By Garrett Christensen on Friday, April 26th, 2024 in Eastern/Southeast Oregon News More Top Stories Northeastern Oregon News
UNION & MALHEUR COUNTIES โ The American Automotive Association (AAA) Foundation for Traffic Safety recently released their findings on a study examining the impact highway speed limits have on nearby roadways. Referred to as a โspillover effect,โ the AAA claims that higher highway speeds create additional hot spots for speed related crashes on neighboring roadways. Areas of both Union and Malheur counties were cited in the study as having more frequent speed related crashes following previous speed limit increases along I-84. The full AAA press release on this study is as follows:
โRaising speed limits on highways could lead to more crashes on nearby roads, according to new research by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. This โspillover effectโ can lead to dangerous clusters of crashes or โhotspotsโ on local roads within a one-mile radius of the interstate.
AAA Foundation researchers investigated whether changes to posted speed limits on interstate highways could cause drivers to adopt risky speeding behaviors on local streets. The study looked at crash data before and after speed limit increases on interstates in Oregon, Georgia, and Michigan. Hot spot analyses were conducted on roads within a one-mile radius of interstates. Researchers found many instances where speed-related crashes increased on nearby roads following the interstate speed limit change, suggesting that drivers exiting the highway continued to drive fast.
This โspillover effectโ creates unintended safety hazards for local communities that might not be involved in the decision-making process to raise the posted speed limit on a nearby highway. According to NHTSA, speeding is a significant safety concern, contributing to almost one-third of road fatalities in the past 20 years. In Oregon, there were 602 traffic deaths in 2022 and 587 in 2023, according to the Oregon Department of Transportation Crash Statistics & Reports. Driving too fast for road conditions and exceeding the posted speed limits are major factors in Oregon crashes.
I-84 in Oregon is one of the interstates studied for this project, with the study looking at 291 miles stretching across eight counties (Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam, Morrow, Umatilla, Union, Baker, and Malheur) and going through several cities: The Dalles, Pendleton, La Grande, Baker City, and Ontario. The posted speed limit changed from 65 mph to 70 mph in 2016.
Crash data provided by the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) shows a 3% decrease in all crashes and a 19% reduction of speed-related crashes on I-84 after the speed limit was raised. However, researchers found a troubling spillover effect โ an increase in speed-related crash rates on nearby roadways. New hot spots were prominent in Wasco County and Gilliam County among others, where speed-related crashes extended onto roadway facilities beyond interchanges and ramps. Speed-related crashes also intensified in Union County and Malheur County. Please find details starting on p. 54 of the technical report.
Here are hotspots in Malheur County:
Here is the โspillover effectโ in La Grande, Oregon:
โThis study by the AAA Foundation shows that raising highway speed limits can have unintended and possibly lethal impacts on neighboring communities. The spillover effect can lead to increases in crashes on roads operated by counties, cities and towns. Local roadways are designed for slower speeds and are shared by children, pedestrians, bicyclists and pets โ theyโre not meant for speeding drivers,โ says Marie Dodds, public affairs director for AAA Oregon/Idaho.
AAA believes itโs crucial that state-level transportation planners work closely with local transportation agencies when considering raising speed limits on interstates and state highways.
Other potential solutions include:
By taking a proactive approach, transportation officials can create safer road networks for all communities. The AAA Foundationโs research reinforces the importance of the Safe System Approach (SSA). The SSA is a strategic way of leveraging the engineering and behavioral countermeasures proven effective at preventing traffic crashes and the injuries that can result from them. Explore the Foundationโs guide for implementing the SSA in your community HERE.โ
A hotspot for Northern Union County specifically can be seen in the image at the top of the page. The study and technical report in which the AAA article is based on can be found at https://aaafoundation.org/uncovering-the-spillover-effect-from-posted-speed-limit-changes-a-tool-to-examine-potential-safety-concerns