WASHINGTON, D.C. –
Drivers are addicted to speed, and we unfortunately see the deadly results
every day on roadways across the country. The auto industry has made
tremendous gains making vehicles more crashworthy, but this new study from AAA and the Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety (IIHS) shows how the impulse to speed and the trend of
rising speed limits are canceling out those safety advances, with deadly
consequences. Even small increases in speed can cause major, traumatic
injuries and turn survivable crashes into lethal ones. During the pandemic,
this problem has only worsened and our roadways have turned into speedways.
Speeding is
especially deadly for teen drivers. They are more likely than any other age
group to die in speeding-related crashes, as confirmed by our report released this week with Ford Motor Company
Fund. Most teen drivers do not start out speeding, but as they gain
confidence behind the wheel, their travel speeds are likely to increase and
be exacerbated by other drivers on the road. For teens, keeping up with
traffic – even if it means going well over the speed limit – becomes the
norm. Therefore, as speed limits rise, so too does the risk for our most
inexperienced drivers.
The AAA/IIHS study
makes clear the deadly consequences of higher speed limits and reaffirms
the need to comprehensively address the issue of speeding on our
roadways.
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