Advocate blasts U.S. pedestrian safety efforts, says ‘no places’ can be considered safe here

The most dangerous metropolitan areas in the country for pedestrians are concentrated in the Sun Belt, but that doesn’t mean other areas are doing enough to protect the most vulnerable road users, according to a national transportation safety advocate.

Beth Osborne, vice president for transportation at the nonprofit Smart Growth America, offered that message Monday as she discussed the findings in a new report that looks at the worsening death toll for pedestrians in the United States.

Her group’s Dangerous By Design 2022 report, released Tuesday, found that states like Florida, South Carolina and California had more than half of the top 20 most dangerous metro areas based on the number of deaths per 100,000 people per year during a recent five-year stretch. But the situation is troubling no matter where you live.

“Just because folks are not listed in that top 20 does not mean that they are safe. There are no places in the United States that can be considered safe,” Osborne said.

Seven of the top 20 most dangerous metro areas from 2016-2020 were in Florida, with the Daytona Beach area at No. 1, with a rate of 4.25 deaths. Albuquerque, New Mexico, was at No. 2, with 4.19. The study found that from 2016-2020 New Mexico was the most dangerous state for pedestrians, with Florida at No. 2; Michigan was at No. 25.

Fatality rates increased in all but four states and Washington, D.C.

Osborne noted that the previous most dangerous metro area, Orlando, had actually gotten worse but had been leapfrogged by seven other cities.

The study, which received funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, relied on data from the federal government’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System. The numbers show a worsening trend, with pedestrian fatalities up 62% since they began “rising steadily” in 2009.