Traffic & Transit
Michigan Pedestrian Fatalities Slightly Fell In 2022: Report
Pedestrian deaths in Michigan slightly fell in 2022, despite a national growing trend, according to a new report.
MICHIGAN — A new Governors Highway Safety Association report counted over 7,500 pedestrians deaths in 2022, which is the highest number since 1981.
The grim figure is part of a longer trend of increasing pedestrians deaths on U.S. roadways. In 2010, 4,302 pedestrians were killed in traffic collisions, accounting for 13 percent of all traffic deaths.
By 2021, pedestrian deaths accounted for nearly 18 percent of all traffic deaths, according to the GHSA report. Pedestrians deaths have increased 77 percent since 2010, compared to 25 percent for all other traffic deaths.
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In Michigan, pedestrians died at a rate of 1.78 per 100,000 in 2022, according to the report, which is below the national average and down four percent from 2021. GHSA also reported that 179 Michigan pedestrians died in 2022, which is down from 183 in 2021.
Pedestrian death rates per 100,000 in 2022:
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- New Mexico — 4.40
- Arizona — 4.17
- Florida — 3.70
- Louisiana — 3.62
- South Carolina — 3.29
- Delaware — 3.24
- Oregon — 3.09
- Georgia — 3.07
- Tennessee — 2.91
- Nevada — 2.83
- California — 2.82
- Texas — 2.78
- Mississippi — 2.76
- North Carolina — 2.57
- District of Columbia — 2.38
- Alabama — 2.21
- Arkansas — 2.20
- Kentucky — 2.19
- Maryland — 2.09
- Missouri — 2.09
- New Jersey — 2.05
- Hawaii — 2.01
- Montana — 1.96
- Virginia — 1.95
- Michigan — 1.78
- Connecticut — 1.71
- Washington — 1.67
- Alaska — 1.64
- Indiana — 1.60
- Kansas — 1.60
- Illinois — 1.59
- Utah — 1.57
- Maine — 1.52
- New York — 1.51
- West Virginia — 1.46
- Massachusetts — 1.43
- Pennsylvania — 1.43
- Ohio — 1.41
- Wyoming — 1.38
- South Dakota — 1.32
- Wisconsin — 1.27
- Colorado — 1.22
- Nebraska — 1.22
- New Hampshire — 1.15
- Vermont — 1.08
- Idaho — 0.98
- Minnesota — 0.80
- North Dakota — 0.77
- Rhode Island — 0.64
- Iowa — 0.56
According to GHSA, several factors have contributed to the rise of pedestrian deaths.
Pedestrians have long been more likely to die at night when visibility is lower, especially in areas where sidewalks and other protections aren't available. About 77 percent of pedestrian deaths happened at night in 2021, according to the report. Nearly 70 percent of pedestrian deaths happened in an area without sidewalks that same year.
"Since 2010, nighttime fatal crashes have increased by 86 percent, compared with a 31 percent rise in daytime pedestrian deaths," GHSA said.
The type of vehicle is also a factor. Deaths by SUV have increased 120 percent over the last decade, although passenger cars were involved in a majority of deaths.
"Because of their greater body weight and larger profile, SUVs and other light trucks can cause more harm to a person on foot when a crash occurs," the report said.
The report also found racial disparities in pedestrian deaths. The latest data available between 2018 and 2020 showed that deaths of Black, non-Hispanic pedestrians rose from 19 to 20 percent, and Hispanic from 20 to 21 percent. Deaths of white pedestrians fell from 41 to 47 percent.
"The saddest part is that these crashes are preventable. We know what works — better-designed infrastructure, lower speeds, addressing risky driving behaviors that pose a danger to people walking. We must do these things and more to reverse this awful trend and protect people on foot. Enough is enough," GHSA CEO Jonathan Adkins said in a news release.
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