http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/08/opinion/08sepkowitz.html?_r=4&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
Kent A. Sepkowitz of NY Times said:Op-Ed Contributor No Need for Speed Sign In to E-Mail or Save This Print Share LinkedinDiggFacebookMixxYahoo! BuzzPermalink By KENT A. SEPKOWITZ Published: September 7, 2008 SPEEDING is the cause of 30 percent of all traffic deaths in the United States — about 13,000 people a year. By comparison, alcohol is blamed 39 percent of the time, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. But unlike drinking, which requires the police, breathalyzers and coercion to improve drivers’ behavior, there’s a simple way to prevent speeding: quit building cars that can exceed the speed limit. Most cars can travel over 100 miles an hour — an illegal speed in every state. Our continued, deliberate production of potentially law-breaking devices has no real precedent. We regulate all sorts of items to decrease danger to the public, from baby cribs to bicycle helmets. Yet we continue to produce fast cars despite the lives lost, the tens of billions spent treating accident victims, and a good deal of gasoline wasted. (Speeding, after all, substantially reduces fuel efficiency due to the sheering force of wind.) Worse, throughout the various federal documents examining traffic fatalities, the role of speeding is de-emphasized. Speeding is not even an “agency priority” of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in its annual assessment of crashes — only alcohol, seat belts, rollovers and vehicle compatibility make the cut. Rather it is in the second-tier “other focus” category, along with large trucks and “intersection-related and roadway departure.” And unlike the statistical attention afforded alcohol (20 pages of a 150-page document), the section devoted to speeding comes in at a measly three pages. A deeper look at the safety administration’s report on traffic fatalities in 2005 also reveals a strange fact about how speeding-related traffic fatalities are tallied up. Consider this: in Texas, in 2005, 3,504 people died in a traffic accident; 1,426 (about 41 percent) were considered speeding-related. In sharp contrast, for Florida, 3,543 died yet only 239 were considered speeding-related — about 7 percent. Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana and New Jersey, among other states, also report rates well below 20 percent. This variation is not just shoddy government work. With alcohol, for example, the 39 percent national rate varies only by a whisker when examined state to state (except for Utah’s admirable rate of 13 percent). Is it possible that drivers in some states speed more often than their counterparts across the border? Not likely. Different states, for various reasons, analyze their automotive fatalities in different ways, but the result is that the safety agency’s official speeding-related fatality rate of 28 percent is almost certainly a low-ball estimate. Then there is the relationship between speeding and alcohol. According to the agency, in 2006, 41 percent of alcohol-related fatalities were also associated with speeding; and between midnight and 3 a.m., 76 percent of speeding drivers killed in motor vehicle accidents had been drinking. Despite all this, we Americans insist on the inalienable right to speed. Imagine, for a moment, if E-ZPass kept track of exactly when each car entered one toll booth and exited another, which would allow local governments to do some basic math, dividing distance traveled by time spent. If this calculation showed you to be a speeder, the authorities would send you a traffic ticket. Lives, money and oil would be saved and proof of wrongdoing would be undeniable, but the public outcry would be deafening. Because the ticket-them-till-they-stop approach simply would not work, we might consider my initial recommendation: build cars that can’t exceed the speed limit. The technology to limit car speed has existed for more than 50 years — it’s called cruise control. In its common application, cruise control maintains a steady speed, but a minor adjustment would assure that vehicles, no matter the horsepower, never go past 75 miles per hour. This safety measure should be required of every new automobile, the same as seat belts, turning signals, brake lights and air bags. Sure, it would take us longer to get from here to there. But thousands of deaths a year are too great a cost for so adolescent a thrill as speeding. Kent A. Sepkowitz is vice-chairman of medicine at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Meant to put a ? in the title so as not to imply that this was in fact a soon to happen law.
My take on it:
Speeding does not cause accidents, (usually), but rather amplifies the likelihood of injury or death if one should occur. To say speed kills is misleading. I could drive 150 mph down a straight road with high visibility, and gasp, live to tell about it. It's not speed that kills, but rather bad driving. Someone who drives 65 mph in a 70 mph zone, but decides he's going to change lanes when there is someone else in the lane he wants going at 70 mph is dangerous. This will result in the person already in the lane to swerve or slam on his brakes, creating potential for an accident to occur. Often times speed is 'blamed' for an accident caused by something else. It's ok to admit that speed was a factor, but if it's inappropriate lane change, or following too closely, or inability to maintain control than that's what it should be called.
I think that speeding citations shouldn't be eliminated, but they should be tacked on to something else. I.E. Failure to signal while changing lanes should be handled differently depending on the speed it occured at. But simply speeding by itself, on a sunny day, with good visibility and low traffic, should not be treated as harshly as it would be in a more congested, challenging situation.
The shortened equation for kinetic energy is KE = 0.5mV^2. V plays a huge part in the outcome of an accident, yes, it's true. But to say that it is the 'cause' is often just a way to scapegoat the problem onto people that are more easily prosecuted, (because speed can be measured, while stupidity behind the wheel is more difficult).
Let's go back to the lane change thing, someone who's going 10 over the limit while performing an illegal lane change should get a different ticket than going 20 over. Also, someone going 10 under the limit should get a similar ticket as 10 over, assuming traffic flow is the speed limit, as it's people that break traffic flow that cause accidents.
This leads to my suggestion that states create speed limits that realistically reflect traffic flow. I just started noticing something Michigan has been quietly doing:
Construction zones on typical 65-70 mph highways for the longest time had 45 mph limits. Then eventually I started seeing signs that read something along the lines of 'Speed Limit 60 mph, 45 mph where workers present'
Now I'm seeing 'Speed Limit 45 where workers present' with no indications of when there aren't any, leaving one to assume that the original posted limit of 65 to 70 is ok. Thank you, people finally trust motorists to navigate stationary orange and white cones when there are no construction workers around. Hell, there aren't even any hairpins set up.
We need more common sense road rules put into place across the nation. Let's start with drive in the right lane, pass on the left. This already exists everywhere that I know of, and is only slowly getting more and more enforcement.
Feel free to disagree and argue with me. I wanna hear more opinions on this.