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New AAA Study: LA/OC Crashes Cost $11 Billion AnnuallyMarch 05, 2008 | Category: Transportation and Traffic Safety
“In the 1980s and 1990s, crash fatalities decreased because of numerous vehicle safety improvements such as airbags and increased use of seatbelts, as well as changes in public perception about the acceptability of drinking and driving,” said Steven Bloch, Ph.D., the Auto Club’s senior traffic safety researcher. “But after a nearly two-decade decline, the number of crash fatalities in California rose by 21 percent from 1998 through 2006. About 4,000 people die and 300,000 are injured each year in California traffic crashes. That creates a drain on limited medical and safety resources and a staggering cost emotionally and financially to families and society at large.”
The Los Angeles/Orange County metropolitan area has the highest “cost of congestion” and the second-highest “cost of crashes” among all metropolitan areas in the U.S. The area with the highest cost of crashes annually is the metropolitan area encompassing New York City, Newark, N.J. and Edison, N.J.
Other Southern California metropolitan areas outlined in the study include Riverside-San-Bernardino-Ontario, which has an estimated congestion cost of $955 million and an estimated crash cost that is more than five times greater – $4.8 billion. San Diego, which has the 13th-highest congestion cost in the country at $1.7 billion, has an estimated crash cost of $2.6 billion. Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura has a congestion cost of $229 million and a crash cost of $676 million – nearly three times greater. And Bakersfield’s estimated congestion cost is $66 million while its crash costs are estimated at over $1 billion – 15 times greater. Southern California traffic crash costs per person per year by region are: LA/Orange County, $817; Inland Empire, $1,203; San Diego, $881; Ventura County, $826; and Bakersfield, $1,321.
The AAA/Cambridge analysis used the traffic congestion study conducted biannually by the Texas Transportation Institute (TTI) as the basis to establish the annual cost of congestion for each metropolitan area. Researchers then calculated crash costs for the same metropolitan areas using crash data provided by each state. The study used crash cost data provided by the National Highway Transportation Administration (NHTSA) to calculate the total crash cost for each metropolitan region. The study includes several recommendations to improve safety, including support for a national safety goal of cutting surface transportation fatalities in half by 2025, as recommended by the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission. The Cambridge report summary contains the study conclusions and recommendations. The full Cambridge report includes detailed statistics for each major metropolitan area in the U.S. |
Media ContactsElaine Beno(714) 885-2333 Jeffrey Spring (714) 885-2333 Marie Montgomery (714) 885-2333 |


