NTSB makes 22 safety recs to improve bicycle safety
Investigators identified two primary areas that, if addressed, would have the biggest effect on reducing the number of vehicle-bicycle collisions.

The most recently released statistics show 857 bicyclists died in crashes in 2018 — a 6.3% increase over 2017 — in a year when total road fatalities went down 2.4%.
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The National Transportation Safety Board’s (NTSB) report on bicyclist safety contained 22 safety recommendations addressing issues including roadway and intersection design, collision avoidance technology, blind spot detection systems, and helmet use.
Investigators identified two primary areas that, if addressed, would have the biggest effect on reducing the number of vehicle-bicycle collisions: improving roadway infrastructure for bicyclists and enhancing their conspicuity to other road users.
“This country needs a multi-faceted approach to deal with a problem that is only getting worse: more Americans are dying in collisions involving bikes and motor vehicles,” said NTSB Chairman Robert L. Sumwalt. “If the recommendations issued in our report are adopted, more Americans on bikes will arrive at their destinations safely.”
The most recently released statistics show 857 bicyclists died in crashes in 2018 — a 6.3% increase over 2017 — in a year when total road fatalities went down 2.4%. In those cases when a collision does occur, the NTSB said helmet use was the single best way to reduce the occurrence or severity of head injuries, which are the leading cause of bicyclist fatalities.
The NTSB held a public meeting here Nov. 5, 2019, detailing the safety issues it uncovered in its first report on bicycle safety in 47 years. Ten of the safety recommendations in the report were reiterated from those previously issued as a result of earlier studies on speed-related crashes, pedestrian safety, and other investigations.
To view the 82-page report, click here.
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