Iowa Seeking to Reduce Fatal Crashes on Rural Roads
An effort to reduce fatal crashes on secondary rural roads has been launched in Iowa.
The Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau announced the effort, which began April 1 and continues through Sept. 30, 2015.
The program will focus on rural secondary roads in Allamakee, Marion, Webster, Fremont and Palo Alto counties. Those counties agreed to participate after an analysis of 10 years of crash data and seat belt compliance rates.
Participating counties will take a three-tier approach including enforcement of traffic laws, especially the seat belt law, education about traffic laws and low-cost safety improvements in the participating counties.
The safety bureau says 72 percent of fatal crashes in 2012 were on secondary rural roads. Those roads make up 79 percent of Iowa’s total roadways.
Iowa had 317 traffic fatalities in 2013.
- Longtime Alabama Dentist Charged With Insurance Fraud in 2025 Office Explosion
- Accuweather: Winter Storm to Cause Up to $115B in Damage, Economic Losses
- LA County Told to Pause $4B in Abuse Payouts as DA Probes Fraud Claims
- Owner of Assisted Living Home Where 10 Died in Fire Denied Access to Insurance Funds