There Are Two Reasons Alaska Is The Most Dangerous State To Drive
The global coronavirus pandemic has at least one positive effect on society. Due to the significantly lower traffic...
There Are Two Reasons Alaska Is The Most Dangerous State To Drive
The global coronavirus pandemic has at least one positive effect on society. Due to the significantly lower traffic in the past six to nine months, significantly fewer people are involved in accidents. And this means fewer people will die and fewer people will get injured. The numbers for 2020 are not available yet but we can take a look at the previous years.
Each year the number of people killed on the roads in the United States is above 30,000. In 2018, for example, 36,560 lives were lost due to one of many factors including careless driving, drunk driving, speeding, a dangerous section of road, bad weather, a vehicle defect, and others. 36,560 people are not with us anymore due to someone’s mistake.
Of course, the situation differs from state to state. While it should be safer to drive in Minnesota and Massachusetts, it’s an entirely different story if you are a driver or a pedestrian in Alaska. According to new research, the country’s largest state by territory is the most dangerous state to drive for two main reasons.
Based on numbers provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the study discovered that drunk driving and speeding account for 97.5 percent of Alaska’s total traffic deaths in 2018. Alaska has been in the Top 10 worst states to drive list for six years since 2011 and it took the first spot for 2020 from New Mexico, which now ranks second.
Of Alaska’s 80 total road fatalities in 2018, 36 came when a driver drank and drove, representing 45 percent of all the cases. Another 42 fatalities involved speeding, amounting to 52.5 percent of all traffic deaths.