FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 22, 2003 |
Contact: Jonathan Adkins at 202-789-0942 |
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Kathryn Swanson is the Chair of the Governors
Highway Safety Association (GHSA), the national nonprofit association
representing State Highway Safety Offices (SHSOs). GHSA members
administer federal highway safety grant programs that address
the behavior of drivers and other road users.
Since the enactment of the Transportation Equity Act for the
21st Century (TEA-21), the motor vehicle fatality rate has dropped
to the lowest on record and related injuries have been reduced
as well. However, total fatalities, including impaired driving
fatalities, are beginning to climb upward. If states are to continue
to address the problem of motor vehicle-related deaths and injuries
in an effective manner, they need additional resources, data
tools, and research.
GHSA recommends that Congress should continue the budgetary
firewalls around behavioral highway safety programs. The firewalls
have ensured that highway safety grant funding is stable and
reliable. This has helped states better plan their programs from
year to year.
Congress also should ensure that states maintain their ability
to determine how highway safety funding is spent within their
own jurisdictions. The performance-based approach to federal
highway safety grant funding has allowed states to perform data-driven
problem identification and target available funding to the biggest
problem areas. If states do not perform, the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) currently has the ability
to work with the states and develop improvement plans. NHTSA
has other management tools at its disposal as well, and GHSA
is working with the agency to develop criteria so that the tools
can be applied more consistently. GHSA would strongly oppose
a return to federal micro-management of the states’ programs
that occurred before the performance-based approach was implemented.
GHSA also recommends that Congress consolidate the behavioral
highway safety grant programs into one large Section 402 program
with two tiers. The first tier would provide occupant protection
incentives for states that improve their safety belt use rate
or enact a primary belt law. It would be based largely on the
successful Section 157 basic grant program. A portion of the
funds would be earmarked for low performing states. The second
tier would be for impaired driving. States would have to meet
a number of specific criteria, just as they do under the current
410 program. The new consolidated program would be funded, at
a minimum, at $500 million.
Another area that should be addressed in the next reauthorization
is state crash-related data systems. GHSA recommends that a $50
million data incentive grant program should be authorized to
help states implement their traffic records strategic plans that
were developed under the current 411 program. Without improvements
to their data systems, states will have to rely on incomplete,
inaccurate and untimely data upon which to base their programs.
GHSA recommends that additional funding should be authorized
for highway safety research as well. Particular emphasis should
be placed on crash causation and on the effectiveness of safety
countermeasures. GHSA recommends that driver and pedestrian research
should be increased from $7 million a year to $15-$25 million
a year.
The federal lobbying restrictions are another area that needs
to be revised in the next reauthorization. TEA-21 restrictions
are counterproductive. States are encouraged to enact specific
legislation in order to receive federal incentive grants or avoid
federal penalties and sanctions, yet current law prohibits them
from lobbying on behalf of safety legislation. Congress needs
to reexamine and loosen these restrictions.
Swanson’s complete statement
is available online at www.statehighwaysafety.org.
GHSA responses to Senate Commerce
Committee Questions
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The Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) is a nonprofit
association representing the highway safety offices of states,
territories, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Indian
Nation. Its members are appointed by their Governors to administer
federal and state highway safety funds and implement state highway
safety plans. Prior to September 2002, GHSA was known as the
National Association of Governors’ Highway Safety Representatives
(NAGHSR). For more information, contact Jonathan Adkins at (202)
789-0942, e-mail jadkins@ghsa.org or
visit www.statehighwaysafety.org.
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