Practices that Reduce Fatalities and Injuries on the Road Notice This document is disseminated under the sponsorship of the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) in the interest of information exchange. The U.S. Government assumes no liability for the use of the information contained in this document. The U.S. Government does not endorse products or manufacturers. Trademarks or manufacturers’ names appear in this report only because they are considered essential to the objective of the document. Quality Assurance Statement The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) provides high-quality information to serve Government, industry, and the public in a manner that promotes public understanding. Standards and policies are used to ensure and maximize the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of its information. FHWA periodically reviews quality issues and adjusts its programs and processes to ensure continuous quality improvement. This document can be downloaded for free in full or by individual unit at: https://rspcb.safety.fhwa.dot.gov/rsf/ 1. Report No. 2. Government Accession No. 3. Recipient’s Catalog No. FHWA-SA-18-003 4. Title and Subtitle 5. Report Date Road Safety Fundamentals: November 2017 Concepts, Strategies, and Practices that Reduce Fatalities and Injuries on the Road 7. Author(s) 6. Performing Organization Code Lead Editor: Daniel Carter, P.E., Senior Research Associate Unit Authors: 8. Performing Organization Report No. Unit 1: Dan Gelinne, Program Coordinator, UNC Highway Safety Research Center Unit 2: Bevan Kirley, Research Associate, UNC Highway Safety Research 9. Performing Organization Name Center and Address Unit 3: Carl Sundstrom, P.E., Research Associate, UNC Highway Safety University of North Carolina, Research Center Highway Safety Research Center Unit 4: Raghavan Srinivasan, Ph.D., Senior Transportation Research Engineer; Daniel Carter 10. Work No. (TRAIS) Unit 5: Daniel Carter; Jennifer Palcher-Silliman, Communications Manager, UNC Highway Safety Research Center Layout and Graphics: Graham Russell, Graphic Designer, UNC Highway 11. Contract or Grant No. Safety Research Center Technical Editors: Jennifer Palcher-Silliman; Patty Harrison, 13. Type of Report and Period Covered Communications Specialist, UNC Highway Safety Research Center; Text book Caroline Mozingo, Senior Manager of Communications, Education and Outreach, UNC Highway Safety Research Center 12. Sponsoring Agency Name and Address 14. Sponsoring Agency Code Federal Highway Administration Office of Safety 1200 New Jersey Ave., SE Washington, DC 20590 15. Supplementary Notes The project manager for the textbook was Felix H. Delgado, P.E., FHWA Office of Safety 16. Abstract This book provides an introduction to the fundamental concepts of road safety. The book’s goal is to equip the reader with a broad base of knowledge about road safety. Thus, the focus is in communicating concepts rather than providing instruction in detailed analysis procedures. The audience for this book is two-fold. First, this is intended for those whose job addresses some aspect of road safety, particularly in a public agency setting. Second, this book is intended for professors and students in a university setting. This book seeks to lay the foundation of road safety knowledge regardless of a particular discipline. Professionals with a background in engineering, planning, public health, law enforcement, and other disciplines will benefit from the concepts presented here. 17. Key Words 18. Distribution Statement road safety, road safety management process, site-level management, system No restrictions level management, human behavior, safety performance measures, road safety data, multidisciplinary approaches 19. Security Classif. 20. Security Classif. 21. No. of Pages 22. Price (of this report) (of this report) 188 FREE Unclassified Unclassified Form DOT F 1700.7 (8-72) Reproduction of completed pages authorized TABLE OF CONTENTS UNIT 1 Foundations of Road Safety Chapter 1: Context of Road Safety Chapter 2: Road Safety Through the Years Chapter 3: Multidisciplinary Approaches Chapter 4: Road Users UNIT 2 Human Behavior and Road Safety Chapter 5: Understanding Human Behavior Chapter 6: Changing Human Behavior UNIT 3 Measuring Safety Chapter 7: Importance of Safety Data Chapter 8: Types of Safety Data Chapter 9: Improving Safety Data Quality UNIT 4 Solving Safety Problems Chapter 10: Road Safety Management Process Chapter 11: Site-Level Safety Management Chapter 12: System-Level Safety Management UNIT 5 Implementing Road Safety Efforts Chapter 13: Who Does What Chapter 14: Road Safety Research Chapter 15: Strategic Communications Chapter 16: Advancing Road Safety ROAD SAFETY FUNDAMENTALS 1 INTRODUCTION This book provides an introduction to many of the fundamental concepts of road safety. These concepts cover areas such as the nature of road safety issues, human behavior in the road environment, and identifying and solving road safety problems. The goal of this book is to equip the reader with a broad base of knowledge about road safety. Thus, the focus of the text is in communicating concepts rather than providing instruction in detailed analysis procedures. The audience for this book is two-fold. First, this is intended for those whose job addresses some aspect of road safety, particularly in a public agency setting. This is especially relevant for individuals who have been tasked with managing road safety but who do not have formal training in road safety management. In order to show practical applications of each road safety concept, this book contains many examples that demonstrate the concepts in real-world settings. Second, this book is intended for professors and students in a university setting who can use individual units or this entire book to add an emphasis on road safety as part of graduate- level work. Each unit provides learning objectives and sample exercises to assist professors as they incorporate content into their courses. As a final note, this book is intended to lay the foundation of road safety knowledge regardless of a particular discipline. Professionals with a background in engineering, planning, public health, law enforcement, and other disciplines will benefit from the concepts presented here. 2 ROAD SAFETY FUNDAMENTALS ABOUT THIS BOOK This book is divided into five units according to major topics of road safety knowledge. Each unit is divided into multiple chapters that address the primary concepts of the unit. The beginning of each unit provides a list of learning objectives that indicate what the reader will be able to understand, describe, identify, or otherwise do by the end of the unit. Each chapter presents call-out boxes, glossary definitions, and references as shown below. Secretary Hoover called a second to coordinate crash research conference for March 1926. During nationwide. The HRB played a major Uniform A the interim between the two part in subsequent efforts to reduce Vehicle Code B Call-out conferences, a special committee the consequences of crashes.8 A code covering Glossary drew up a model “Uniform Vehicle registration and boxes are titling of vehicles, definitions are Code” covering registration and Federal Government Role B titling of vehicles, licensing of in Highway Development licensing of provided drivers, and provided along drivers, and operation of vehicles on operation of The growing use of motor vehicles throughout the the highways. The code incorporated vehicles on the side of the the best features of the numerous during the 1920s was mirrored the highways. book to provide and varied State laws then on by the expansion of the Federal page. These the statute books. The second Government’s role in funding and examples conference approved this code building roads. In its early form, the 8 correspond to and recommended it to the State Office of Public Roads was organized of concepts Source: America’s words in bold legislatures as the basis for uniform under the U.S. Department of Highways, 1776-1976: presented in motor vehicle legislation. Agriculture, playing a large role in A History of the face in the page funding roadways within national Federal-Aid Program. Studies following this 1926 Federal Highway the chapter. parks and forests. Administration C content. conference concluded that (U.S. Government determining the causes of crashes Following the Federal Aid Road Act Printing Office, Washington D.C., was far more difficult than they had of 1916, this office would become 1976). presumed. The problem warranted the Bureau of Public Roads (BPR), a sustained program of research charged with working cooperatively by a national organization. The with State highway departments on C Conference agreed, and the Highway road projects. Work continued on References Research Board (HRB) organized the expansion of highways across the Committee on Causes and the country, and between 1921 and to source Prevention of Highway Accidents 1939, the distance of paved roads material are Balanced Design for Safety provided along In the 1920s and 1930s, it was good Increasing concern for road safety led many the side of the engineering practice to design new highway engineers to worry about this A highways as much as possible in long inconsistency between posted speed limits page. These straight lines or “tangents.” When it and safe design speed on curves. In 1935, became necessary to change direction, highway engineer Joseph Barnett of the BPR are numbered the engineer laid out a circular curve, proposed that all new rural roads conform to the radius of which he selected to fit an “assumed design speed,” a comfortable consecutively the ground with the least construction top speed for drivers outside of urban areas. cost, but which could not be less than a With its adoption by American Association through the unit certain minimum fixed by department of State Highway Officials in 1938, Barnett’s policy. In practice, engineers made the “balanced design” concept became a and correspond curves sharper than this minimum when permanent feature of U.S. roadway design. it was cheaper to do so, but with little Today, standards for designing curves, to numbers consistency.

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