Traffic laws contribute to the ongoing slaughter of pedestrians
As if the roads aren't bad enough for walking, American laws are out to get us, too.
The Governors Highway Safety Association is crunching numbers on pedestrian fatalities, and they expect the final number to be 7,508 people killed while walking in 2022. That’s the most since 1981. In their words:
Between 2020 and 2021, pedestrian deaths increased 16%, while other traffic fatalities increased 10%. More alarmingly, since 2010, pedestrian deaths have gone up a shocking 77%, compared to a 25% increase in all other traffic fatalities.
The approach of different countries to road safety might reflect their societal values and priorities. I’m not a mind reader, I’m just speculating. Consider the mindset of American and Danish laws when it comes to how the life of a pedestrian is treated in traffic safety laws.
Danish Mindset: “We’ll slow down in case you need to cross.”
The Danes adopted a proactive and protective approach toward pedestrians.
Drivers who approach a pedestrian crossing that is not regulated must adjust their speed in such a way that there is no danger or inconvenience to pedestrians who are in the crossing or are on their way into it. If necessary, the driver must stop to let pedestrians pass. Danish Traffic Act § 27
The motorist is responsible for not endangering or inconveniencing pedestrians, even outside designated crosswalks. This is a pragmatic application of the “streets are for people” slogan, giving vehicular traffic the back seat.
Here’s the part that's so un-American 🤦♂️ about the Danish Traffic Act: motorists are required to adjust their speed in such a way that there is no inconvenience to pedestrians who are are on their way into the street.
No inconvenience. Can you imagine?! Maybe a person steps off the curb, maybe they don’t. Maybe the stroller dips into the crosswalk, maybe it doesn’t. The point is that pedestrians are given the priority when there’s a potential conflict.
American Mindset: “We’ll hit the brakes when your foot hits the street.”
Motorists are typically given the right-of-way until a pedestrian begins crossing (or the baby stroller is already in harm's way). That’s because American transportation professionals have fooled themselves into thinking travel modes can be balanced. There is no such thing as multimodal balance. Something gets top priority, and in the US, the legal framework reinforces the perverse incentives of Motordom. (Read Fighting Traffic, by Peter Norton.)
American laws put a significant burden on those walking, rather than on drivers. Our traffic laws tend to prioritize the movement of vehicles, lest a motorist be forced to give vulnerable road users a hint of convenience and safety. These laws reflect the car-centric mindset that has become a cultural norm.
It’s bad enough that pedestrians are gambling with their lives at a crosswalk, guessing about the intentions and awareness of drivers. But it’s worse mid-block. It’s common for pedestrians to yield the right-of-way to vehicles if they are crossing outside a designated crosswalk. So many 4-, 6-, 8-lane arterials are more convenient to cross in between intersections, rather than walking an extra quarter or half mile to get to the other side.
Here are a few examples of the subtle language that puts the burden on the most-likely-to-die road users.
New York
New York State Vehicle and Traffic Law Section 1151:
When traffic-control signals are not in place or not in operation, the driver of a vehicle shall yield the right of way, slowing down or stopping if need be to so yield, to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within a crosswalk on the roadway upon which the vehicle is traveling, except that any pedestrian crossing a roadway at a point where a pedestrian tunnel or overpass has been provided shall yield the right of way to vehicles.
California
California Vehicle Code Section 21950:
The driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within any marked crosswalk or within any unmarked crosswalk at an intersection.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 89 Section 11:
When traffic control signals are not in place or not in operation the driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way, slowing down or stopping if need be to so yield, to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within a crosswalk marked in accordance with standards established by the department of highways if the pedestrian is on that half of the traveled part of the way on which the vehicle is traveling or if the pedestrian approaches from the opposite half of the traveled part of the way to within 10 feet of that half of the traveled part of the way on which said vehicle is traveling.
Try describing the American vs. Danish approach to a child. Break it down in plain language, and see how they react. They’ll probably want to seek shelter inside a vehicle forever and always.
If you’re talking with adults about motorist vs. pedestrian right-of-way, add in the issue of stopping distance. If a driver waits until a person has stepped into the street before slowing down, the chances are much higher of a crash. Either experts believe the laws of physics don’t apply to American drivers, or that pedestrians aren’t important enough to be protected.
“Stop, look, and listen” makes sense at a railroad crossing where the train is not stopping. But that’s not how traffic works in population clusters.
Good comparisons here. To me, though, no one’s really driving thinking of the local vehicle code about exactly when to yield. Rather, people drive with the perception of the consequences forefront in their minds. “Drive to close to the curb? Oh I might scratch my rims.” “Hit a pedestrian in the crosswalk? Oh I could lose my license and go to jail!”
Except in the US, compared to countries you mentioned like Denmark, drivers rarely face legal consequences for threatening pedestrians in crosswalks. US drivers know that the consequences *after* any potential pedestrian collision would favor the driver. I think this is the crucial difference compared to true Vision Zero countries.
Growing up in the US, it has been very illuminating to travel internationally. The value of human life is much lower than a car in most of the US, and that's absolutely the case in Rio de Janiero. Cars WILL run you over if you don't run out of their way.
Rome is like that at night, but not during the day.