This
week,
the
US
National
Highway
Traffic
Safety
Administration
(NHTSA)
stunned
safety
advocates
by
proposing
new
vehicle
rules
that
it
says
will
help
reduce
pedestrian
deaths
in
America.
The
new
rules
appear
aimed
directly
at
the
trend
of
increasingly
massive
SUVs
and
trucks,
which
have
been
shown
to
be
more
deadly
to
pedestrians
than
smaller
and
midsize
vehicles.
Never
in
its
50-plus
years
in
existence
has
the
regulator
issued
new
rules
for
automakers
requiring
them
to
change
their
vehicle
designs
to
better
prevent
pedestrian
fatalities.
If
enacted,
the
new
rules
could
change
how
vehicles
are
designed
in
the
US
—
permanently.
“It’s
good
to
see
NHTSA
acknowledge
that
a
myopic
focus
on
pedestrian
detection
—
which
is
imperfect
—
is
no
substitute
for
actually
regulating
car
bloat,”
said
David
Zipper,
a
senior
fellow
at
the
MIT
Mobility
Initiative
and
a
Verge
contributor.
In
recent
years,
NHTSA
has
issued
a
handful
of
new
requirements
aimed
at
reducing
the
number
of
pedestrian
deaths.
Earlier
this
year,
the
agency
announced
that
automatic
emergency
braking
would
be
required
in
all
new
vehicles.
It
also
updated
the
New
Car
Assessment
Program
(NCAP),
also
known
as
the
five-star
safety
rating,
to
account
for
technology
that
can
help
reduce
pedestrian
injuries
and
deaths.
But
it’s
never
before
taken
aim
at
vehicle
design.
The
rules
announced
this
week
would
update
the
Federal
Motor
Vehicle
Safety
Standards
(FMVSS),
the
government’s
bible
for
everything
that’s
required
in
a
new
vehicle
before
it’s
sold
—
from
steering
wheels
to
rearview
mirrors
—
to
set
testing
procedures
to
simulate
head-to-hood
impact,
with
the
aim
of
reducing
head
injuries.
If
enacted,
automakers
will
have
to
test
their
vehicles
using
crash
test
dummies
representing
adult
and
child
pedestrians
for
the
first
time.
NHTSA
says
the
changes
could
save
up
to
67
lives
every
year.
“The
US
has
never
used
pedestrian
crash
test
dummies
officially,”
said
Angie
Schmitt,
author
of
Right
of
Way:
Race,
Class,
and
the
Silent
Epidemic
of
Pedestrian
Deaths
in
America.
“I
thought they
were
going
to
continue
to
avoid
doing
that
even
though
Congress
had
sort
of
told
them
to
do
this
—
but
apparently
not.”
The
proposed
rules
come
amid
a
deadly
period
for
pedestrians
in
this
country.
Each
year,
cars
kill
roughly
40,000
Americans.
But
while
automakers
have
become
very
good
at
protecting
people
inside
of
vehicles,
they
have
essentially
neglected
the
safety
of
people
outside
of
them.
“I
thought they
were
going
to
continue
to
avoid
doing
that”
SUVs
and
trucks,
two
of
the
most
popular
segments
in
the
US,
have
become
larger
and
heavier
than
ever
before.
In
2023,
31
percent
of
new
cars
in
America
weighed
over
5,000
pounds
(2.27
tons),
compared
to
22
percent
in
2018,
according
to
a
recent
investigation
by
The
Economist. And
with
the
shift
to
electric
vehicles,
many
of
those
vehicles
have
become
even
heavier.
The
Ford
F-150
Lightning
has
a
curb
weight
of
around
6,500
pounds,
roughly
60
percent
heavier
than
its
gas
equivalent.
Meanwhile,
pedestrian
deaths
have
skyrocketed
in
recent
years.
Between
2013
and
2022,
pedestrian
fatalities
increased
57
percent,
from
4,779
to
7,522,
NHTSA
reports.
In
2022,
88
percent
of
pedestrian
deaths
occurred
in
single-vehicle
crashes.
Photo
by
Mario
Tama
/
Getty
Images
“I
think
it
will
exert
positive
pressure,”
Schmitt
said
of
the
new
proposal,
“and
maybe
rein
in
some
of
the
industry’s
worst
excesses.”
The
shape
of
a
vehicle,
especially
the
hood,
also
plays
a
critical
role
in
determining
whether
a
pedestrian
can
survive
being
struck.
Vehicles
with
hood
heights
of
more
than
40
inches
and
blunt
front
ends
angled
at
greater
than
65
degrees
were
44
percent
more
likely
to
cause
fatalities,
according
to
the
Insurance
Institute
for
Highway
Safety.
Automakers
often
point
to
the
increasing
use
of
technology
in
vehicles
—
cameras,
blindspot
detection,
automatic
braking
— to
help
reduce
pedestrian
deaths.
But
rarely
do
they
address
the
role
that
vehicle
design
plays
in
crash
fatalities.
That’s
because
big
trucks
and
SUVs
are
not
only
popular
but
also
better
moneymakers
than
smaller
vehicles.
SUVs
have
a
profit
margin
that’s
10–20
percent
higher
than
smaller
cars
because
they
command
a
higher
price
while
costing
only
slightly
more
to
manufacture.
Safety
advocates
celebrated
the
news,
while
also
noting
that
vehicle
design
is
only
one
piece
in
a
large,
complex
puzzle
to
make
roads
safer.
That
includes
lower
speed
limits,
infrastructure
improvements,
and
increased
enforcement
of
traffic
laws.
Many
note
that
Europe
has
already
gone
much
further
to
protect
pedestrians,
enacting
rules
that
would
prevent
many
of
the
largest
vehicles
produced
by
US
manufacturers
from
being
sold
on
the
continent.
“Considering
NHTSA
estimates
the
new
standard
would
save
67
lives
a
year,
it
is
a
step
in
the
right
direction,
but
it
still
falls
behind
what
Europe
has
successfully
done,”
Cathy
Chase,
president
of
Advocates
for
Highway
and
Auto
Safety,
said.
“Numerous
proven
solutions
must
be
employed
to
improve
the
safety
of
all
vulnerable
road
users.”
The
new
NHTSA
proposal
is
an
important
step,
but
it’s
just
the
first
of
many
needed
to
turn
this
crisis
around.
Original author: Andrew J. Hawkins
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