Truck Accidents Statistics
2004 Truck Crash Deaths per 100,000 Population (100KP)*
| Rank |
State |
Rate of Deaths - per 100KP |
| 1 |
WYOMING |
8.09 |
| 2 |
ARKANSAS |
4.00 |
| 3 |
ALABAMA |
3.60 |
| 4 |
WEST VIRGINIA |
3.53 |
| 5 |
MISSISSIPPI |
3.48 |
| 6 |
KANSAS |
3.44 |
| 7 |
NEW MEXICO |
3.31 |
| 8 |
OKLAHOMA |
3.24 |
| 9 |
KENTUCKY |
2.99 |
| 10 |
GEORGIA |
2.81 |
| 11 |
NEBRASKA |
2.80 |
| 12 |
MISSOURI |
2.75 |
| 13 |
TENNESSEE |
2.63 |
| 14 |
SOUTH CAROLINA |
2.62 |
| 15 |
INDIANA |
2.52 |
| 16 |
VERMONT |
2.41 |
| 17 |
IOWA |
2.37 |
| 18 |
SOUTH DAKOTA |
2.33 |
| 19 |
NORTH CAROLINA |
2.32 |
| 20, 21 |
LOUISIANA/ NORTH DAKOTA |
2.21 |
| 22 |
DELAWARE |
2.17 |
| 23 |
FLORIDA |
2.17 |
| 24 |
ALASKA |
2.14 |
| 25, 26 |
TEXAS/IDAHO |
2.08 |
| 27 |
WISCONSIN |
1.94 |
| 28 |
ARIZONA |
1.85 |
| 29 |
MONTANA |
1.73 |
| 30 |
OHIO |
1.66 |
| 21 |
MAINE |
1.59 |
| 32 |
PENNSYLVANIA |
1.52 |
| 33 |
COLORADO |
1.50 |
| 34 |
MARYLAND |
1.49 |
| 35 |
OREGON |
1.47 |
| 36 |
MINNESOTA |
1.43 |
| 37 |
VIRGINIA |
1.31 |
| 38 |
UTAH |
1.30 |
| 39, 40 |
NEVADA/ILLINOIS |
1.24 |
| 41 |
CALIFORNIA |
1.16 |
| 42 |
NEW HAMPSHIRE |
1.15 |
| 43 |
MICHIGAN |
1.08 |
| 44 |
WASHINGTON |
0.92 |
| 45 |
NEW JERSEY |
0.91 |
| 46 |
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA |
0.90 |
| 47 |
NEW YORK |
0.73 |
| 48 |
CONNECTICUT |
0.71 |
| 49 |
MASSACHUSETTS |
0.64 |
| 50 |
RHODE ISLAND |
0.46 |
| 51 |
HAWAII |
0.32 |
| LEGEND |
| Disastrous Lethal Deadly Dangerous Caution |
Source: 2004 Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS),
Special Data Run, National Center for Statistics and Analysis, October
2005
- 5,374 people were killed in crashes involving large
trucks in 1998, representing thirteen percent of all traffic
fatalities. Of these, 78 percent were occupants of another vehicle, 14
percent were large truck occupants and 8 percent were non-occupants. An
additional 123,000 people were injured in those crashes. (National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, or NHTSA)
- In 1997,
large trucks made up three percent of all registered vehicles and seven
percent of all vehicle miles traveled. Yet, large trucks constituted
nine percent of all vehicles involved in fatal crashes, and four
percent of all vehicles involved in injury and property-damage-only
crashes that year. (NHTSA, 1999)
- In 1998, large trucks
were more likely to be involved in a fatal multiple-vehicle crash-as
opposed to a single-vehicle crash-than were passenger vehicles (84
percent of all large trucks in fatal crashes, compared with 62 percent
of all passenger vehicles). (NHTSA, 1999)
- One out of eight traffic crash fatalities in 1998 was the result of a collision involving a large truck. (NHTSA, 1999)
- Most
of the fatal crashes involving large trucks occur in rural areas (67
percent), during the day (68 percent) and on weekdays (80 percent).
(NHTSA, 1999)
- A loaded tractor-trailer requires 20-40
percent further stopping distance than a car. With an empty trailer,
the discrepancy between the truck and the car is even greater. (NHTSA,
1999)
- Of the trucks with out-of-service violations, more
than one-third of them have problems with brakes. (Federal Highway
Administration, 1998)
- All new tractors and trailers are
required to have anti-lock brakes. Anti-lock braking systems are
effective in preventing wheel lock and loss of steering in emergency
stopping, especially on wet roads.
- Federal regulations
allow drivers of large trucks to drive up to 16 hours a day. However,
drivers under the regulations can compile 60 hours in less than five
days by alternating ten hours of maximum permitted continuous driving
with the minimum eight hours off duty. Surveys reveal that many drivers
of large trucks violate the regulations on hours of service. Studies
also show that driver fatigue plays a role in large truck crashes and
that drivers are more likely to crash after many long hours of driving.
(IIHS) The Department of Transportation is currently considering a
revision of these hours-of-service rules.
- Almost 30
percent of large truck drivers involved in fatal crashes in 1998 had at
least one prior conviction for speeding, compared to slightly less than
20 percent of the passenger vehicle drivers in fatal crashes. (NHTSA,
1999)
- Truck Safety in the U.S. and Maine is Moving in
Reverse: Truck safety is not improving in the U.S. Data for 2005
(NHTSA) project that 5,226 people were killed in crashes involving
large trucks, the third year in a row that big truck crash deaths
continued to mount. About one of every 8 traffic crash fatalities each
year is the result of a large truck collision.
- Passenger
Vehicle Occupants Die in Record Numbers in Crashes with Big Trucks: In
two-vehicle crashes between a small passenger vehicle and a large
truck, 98 percent of the resulting deaths are the occupants of the
small passenger vehicles.
- The new study's reanalysis of
the data in the first report (using data on fatal crashes from 1993 to
1999) confirmed its results: Approximately 20% of fatal crashes involve
at least one driver who did not have a valid license at the time of the
crash. These data also show a wide variation across states in the
proportion of drivers involved in fatal crashes who lacked a valid
license-from a low of 6.1% in Maine to a high of 23.1% in New Mexico.
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