The National Safety Council invites you to join their Road to Zero webinar

The National Safety Council invites you to join their Road to Zero webinar

The National Road Safety Council (NSC) is inviting all those interested to join the Road to Zero Coalition webinar to learn about how to make roads safer. National Coalition of Safer Roads (NCSR) president, Melissa Wandall, invited everyone to take part in the webinar so that people can listen, learn, and look at what’s ahead for the mission of safer roads in 2021 in the United States and beyond. The webinar is scheduled for Thursday, February 4 at 2 pm Eastern Time. 

screen shot 2021 01 27 at 6 47 33 pmRoad to Zero Coalition
Road to Zero Coalition is a nonprofit and nonpartisan research institute managed by NSC. It has identified three major initiatives to reduce roadway fatalities; double down on evidence-based road safety strategies, help advance life-saving technology in vehicles and infrastructure, and adapt the safe systems approach.

In a report that lays out the strategies to end roadway deaths in the United States by 2050, the Road to Zero Coalition emphasizes that young people are affected disproportionately as road crashes are the leading cause of death for youth aged 15-24.

The report does not just list young people as victims of road crashes but as at-risk drivers who may be affected by external factors such as weather and other road infrastructures. It also notes how the perception of young people started to change as different sectors started to discuss health and transport with youth, teaching them about land-use policies and urban design that affects the community.

Keeping roads safe
NSC focuses on eliminating the leading cause of preventable death: road crashes. Apart from the goal of ending road crashes by 2050, NSC also has other initiatives to make roads safer for everyone.

In efforts to protect young people, specifically children, NSC manages the National Child Passenger Safety Board that certifies technicians to ensure children are secured safely on every ride.

YOURS shares a similar mission in terms of its work to make the world’s roads safe for young people through meaningful youth engagement. YOURS believes that young people have a right to be adequately informed, consulted, and empowered on road safety as they are the most affected by this crisis.

The goal is to meet the road safety targets presented in the new Decade of Action for Road Safety by 2030.

“Youth are the main victims of road crashes and meaningfully involving them bene ts all parts of society. Through meaningful youth participation in road safety, we can empower young people to become the change agents of their communities. Who is better positioned to lead the charge for road safety from the grassroots up?” – Floor Lieshout

Stay informed on global efforts to make the world’s roads safer! 

 

REGISTER FOR THE ROAD TO ZERO WEBINAR

Global Youth Coalition for Road Safety launches Local Actions – take part!

Global Youth Coalition for Road Safety launches Local Actions – take part!

The Global Youth Coalition for Road Safety has launched a search for proposals to help achieve the demands listed in the Global Youth Statement for Road Safety through Local Actions. A local action is a short-term or mid-term grassroots action plan oriented to address the most pressing issues in the city or area where the youth member belongs. Applications are open from 22 January to 12 February. Get involved!

Local Action guidelines
The call for proposals is exclusive for members of the Global Youth Coalition for Road Safety. Apart from being a member, the applicant must have conducted at least one youth consultation so that they can be guided in shaping their project plan through their conversation with youth leaders in the local area.

The project proposals are required to address the most urgent road safety needs in the community, as outlined in the Global Youth Statement. The projects will have a direct link with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that have direct connections with road safety and sustainable mobility such as health, education, reduced inequalities, sustainable cities, and climate action.

Applicants are requested to develop original, impactful, innovative, and innovative projects that focus on three key strategies; community mobilization and awareness, advocacy, or peer-to-peer engagement.

Community mobilization projects help bring together stakeholders to raise awareness on important road safety issues in the community. advocacy projects focus on developing concrete and tangible actions and petitions to influence decision-makers to further the road safety agenda, and peer-to-peer engagement projects lean more on helping young leaders to facilitate, train, consult, and collaborate with other young leaders.

Winning project proposals
Winners of the local actions will be determined by our selection committee – an international and diverse group of experts who will judge proposals based on presentation, sustainability, impact, evidence-based actions, SDG inclusion, connection with road safety, project structure, and project implementation.

Winning applicants will receive support from the Global Youth Coalition in terms of three aspects; seed funding worth € 5000 for the implementation of the project, support in the development of a project plan to map out the project, and mentorship from the Coalition in areas such as communication, fundraising, networking, youth participation, and more.

Help turn the Global Youth Statement for Road Safety into a reality by sending in your proposal! 

 

JOIN THE COALITION   GO TO LOCAL ACTIONS    

DOWNLOAD GUIDELINES

UNICEF releases guidance for safe and healthy journeys to school in COVID

UNICEF releases guidance for safe and healthy journeys to school in COVID

In light of the global pandemic, the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), in partnership with FIA Foundation and Child Health Initiative, published a guidance manual for safe and healthy journeys to school during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. The document will be a guide for individuals and organizations when schools reopen, discussing the measures to help keep students safe on school premises. 

COVID: the latest facts
In the time of COVID, the goal is to prevent the spread of the virus. In the context of the safe journeys manual, preventing transmission of the virus would revolve around school journeys while also addressing the risk of road traffic injury and air pollution.  

COVID-19 and road safety have a common unfortunate characteristic – they hit the most vulnerable people the hardest – Hartwig Schafer

09 how simple street design interventions are saving kids lives in africa 520x292The assumption that road deaths would go down because of global lockdowns was addressed by Mr. Schafer in his article Road Safety Matters, more so during COVID-19, saying that a closer look at the traffic data reveals that fatality rates per kilometer traveled have increased. He cites higher traffic speed due to lower traffic volumes, lack of enforcement and larger proportions of vulnerable road users account for the increase in road-related fatalities. 

The Association for Safe International Road Travel expressed the same observation in their article Road Safety During COVID-19, saying that as roads become less crowded with vehicles, many drivers exceed the speed limit at dangerous levels.

Key Actions
To help keep students safe, UNICEF has listed ten key actions that could be integrated into school reopening plans, mainly; engage the entire community, ensure physical distancing, prioritize non-motorized transport to support physical distancing, make it safe for vulnerable road users, help students who use non-motorized modes of transport, reduce private vehicle use, treat school buses as extensions of classrooms, promote safety and hygiene, ensure equal access to transport, and sustain changes in the long term.

Under these key actions, more specific tasks are identified and described so that it can guide groups from community members to policymakers in efforts to help keep students safe on their way to school and the rest of their educational journey. 

In the manual, UNICEF adds a checklist for different stakeholders to support safe and healthy journeys to school.

 

DOWNLOAD UNICEF MANUAL HERE 

Join the International Conference on Road Safety, Transport, and Road Statistics

Join the International Conference on Road Safety, Transport, and Road Statistics

Earlier this month, the World Academy of Science, Engineering, and Technology launched the International Research Conference on Road Safety, Transport, and Road Statistics which is dedicated to bringing together leading academic scientists, researchers, and research scholars to exchange and share experiences and research results in all aspects of road safety. 

International Research Conference
The conference on road safety, transport, and road statistics is part of the International Research Conference – a federated organization dedicated to bringing together significant numbers of diverse and scholarly events for presentation.

World Academy of Science, Engineering, and Technology describes the conference as a premier interdisciplinary platform for researchers, practitioners, and educators to present and discuss the most recent innovations, trends, concerns, and solutions in the field of road safety, transport, and road statistics.

Applicants are invited to submit research abstracts, papers, e-posters, and research contributions describing original and unpublished results in all areas of road safety.

The deadline to submit abstracts and Full-Text Papers is on 28 January 2021 for the November conference in Rome, Italy.

Road Safety in Data
The World Health Organization (WHO) emphasizes the importance of data in saying that it can be used to raise awareness about particular road safety issues. Road safety data also acts as evidence and is able to draw support for policies, programs, or allocation of resources.

Having accurate road safety data allows different organizations to create successful plans, projects, and initiatives that can address road safety issues in local and global settings. In the latest Capacity Development session launched by the Global Youth Coalition for Road Safety, YOURS Executive Director, Floor Lieshout, raised the importance of gathering road safety data before creating a project plan.

Help contribute to the data and resources in road safety, transport, and road safety statistics by sending your paper.

 

MORE INFORMATION HERE  

Raising the case for speed reduction during the new Decade of Action

Raising the case for speed reduction during the new Decade of Action

The World Transport Bank published a paper called Road Crash Trauma, Climate Change, Pollution and the Total Costs of Speed to raise awareness on the impact of speed on the safety of road users on congestion, pollution, and total costs of road travel to raise its case for speed reduction. Global Road Safety Partnership called this “an enormous opportunity to reduce road trauma”. 

Speed and the risk of fatal crashes 

Speeding is directly related to the likelihood of a crash occurring and the severity of the consequences of the crash. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that every 1km/h increase in speed raises the risk of an injury by 3% while also raising the risk of a fatal crash by 4-5%.

Speeding increases the likelihood that a driver will lose control of the vehicle because of a reduced reaction time to anticipate and respond to oncoming hazards. A high speeding vehicle also has “increased instability” and is more dangerous in an approaching curve.

In 2018, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reported that speeding was a factor in 26% of all traffic fatalities which means 25 deaths per day. For more than two decades, speeding has been involved in approximately one-third of all motor vehicle fatalities.

0f0603a166524734bb7a8f9687363f93Speed management
With the new Decade of Action for Road Safety, governments and organizations have begun to address road safety risks.

Earlier this year, the Brussels Capital-Region set a default speed limit of 30hp from the original 50kph. The new speed will not only apply to the capital but also to all minor roads in the region. According to Brussels Mobility, about 60% of roads in the Brussels region are already in a 30kph zone.

Apart from official mandates, WHO lists other tools to help effectively manage speed. The organization presents six tools; speed zoning and speed limits, changing behavior – regulating and enforcing speed, changing behavior – public education, engineering treatments, use of speed-limiting technology and intelligent speed adaptation, and speed management by employees.

To continue raising awareness on speed, the United Nations Road Safety Collaboration (UNRSC) declared that the 6th UN Road Safety Week to be held this May will focus on speed. 

READ ABOUT UN ROAD SAFETY WEEK 

Read about the Winter Global Youth Forum 2021 by the International Training Centre

Read about the Winter Global Youth Forum 2021 by the International Training Centre

The International Training Centre has launched the Winter Online Global Youth Forum – a two-week immersive experience that consists of live sessions, group activities, knowledge-sharing, and remote networking gatherings. The aim of the Forum is to explore the critical role that young people can play in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Deadline of applications is set on the 16th of January. 

Scope of the forum
According to the website, the forum aims to explore the critical role of young people in the realization of the global goals. The course seeks to build a deeper understanding of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and how the different stakeholders play important roles in its achievement.

Because of the global pandemic, youth leaders who have been accepted into the forum will be challenged to create innovations that would allow the local and global communities to build back better, putting emphasis on how young people have been affected.

The website also mentions that participants will be able to engage in constructive debates on youth participation in achieving the SDGs and in practical workshops on how to support the achievement of the Goals in their local communities.

photo 1588196749597 9ff075ee6b5bThe course would take two weeks or thirty (30) working hours.

The first week will include sessions on the UN Sustainable Development Agenda and SDGs, a discussion with international experts from the UN system, private sector, international NGOs, and Civil Societies, and practical workshops on how to create innovative solutions to include vulnerable groups to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Agenda.

The second week will include the Leadership and Skills lab and exchanges with young leaders and professionals.

Road safety and the global goals 
According to the Global Youth Statement for Road Safety, road safety and sustainable mobility connect with five (5) other SDGs, specifically SDG 3: Health, SDG 4: Education, SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities, SDG 11: Sustainable Cities, and SDG 13: Climate Action. 

Specifically, road safety targets set in the SDGs are Target 3.6 – halve the number of road-related deaths and injuries by the year 2030 and Target 11.2 – By 2030, provide access to safe, affordable, accessible, and sustainable transport systems for all, improving road safety, notably by expanding public transport with special attention to the needs of those in vulnerable situations (women, children, persons with disabilities, and older persons).

Road safety connects with so many of the global goals. Better road infrastructure and safer and more sustainable mobility contribute directly to the contribution of the other goals. 

Safe and sustainable transport ensures that everyone is able to move freely without fear of getting involved in dangerous situations, it would mean students getting to school with enough time to spare, it means less pollution and better overall community health, and more. A safer transport system made up of better road infrastructure would mean reduced or even eliminated road-related deaths globally. 

Sign up to help meet the 2030 agenda for sustainable development today!

MORE DETAILS HERE