Traffic & Transit

Pedestrian Deaths Spiked In New Jersey During Pandemic

U.S. pedestrian deaths were up 4.8% last year, the Governors Highway Safety Association found. Bad driver behavior is likely to blame.

Speeding and drunken and distracted driving are the likely culprits behind a spike in pedestrian deaths recorded in several U.S. states last year, according to new data released Thursday.
Speeding and drunken and distracted driving are the likely culprits behind a spike in pedestrian deaths recorded in several U.S. states last year, according to new data released Thursday. (Shutterstock)

NEW JERSEY — Speeding and drunken and distracted driving are the likely culprits behind a spike in pedestrian deaths recorded in several U.S. states last year, according to new data released Thursday.

In fact, bad driver behavior during the coronavirus pandemic likely contributed to the largest-ever nationwide increase in pedestrian deaths recorded in a single year, according to the Governors Highway Safety Association’s 2020 report on pedestrian fatalities by state.

New Jersey is among those that saw an increase in pedestrian deaths in 2020, or the number of people on foot who were killed by people driving cars.

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Based on preliminary data provided by state highway safety offices, a total of 191 pedestrian deaths were reported in our state in 2020, a 9 percent increase from 2019.

RELATED: Pandemic Revs Up Bad Driver Behavior, U.S. Traffic Fatalities

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Nationally, the Governors Highway Safety Association projects there were 6,721 pedestrian fatalities in 2020, a 4.8 percent increase from the 6,412 deaths reported in 2019. It should be noted that the Governors Highway Safety Association adjusted 2020’s total from 6,410 to account for historical differences between preliminary and final numbers.

Another notable finding in the report: Pedestrian deaths increased despite a 13 percent decrease in the number of miles traveled by drivers in 2020.

This means the pedestrian fatality rate in 2020 was 2.3 per billion vehicle miles traveled, a “shocking and unprecedented” 21 percent increase from 1.9 per billion in 2019, the report states.

“Last year was filled with so much death and loss as COVID swept across the country. As America gets vaccinated and returns to normal, we need to treat pedestrian safety like the public health emergency that it is,” Jonathan Adkins, executive director of the Governors Highway Safety Association, said in a news release.

“We must strengthen our efforts to protect those on foot from traffic violence by implementing equitable and proven countermeasures that protect people walking and address those driving behaviors that pose the greatest risk,” Adkins said.

Thursday’s report follows a similar one released in February, in which the Governors Highway Safety Association projected the number of pedestrian deaths for the first six months of 2020. The new report adds preliminary data from the last six months of the year.

Data for the report was provided by state highway safety offices. The numbers are meant to provide an early look at 2020 pedestrian deaths, months before the data is available through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System.

Since the data is preliminary, it may also be incomplete, the report notes.

The projected increase in pedestrian fatalities in 2020 continues a decade-long pattern of rising pedestrian deaths, the report states. In fact, from 2010-2019, pedestrian fatalities increased by 46 percent.

This article contains reporting by the Patch national desk

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