Car, Motorcycle, and Truck Accidents
Driving StatisticsIn 1960, there were 3,545,693 miles of highway in the U.S. By 1997, that number had risen to,944,597 according to information compiled by the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). According to the DOT, the number of registered passenger cars in the U.S. has more than doubled from 61,671,390 in 1960, to 129,748,708 in 1997. The DOT has indicated that the total societal annual cost of car accidents is $150 billion. According to data compiled and analyzed by the DOT, 41,471 people died in motor vehicle accidents in the United States in 1998.
The highest motor vehicle death rate, by age, is not teenage boys as many people might assume. Instead, the highest motor vehicle death rate is among males who are eighty years and older. Boys and men ages sixteen to twenty-four are the next highest grouping. In 1999, there were 5,362 large truck-related fatalities. Approximately 800 of those fatalities are believed to have been related to driver fatigue. For more information, please contact Blair C. Lane, Sr., at 856-528-3010. Initial consultations are free. |