Transportation Safety


NHSTA to Set Minimum Sound Levels for EVs, Hybrids

NHTSA Administrator David Strickland said the proposed rule gives manufacturers flexibility to design different sounds for different makes and models.

Study Finds Digital Billboards Distract Drivers

Published in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention, the study concludes these colorful, rapidly changing billboards attract and hold drivers' gazes far longer than a threshold previous studies have shown to be dangerous.

Iowa DOT Traffic Cameras Zoom in on Safety

Instead of revenue generation, traffic cameras should be used to enforce street safety, according to Iowa officials.

No Leak Found from Grounded Drillship's Tanks

A team of five people boarded Shell's Kulluk ship, grounded since Dec. 31 on the southeast coast of Sitkalidak Island, Alaska. They reported it is firmly aground and found no signs of environmental impact.

NTSB Using 3D Technology at Accident Scenes

Laser scanning can accurately depict a scene in three dimensions, Joseph Kolly, director of the agency’s Office of Research and Engineering, reported Jan. 1 in a post on the NTSB blog.

Traffic Safety Research Center Opens in Beijing

AB Volvo, one of five partners involved in the China Sweden Research Centre for Traffic Safety, said pilot projects already are under way.

AAA Backs Ignition Interlock Recommendation

New Year's Day tops the list of most deadly day for alcohol-related fatalities.

DUI Patrols Nationwide Looking for Impaired Drivers

The New Year's holiday brings a spike in DUI arrests and, in many states, in alcohol-related crashes.



HUMS Contract to Improve Coast Guard Rescue Flights' Safety

Honeywell recently announced it has been awarded the $4.8 million contract to install the health and usage monitoring systems in all 42 of the U.S. Coast Guard's MH-60T helicopters.

China Successfully Tests Longest High-Speed Rail Line

The Xinhua news agency reported the Dec. 22 test along a 415-mile stretch of the line's northern section went smoothly. The public can begin using the 1,378-mile railway Dec. 26.

Costa Concordia Removal Planned by Fall 2013

The task of uprighting and refloating the stranded cruise ship involves about 400 workers and a seven-days-a-week schedule, the salvors reported Dec. 23.

Toyota Paying Millions in Fines for Late Notice of Defects

The auto manufacturer failed to notify NHTSA that a recall was necessary within five days of discovery.

New Responsible Care Codes Coming Next Year

The chairman of the Responsible Care board committee announced updated product and process safety codes will be issued.

OSHA Announces Stakeholder Meetings on Vehicle Backovers

Two will be held Jan. 8-9 at DOL’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., and the others will take place Feb. 5 at the University of Texas at Arlington. The agency seeks comments on how to prevent this all-too-common type of injury and fatalities.

MAP-21 Provision Halts Bus Testing Regulation

The law directs the Federal Transit Administration to work with manufacturers and transit agencies to set a new pass/fail standard for bus testing, and this takes precedence over full-load testing change.

October Freight Usage Declined in Part Due to Sandy

The levels for freight transportation usage in October were the lowest they had been in more than a year.

Work Fatalities in Australia Fall to 8-Year Low

The 2010-2011 total of 374 occupational fatalities there is equal to 8 percent of the 4,690 fatalities recorded in the United States in 2010, according to BLS.

DC Transit System Using Broad Approach to Manage Fatigue

"While we need to avoid schedules that call for excessive hours, it's equally important to modify work patterns through a combination of education, training, and lifestyle choices to ensure employees can avoid fatigue," said Metro Board Safety Committee Chair Mort Downey.

FAA Rejects Call to Expand Rest Rule to Cargo Operators

The agency reiterates that cargo airlines are free to adopt the rule voluntarily and said its new Supplemental Regulatory Impact Analysis provides even more economic evidence for excluding cargo.

GPS, Ignition Interlocks, Signage Among Wrong-Way Driving Solutions: NTSB

According to the special report issued Dec. 11 by the safety board, between 2004 and 2009 there were 1,566 wrong-way fatal crashes in the United States that killed 2,139 people.

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