ADOT crash statistics show decrease in alcohol-related crashes3 min read

Arizona saw fewer crashes, fatal crashes, injury crashes and crash caused injuries on its roadways in 2018 compared to 2017, according to the 2018 Motor Vehicle Crash Facts
report that was released June 18.

However, despite reductions in those key areas, the number of total traffic fatalities increased by 1%.In 2018, 1,010 people killed in vehicle collisions on all of Arizona’s roads compared to 998 in 2017.T

he Arizona Department of Transportation produces the annual Motor Vehicle Crash Facts Report, which is a compilation of traffic crash reports provided to ADOT by law enforcement agencies around the state.

The report reflects crash data for all Arizona roadways, including city streets, county roads,reservation roads and state highways.The rising number of traffic fatalities can’t be solved by state agencies alone — 68% of crashes occur on roads other than state highways. In fact, real change must begin in the driver’s seat because driver behavior is a factor in more than 90% of crashes.Some of those behaviors saw better results in 2018 versus 2017, but there are still too many preventable collisions, fatalities and injuries occurring on Arizona’s roads.

The 2018 Arizona Motor Vehicle Crash Facts Report Summary is as follows with 2018 numbers first and 2017 numbers last.

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  • Total crashes: 2018: 127,056 vs 2017: 127,805
  • Fatal crashes: 2018: 916 vs 2017: 917
  • Injury crashes: 2018: 36,507 vs 2017: 38,053
  • Fatalities: 2018: 1,010 vs 2017: 998
  • Injuries: 2018: 53,376 vs 2017: 55,879
  • Alcohol-related fatalities: 2018: 261 vs 2017: 324
  • Unbuckled fatalities: 2018: 216 vs 2017: 230
  • Motorcycle fatalities: 2018: 150 vs 2017: 161
  • Bicyclist fatalities: 2018: 24 vs 2017: 32
  • Pedestrian fatalities: 2018: 245 vs 2017: 226
  • Licensed drivers: 2018: 5.3 million vs 2017: 5.2 million
  • Registered vehicles: 2018: 6 million vs 2017: 5.8 million

From 2017 to 2018,Arizona saw fewer deaths in alcohol-related crashes speeding-related crashes and those not wearing seat belts. In fact, alcohol related fatalities were reduced significantly last year,falling from 324 in 2017 to 261 in 2018.

These reductions were accomplished despite Arizona seeing its total licensed drivers grow by nearly 90,000 to 5.3 million and the total number of vehicles registered in the state surpass 6 million for the first time. The number of people killed not wearing seat belts fell for the fourth year in a row — from 258 in 2015 to 216 in 2018 — but unbuckled occupants still account for more than a fifth of all traffic fatalities. Total crashes and fatalities involving motorcycles and bicyclists also saw a decrease.

The total number of collisions involving motorcycles fell by 6%and fatalities dropped from 161 in 2017 to 150 in 2018.Collisions involving bicyclists saw a 14% decrease and fatalities at 24 fell to the lowest total since 2012.Pedestrians account for nearly a quarter of the 1,010 killed in vehicle crashes. Pedestrian-related fatalities have climbed from 155 in 2014 to 245 in 2018. Most pedestrian fatalities occur in urban areas and pedestrians should cross streets only a marked crosswalks where drivers expect to see them.

Officially, there were 11,898 drivers engaged in “distracted driving behavior” that were involved in collisions,including 42 fatal crashes.However, it is widely accepted that the number of crashes caused by distracted drivers is much higher than reported because distracted drivers that cause crashes typically don’t admit to the act or died in the crash.

The 2018 Arizona Motor Vehicle Crash Facts report and past reporters are available at azdot.com.

Larson Newspapers

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