Roads cleared out at the end of March and Peter North Jenna Jameson - Priceless (1995)through May as the coronavirus outbreak shut down cities. With fewer commutes and most businesses closed, freeways and major thoroughfares were eerily empty. A cross-country drive hit a record fast time: under 27 hours.
But rather than creating a peaceful and calm presence on America's roadways, the unprecedented emptiness led to riskier driving behavior. It was in some ways less safe on the roads than before, and that's considering that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration recorded 9,378 people killed in speeding incidents in 2018 alone.
Some telling data points come this week from Samsara, a sensor and analytics company plugged into 500,000 vehicles (including some with AI dash cams) that found a 20 percent increase in "severe speeding" during the main pandemic shutdown. Severe indicates drivers going more than 11 mph over the limit. Sensor data also recorded a 40 percent increase in speeding in cities. Looking at the five cities of Atlanta, NYC, Chicago, Houston, and San Francisco speeding was double the nationwide 20 percent increase in April.
Now that more vehicles are returning to the road, the dangerous fast driving is returning to pre-COVID-19 levels. It's expected to dip back down to its usual baseline.But still, it highlights the counterintuitive behaviors on cleared-out streets.
SAE International, an association researching mobility and automotive safety standards, also found the new coronavirus and the shutdowns affected how we got around, like how we nearly stopped using public transit and how more people bought bicycles. The data also demonstrated that it was generally less safe on the streets.
While the number of car crashes went down with fewer cars on the road, an SAE International analysis out last week from head of new mobility Annie Chang and McGill University associate professor Luis Miranda-Moreno found the severity of crashes, including fatal and injury-causing crashes, increased. Looking at New York City data, the researchers found there was a smaller drop in the number of deadly crashes during social distancing compared to the drop of non-fatal incidents. Severe crashes went down the most for pedestrians (-70 percent), followed by motorists (-60 percent), and then, bicyclists (-50 percent).
SEE ALSO: It took a coronavirus outbreak for self-driving cars to become more appealingIn Connecticut, that same severe speeding Samsara noted was in full effect: 90 percent more cars were driving 15 mph above the speed limit. The state saw a 40 percent increase in fatal crashes compared to this time period last year. Traffic volume was half of usual, too.
Hopefully slow streets, like those that popped up in New York City and California's Bay Area dedicated to pedestrians and bicycles during social distancing, can stay in place even as drivers return to the streets.
Topics COVID-19
The Morning News Roundup for October 3, 2014NFT creator agrees to pay $6.1 million settlement in SEC caseHow to optimize your Instagram profile for searchCensoring Terry SouthernThe Opposite of Icarus21 best crime documentaries on Netflix in 2023Amusing Myself: An Interview with Bob Neuwirth by Gary LippmanIn Search of the Lost Trail'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 30, 2023The Opposite of IcarusBest telescope deal: Get the Celestron NexStar 8SE telescope for 23% offLearning to SwearNothing Happened: An Interview with Joseph O’Neill by Jonathan LeeReunion by Sadie SteinThe Notion of FamilyThe Morning News Roundup for October 1, 2014The Morning News Roundup for October 10, 2014The Morning News Roundup for September 22, 2014Kids Tossing Guns, Phenomenal HardButt dialing on Instagram is a real problem, please beware “Le Pont Mirabeau” by Guillaume Apollinaire Honey! Who Would’ve Thought? The Paris Review’s Latest Cameo—in the Hands of Ethan Hawke Ben Lerner on John Ashbery “The Valley of the Dolls” at Fifty Malick Sidibé’s Iconic Photos of Nightlife in Bamako, Mali Read an Interview with Paul Beatty, NBCC Fiction Winner An Interview with Jonathan Lee Dorothy Parker’s House The Night Men with Their Rude Carts, and Other News by Dan Piepenbring This Disturbing 1936 Cartoon Tells Springtime’s Origin Story Poem: “After the Loss of a Limb,” Elena Wilkinson, 1974 What If Technology Actually Helped Writers? Memento Mori: How Salesmen Sold Tombstones in the 1920s Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Puzzle Deadline Extended on Grounds of Extreme Difficulty! Three Paintings and Two Sculptures by Izumi Kato Staff Picks: Spike Lee, Gerald Murnane, Robin Wasserman James Tate, 1943–2015 by Jeffery Gleaves On the Hundredth Anniversary of Henry James’s Death
2.5526s , 10132.2421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Peter North Jenna Jameson - Priceless (1995)】,Unobstructed Information Network