Transportation Safety


New study says deficient roads contribute to most highway fatalities.

Study Cites Deficient Roads as Leading Highway Hazard

"If we put as much focus on improving road safety conditions as we do in urging people not to drink and drive, we'd save thousands of lives and billions of dollars every year," said Dr. Ted Miller, principal author of the new study, "On a Crash Course: The Dangers and Health Costs of Deficient Roadways."

Impactable dock doors are designed to make open and closing easier.

Dock Design for a Changing Workforce

Following these suggestions will promote productivity out of your most experienced workers while avoiding the costs of accidents and injury.

NTSB Investigates Airbus A-330 Malfunction Incidents

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating two recent incidents in which airspeed and altitude indications in the cockpits of Airbus A-330 aircraft may have malfunctioned.

Rosenker Extols Mandatory PFDs, Training for Recreational Boating

National Transportation Safety Board Acting Chairman Mark V. Rosenker recently addressed the Western States Boating Administrators Association Conference (WSBAA) on advancing recreational boating safety on the nation's waterways.

CALSTAR provides air ambulance services throughout central and northern California.

FAA Approves IFR System for Air Ambulance Firm

"It was a tedious, difficult process but it was well worth it," said Paul G. Likens, lead pilot for CALSTAR IV in Ukiah, Calif. "Without a doubt we will be able to more safely complete the transportation of the gravely ill and victims of trauma."

CSB to Begin Chemical Release Reporting Rulemaking

The agency wants comments by Aug. 4 on how it should write a rule that will require accidental chemical releases to be reported to it or to the National Response Center.

This Allstate photo shows Montgomery County (Md.) Police Capt. Tom Didone in front of nearly 5,000 key chains representing the number of teens who die each year in car crashes.

Keys Display Highlights Teen Drivers' Risks

A recent Allstate Foundation survey of young drivers with the National Organizations for Youth Safety found 83 percent of teenagers admit they talk on a cell phone while driving, and 68 percent admitted to texting while driving.

Smith System Sets Two DOT Compliance Seminars

Being presented Aug. 13 and Sept. 24 at the Holiday Inn -- DFW Airport South in Fort Worth, the all-day seminar by instructor Tony Douglas will help attendees understand current motor carrier safety regulations.



Coast Guard Gears Up for Operation Dry Water

The awareness campaign "seeks to get impaired boaters off the water, while making them aware of the legal consequences as well as the potentially fatal effects of boating under the influence," says Al Johnson, the First Coast Guard District's recreational boating safety specialist.

railroad locomotive

Rail Crashworthiness, Maintenance Worker Rules Nearly Done

The Federal Railroad Administration's Rail Safety Advisory Committee will meet June 25 in Washington, D.C., with several of its projects about to reach the proposed or final rule stage, FRA said in a new update.

NY Railroad Ordered to Pay $300,000 for Retaliating Against Workers

OSHA has ordered the Metro North Commuter Railroad Inc., which provides commuter rail service in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, to take corrective actions and pay each of the four complainants $75,000 in punitive damages.

New Web Site Offers Education on Next-Generation 911 Industry

In general, the public assumes that when “9-1-1” is dialed—whether from a wireline, VoIP, or wireless phone—the location information will be transmitted to the correct public safety answering point, but because of an aging infrastructure designed for wireline use in the 1970s, E911 coverage is inadequate for many of today’s commonly used communication technologies.

a fireworks display

Fireworks for the Fourth Will Roll On

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration announced Friday it has renewed the American Pyrotechnics Association's exemption from the hours of service regulation for 61 member motor carriers and about 3,000 of their drivers.

no texting while driving sign

North Carolina Becomes 14th State to Ban Texting While Driving

The Governors Highway Safety Association hailed Gov. Bev Perdue's signing of her state's new law today. It means in only the first six months of 2009, the number of states with such bans in place has doubled, GHSA says.

U.S. Government Accountability Office logo

GAO Finds Problems in Government's Flu Readiness

A June 16 report summarizing three agencies with essential occupations that cannot be done remotely, including air traffic controllers, indicates the FAA in particular isn't ready and believes long-term use of respirators during a pandemic is impractical.

DOT Leaders Vow to Improve Pilots' Training

Secretary Ray LaHood and FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt joined representatives of pilots' unions and U.S. airlines to promise mentoring, a better system for checking pilots' records, and a review of existing training programs to see how to strengthen them.

a school bus

Highest NHTSA Penalty Rising to $16.9 Million

As the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration adjusts its civil penalties for inflation, the maximum available would be $16,950,000 for a series of related violations under the school bus safety provisions.

National Transportation Safety Board Chair Deborah A.P. Hersman

Obama Chooses Hersman to Chair NTSB

A board member for five years, she has been on-scene member at 15 events, including the devastating 2005 freight train chlorine spill in Graniteville, S.C.

Survey: Majority of Drivers Who Own Cell Phones Use Them Despite Risks

Most drivers who own cell phones use them while driving even though almost all of them believe it is dangerous to do so. A quarter of drivers with cell phones sends or receives text messages while driving.

NTSB Hearing Has Safety on the Radar

In its examination of how US Airways Flight 1549 was able to avoid tragedy after striking geese and safely ditching in the Hudson River on Jan. 15, the hearing will focus in part on developments in technologies such as radar for bird tracking.

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