Gridlock Guy: National traffic data shows I-285 deadliest highway,
11/8/15 AJC
Another gloomy traffic distinction
belongs to Metro Atlanta. 2013National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
data shows that Interstate 285 is one of America’s deadliest freeways. Sarah
Frostenson on Vox.com took the fatal crash data from that year, mapped each
crash, and calculated the statistics for each interstate. I-285 did not have
the highest number of fatal wrecks or the greatest number of crash-related
deaths - I-4 in Florida leads those stats. But Frostenson came up with another
interesting metric to measure how deadly an interstate is.
I-285 had the second-most fatal
wrecks (26) and deaths (29) that year. But Frostenson decided a better way to
measure a freeway’s danger was to calculate the number of fatal crashes per 10
miles. That pegs I-285 with 3.5 fatal crashes every 10 miles in 2013, .5 more
than the next-highest freeway. Seeing I-285 at the top of the list probably
isn’t a surprise to many of us. But the similarities to the interstates in the
same top 10 list with the Perimeter shine a light as to why.
Major
design flaws or a lack of talent in the Atlanta driving pool are probably not
unique reasons that make I-285 so comparatively lethal. Seven of the top 10
deadliest interstates are bypasses or perimeters in their own right. That may
not seem to mean much, but it does. Think about I-285 - it is filled with
tractor trailers and attracts people that aren’t from Atlanta, who are trying
to avoid the jams on the Downtown Connector (Interstates 75/85). This mix of
characteristics is common on bypass freeways and is exactly those roads’
purpose.
The presence of tractor trailers
automatically makes conditions more dangerous. People in smaller vehicles
constantly jostle in and out of lanes as if the big rigs are moving chicanes,
doing so in the the large trucks’ blind spots and causing them to make evasive
moves or hit those cars. Those maneuvers are often what causes the big rigs to
overturn or to plow into other vehicles, thus making for nastier wrecks.
Stir in some out-of-town drivers
searching for their exits or unfamiliar with the sharp turns in the I-285/I-20
interchange in DeKalb County or the other tricky one just a few miles away at
I-75 in Clayton, and the recipe is in place for more crashes. More wrecks,
means more chances of fatal ones.
Every interstate in Frostenson’s top
10 list was in or near a large metropolitan area. So naturally that means more
commuters, more tourists, and a higher crash probability.
With this fact in mind, drive with
even more awareness on I-285. Think twice before trying to squeeze between two
tractor trailers, as you move to exit at the last second. Read the signs and
obey the speed limits on those sharp transition ramps on the south side
Perimeter. And, please, don’t stray your eyes to your smart device. With all of
the aforementioned variables swirling around I-285, you just cannot afford to
miss one. That could be the difference in life and death.
Gridlock updatesMark Arum’s column
appears Mondays. Listen to his traffic reports daily on News 95.5 and AM750
WSB, and see him each morning on Channel 2 Action News. Connect with Mark on
Twitter: @markarum.
http://www.ajc.com/news/news/local/gridlock-guy-national-traffic-data-shows-i-285-dea/npJTB/
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