show that vehicle driver and passenger deaths in 海角换妻 crashes are up 41.5% over the last five years. Over that same span, pedestrian deaths from impacts with vehicles climbed 31%.
鈥2022 has been the deadliest year on our roadways in decades,鈥 said DOT Commissioner Garrett Eucalitto.
How have we gotten here? A higher rate of impaired driving is one cause, according to Eric Jackson, director of the 海角换妻 Transportation Safety Research Center.
鈥淭he last time I counted, we had over 181 different drugs found in people鈥檚 systems in fatal crashes in the last year,鈥 Jackson said on All Things Considered. 鈥淲hat we鈥檝e also seen is it seems the road rage and aggressive driving has increased exponentially.鈥
Jackson discussed a number of proposals in the works to make 海角换妻 roads safer. He supports a proposal in the General Assembly to lower the legal alcohol limit statewide from .08 to .05 and said he doesn鈥檛 believe that a .05 legal limit will punish drivers who had just two glasses of wine for dinner.
鈥淎n officer is not going to just be able to, you know, sniff you out on the roadway and pull you over,鈥 Jackson said. 鈥淭hey have to notice that you鈥檙e driving in a manner that shows or suggests that you have some type of impairment.鈥
While police are experienced in testing to determine a driver鈥檚 alcohol impairment, that鈥檚 not the case for other substances like marijuana. With recreational marijuana sales now legal in 海角换妻, the UConn Transportation Research Center has begun hosting 鈥淕reen Labs鈥 to help police better recognize the signs of a cannabis-impaired driver.
In the lab, officers observe 18 volunteers 鈥 six of whom consumed only cannabis, six of whom consumed only alcohol and six of whom consumed both. Officers receive training on noticing signs of impairment through observing factors like eye movements and motor skill proficiency.
鈥淭here is no roadside test where you can blow into a device, blow into an instrument and say, 鈥榊es, you are impaired,鈥欌 Jackson said. 鈥淏ecause there is no legal limit.鈥
Finally, there鈥檚 the idea of using red light cameras to keep drivers from speeding through red lights and stop signs. Waterbury, New Haven and Hartford are considering these cameras. Jackson said he鈥檚 encouraged by a recent study done by the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety that looked at red-light-running crash rates in large cities.
鈥淭hese cameras reduced those crash rates by 21%,鈥 Jackson said. 鈥淔or fatal crashes at signalized intersections, it reduced those by 14%. So they are effective.鈥