Updates from Jacob Smith, our Regional Champion for North America

Updates from Jacob Smith, our Regional Champion for North America

From participating in leadership opportunities in high school to establishing his own consulting firm where he works with national nonprofit organizations in advocacy, Jacob Smith remains passionate about promoting safety issues and youth leadership.

jacob ciricle imageHello,

Have you heard? The National Safety Council recently estimated 40,000 people were killed in motor vehicle-related crashes in 2018, with industries and property damages at $412.8 billion in the United States. These numbers are unacceptable, and there is no secret that there has become a societal normal of car crashes.

NTSB Vice Chairman Bella Dinh – Zarr, PH.D MPH recently shared in an Op Ed how we can save at least 1500 lives every year if every state adopts a .05 BAC law. Interventions like such is what changes the behavior, but more importantly the culture. I was recently shocked after learning the trend “DDD – designated drunk driver”. This has become a trend in undergraduate institutions and illustrates the need for stronger laws and education in higher education.

Upcoming Events:
This past month I had the fortunate opportunity to attend the FIA Foundation Catalyzing Safe & Healthy Streets: Vision Zero for Youth as part of the Transportation Research Board Annual meeting.

I look forward to attending the next few events. If you are attending, please reach out and let’s connect!

  • Lifesavers Conference on Highway Safety Priorities – March 31 – April 2, 2019
  • Texas FCCLA State Leadership Conference – April 4 – 6, 2019

READ MORE ABOUT JACOB

YOURS set to co-deliver RISE Tanzania training with Amend and World Bank

YOURS set to co-deliver RISE Tanzania training with Amend and World Bank

The World Bank, through the Roads to Inclusion and socioeconomic Opportunities Project (RISE), in collaboration with Tanzania Rural and Urban Road Agency (TARURA) and the Non-Government Organization Amend, is organizing a training to introduce and develop people-centered rural road design capacities among key RISE stakeholders (TANROADS, TARURA, World Bank, consultancy firms advancing first generation RISE projects, other) involved in the RISE development projects.

tanzania flagRoad traffic injuries (RTIs) are a major public health threat in Tanzania. The World Health Organization estimates approximately 16,252 lives are lost on the Tanzanian roads each year (29.2 deaths per 100.000 citizens). Almost half are vulnerable road users, like pedestrians, motorcyclists and cyclists. Although the government, enforcement agencies and NGOs have taken various preventive measures, the number of RTIs keeps growing. Adopting a people centered approach to road development can assist in preventing these daily tragedies.

“PEOPLE-CENTERED ROAD DESIGN”
This practical training will bring international and Tanzanian experts to cover topics on road safety, behavioral change and citizen engagement through consultations, case studies, group discussions and site visits.

This workshop is an opportunity for key RISE stakeholders to raise awareness, provide a space for dialogue and facilitate collaboration among stakeholders. At the end of the training, participants are expected to be able applypeople centered rural road design concepts and:

  • Explain the rationale and vision behind designing rural roads with a people-centered approach
  • Inspire and challenge other key stakeholders to promote people centered road design and avoid vehicle centered design
  • Demonstrate the importance of engaging communities in road design from the outset and throughout the design process to avoid road safety risks and social risks
  • Implement a consultation with the community to better understand (1) their needs and the current functions for which the road is used before road design and (2) receive their feedback on a preliminary road design
  • Explain and implement a people centered road safety audit.

The training takes place from 12-14 March 2019.

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YOURS participates in the High Level Consultative Committee: Sweden 2020

YOURS participates in the High Level Consultative Committee: Sweden 2020

Sweden is to host the 3rd Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety on 19–20 February 2020. The conference will be co-sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO), and minister-led delegations from more than 100 countries are expected to attend. Representatives from the world of industry and research, international institutions and other global organizations will also participate.

The conference marks the end of the UN Decade of Action for Road Safety 2011–2020 and the starting point for continued collaboration on road safety. The aim is to reach global consensus on guidelines for continued international collaboration on road safety up to 2030.

As part of the preparation for this landmark meeting in 2020, the Government of Sweden in collaboration with the World Health Organization undertook a meeting with a high-level consultative committee. YOURS was invited to be part of the committee to bring the voice of youth in road safety to the table and speak about our plans for a 2nd World Youth Assembly for Road Safety.

Members of the High-Level Consultative Committee for Sweden 2020

The meeting focused on a number of areas including an overview of the Decade of Action for Road Safety which comes to its conclusion in 2020 and the steps ahead; objectives of the 3rd Ministerial Conference, the role of road safety stakeholders ad well as a discussion on pre and post events.

Our Executive Director, Floor Lieshout presented the idea of a 2nd World Youth Assembly for Road Safety to take place as a pre-event to the conference. The Assembly has the vision:

For young delegates to be empowered with road safety knowledge, skills and resources and to have direct access to their leaders in order to work together as equals on building a safe mobility system. 

Overall, the idea for the Youth Assembly was well received and we are now working hard to make it a reality in Sweden.

youth statement opening ceremony 2YOURS is a direct follow-up of the United Nations World Youth Assembly for Road Safety in 2007. More than 400 young people from over 100 countries gathered to discuss the global road safety crisis and how young people can be part of the solution. One of the main wishes of the World Youth Ambassadors was the creation of a global youth-led organization that would lead a global youth movement for road safety. After a full year of planning and preparations under the auspices of the World Health Organization, YOURS was officially launched November 2009 during the opening ceremony of the First Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety in Moscow, Russia.

READ MORE ABOUT SWEDEN 2020

How are young people ‘fixing’ road safety in the UK? – Fixers

How are young people ‘fixing’ road safety in the UK? – Fixers

Young people from across the UK are using their personal experiences of road safety to change people’s behaviour. Fifty 16-25 year olds have worked with Fixers, the charity giving young people a voice, to create films, posters, air fresheners and beer mats.These resources, created in partnership with the Road Safety Trust, have been housed in a unique digital space for professionals, parents and young people.

The projects cover topics ranging from drink driving to cyclist awareness; distractions in the car to learning how to drive.

Jay Connor’s One Pint Worth a Life? film addresses the life-long consequences of driving under the influence, while Cassy Del Busso’s Don’t Dial and Drive video emphasises the devastating effect using a phone behind the wheel can have on drivers and their families.

Lucinda Larnach’s Personal MOT, is about to start driving. She has developed a personal M.O.T acronym for drivers to follow before taking to the roads, to ensure they are in an appropriate mind-set to operate a vehicle.

Her M.O.T stands for ‘Mind-set’, ‘Obstructions’, and ‘Tell Someone’, highlighting the importance of checking your own physical and mental state, as well as being aware of the actions of other drivers and communicating your intentions with friends and family.

Print resources include the One Second, One Life air-freshener created by Ferhaz Alam, made to encourage motorists to consider their speed, and the Don’t be a C@?k beer mats designed by Jessica Burris to be an explicit reminder not to drink and drive.

While the resources have been made by young people, they are aimed at everyone who shares the roads to try and bring about positive change in these issue areas.

Ann Havline, Director of Product Development for a2om international and writer for Drive IQ DriverMetrics said of the site: ‘These young people have first hand knowledge of how bad speed choice, social responsibility or just inexperience can have dire consequences.’

VISIT THE FIXERS ROAD SAFETY MICROSITE

Brian’s Column: Shouldn’t we be appalled by the number of animals killed on our roads?

Brian’s Column: Shouldn’t we be appalled by the number of animals killed on our roads?

Our youth columnist from Uganda is back for another insight into all things road safety issues in Africa. His viewpoints give a peak into road safety trends and phenomenas around in the region. Check out his unique insights.

Roads even in 2019 continue to be the most dangerous place to be, particularly if you are in “Low and Middle Income Countries”:-a term I have personal reservations, but this is not about being personal or is it?

rd398 animals on road signeditThere is an overly increasing trend of animals killed on our roads. It doesn’t require you to have 3 PhDs to make this subtle observation. In what should be an outrage (or am I being radical real here), we neither know how many of these poor animals get killed annually nor do we know why and when they are killed. I have no bragging rights to claim (yet) to be an animal rights activist, but rightly so, every human should be concerned by the wellbeing of all animals since we all belong to the same Kingdom.

Eish, never mind, but seriously though…if bodies of dogs, cows, goats, cats, deers, donkeys, camels, toads (mention and delete as applicable in your home country) continue to flood our roads, shouldn’t that be an indicator that human lives in the same neighborhood are at risk? Let’s see…why would a dog be killed on the road? For a fact, I don’t think (you can agree or don’t as I’m not in a medically verified state of mind right now) that a dog hit’s a car! So, let me be a genius here for a second:-Dogs (and all animals) have ears, eyes and legs (or their equivalent), If a car hits one of them, the car has to be travelling at a higher speed than that of the animal! Yes, that’s right, Eureka! I’m the first person to discover this:-that’s right.

Luckily, I didn’t have to discover that if a car hits a body at speeds of more than 50km/hr, the chances of survival reduce by 60%:-this is why a 30km/hr speed is recommended legally in school and urban zones. WHO has already done hell lotta studies about this. In the same neighborhoods are children, young people, elderly, and persons with special needs:-whether a decision maker or a citizen, the sight of a dead animal killed on your road should be an indicator that, you are in a blackspot (I prefer dangerspot) and efforts should be put in place to increase visibility, speeding and distracted driving.

 

This is not a joke. In a JOHANNESBURG, Gauteng study by the Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT), More than 95% of respondents to the questionnaire survey believed that speed was the sole cause of roadkill. Compliance with park speed limits was determined to be high, with 72% of the 6981 vehicles monitored driving at or below speed limits.  To investigate the role of speed in determining rates of roadkill, the research team placed fake animals on the road and observed the behavior of 201 drivers. They found that of these drivers, almost 70% were considered to not be looking at the road further highlighting the risk of distracted driving.

Next time, you drive/cycle/walk past an animal killed on the road, think again.

Happy and safer valentines (for those who are interested and qualified in this department).

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Vote for our friends FedEx Cares for their road safety corporate social responsibility

Vote for our friends FedEx Cares for their road safety corporate social responsibility

FedEx is a partner and supporter of YOURS and through their work at FedEx Cares, have impacted hundreds of thousands of lives globally through a range of coorporate social resposibility activities.

CSR aims to ensure that companies conduct their business in a way that is ethical. This means taking account of their social, economic and environmental impact, and consideration of human rights. It can involve a range of activities such as: Working in partnership with local communities.

Company Name: FedEx
Title: Reaching 17 million kids, improving infrastructure, and helping a global alliance: A FedEx Road Safety Story
Video Description: Road traffic crashes take 1.35 million lives annually, and injure as many as 50 million people worldwide every year.

If you had more than 170,000 vehicles on the world’s roads, caring about road safety would be top-of-mind. Well…FedEx does, and FedEx cares. Internal investments in road safety range from training drivers to maintaining vehicles. Externally we come alongside road safety NGOs and invest resources to help keep other road users safe.

This video shares our story about reaching more than 17 million kids around the world with lifesaving road safety education and training, improving road infrastructure around schools, and increasing the capacity of road safety nonprofit organizations in 90 countries.

From enabling our drivers around the world to visit schools in a FedEx truck to teach kids about blind spots, to facilitating the development of a tool that will lead to infrastructure improvements for schools worldwide, to helping people in a village in Botswana feel safer, you will be encouraged to see FedEx reaching way beyond the borders of our company to help make communities safer.

This video demonstrates how we strategically align our CSR programs with our corporate values, resources and expertise to help communities worldwide

 

FedEx truly believes in supporting communities and we are proud to have worked with them with the Alliance Advocates programme and a range of workshops delivered together. We ask you to vote for this company’s great CSR work!

VOTE FOR FEDEX

READ ABOUT OUR WORK WITH FEDEX