THE SECRETARY'S
HIGHWAY SAFETY ACTION
PLAN
by Frederick G. Wright Jr.
During the debate on the National
Highway System (NHS) Designation Act of 1995, a great deal of attention was focused
on highway safety issues in the bill and the evolving federal role in highway safety.
In a fundamental shift of authority from the federal government to the states,
Congress granted states the right to virtually set their own highway safety laws.
The most controversial aspects of the act were the repeal of the national maximum
speed limit law, the repeal of the law encouraging states to enact motorcycle helmet
use laws, and the potential exemption of large numbers of small- to medium-sized trucks
and their drivers from critical safety regulations governing driver qualifications
and truck maintenance.
While the debate on the NHS Designation Act was under way, the Department of Transportation
(DOT) formulated the Secretary's Highway Safety Action Plan to address concerns associated
with the highway safety issues embodied in the legislation. The Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) have worked
closely on the development and implementation of this plan, which became effective
upon the signing of the NHS Designation Act by the president on Nov. 28, 1995.
The Secretary's Highway Safety Action Plan is a series of actions, some ongoing
and some planned for the future, that address the safety issues of NHS and the emerging
state responsibilities in the federal-state partnership in highway safety.
The primary objectives of the action plan are to:
- Make state and local policy-makers aware of the costs to taxpayers and business of
highway crashes as the responsibility for highway safety programs shifts to states
and local governments.
- Work with states, local policy-makers, taxpayers, and business to enact laws that
attack highway safety problems in their communities.
The 10 major elements of the action plan are:
- Strengthen partnerships. President Clinton will work with the governors and state
legislatures to emphasize highway safety, thereby reducing deaths, injuries, and related
costs.
- Educate policy-makers. Secretary of Transportation Federico Peña has established a
task force on highway injury costs. The task force - composed of representatives from
the medical, insurance, and legislative communities - will seek to educate policy-makers
at all levels on the consequences of weakening highway safety laws.
- Urge caution about increasing speed limits. The secretary contacted governors and
urged them to work with their state legislatures to conduct public hearings and to
fully consider and debate the impact of increasing speed limits.
- Implement proactive programs. DOT will work to ensure that all governors and state
legislators are aware of the costs of highway crashes; to encourage the adoption of
traffic safety laws, including "zero tolerance" as the standard for the
blood-alcohol level of drivers under the age of 21; to study the setting of speed
limits; to encourage replication of "best practices"; and to promote public
education about the benefits of safety laws.
- Develop performance-based systems. The secretary will encourage the states to track
specific motor vehicle crashes, determine causal factors, and identify costs. DOT
will assist the states in this effort and will assist state policy-makers as they
consider their state's highway safety policies.
- Support zero tolerance. DOT will aggressively support the passage and enforcement
of zero tolerance legislation by the States and will provide technical assistance
to the states.
- Promote safety management systems. DOT will aggressively promote and provide training
for the development of state safety management system efforts. DOT will showcase the
"best practices" to show system benefits.
- Implement the Traffic Safety Pilot Program. DOT will carefully exercise its discretion
and will seek broad public input in implementing the new pilot program for medium-sized
trucks (less than 11,800 kilograms).
- Monitor exemption programs. The department will closely monitor the statutory exemptions
that remove safety requirements for specific categories of truck operators and, if
necessary, will conduct a rulemaking to modify or revoke the exemptions.
- Exercise technology leadership. DOT will develop a safety-based technology plan that
aggressively promotes intelligent transportation systems and technology applications.

Much of the action plan is a continuation of activities that have already
been identified, through strategic planning in FHWA and NHTSA, as high-priority areas.
Some of the continuing activities include:
- Safe community programs - a DOT initiative to create local coalitions to improve
highway safety.
- Moving Kids Safely - a joint conference sponsored by DOT, the Department of
Health and Human Services, and the Department of Education.
- Network of Employers for Traffic Safety (NETS) - a partnership to educate the private
sector on the costs of motor vehicle crashes to their companies and to help reduce
these costs.
- Highway work-zone safety - a national work-zone safety education and awareness
campaign and a national work-zone safety information clearinghouse.
- Red-light-running campaign - a public education and enforcement campaign to
reduce the incidence of red-light running.
- Grade-crossing safety - implementation of the DOT Grade-Crossing Action Plan,
including the elimination of crossings on NHS roads.
- Using advanced technologies to provide highway safety enhancements - Intelligent
Transportation Systems (ITS) technologies, including collision avoidance warning systems,
electronic traveler guidance and weather warning information systems, commercial vehicle
clearance systems, and pen-based computerized inspection programs for commercial vehicles.
- Truck and Bus Safety Summit - a forum of experts to present their viewpoints
on truck and bus safety issues.
- Reduction of fatal commercial vehicle crashes - an effort by DOT and the 10
states that account for 40 percent of all fatal commercial motor vehicle crashes to
find out the reasons for these crashes, develop countermeasures, and reduce crashes
by 25 percent in these states.
- Share the Road Campaign - an outreach campaign to educate the public on sharing
the road with commercial vehicles.
For more information about the Secretary's Highway
Safety Action Plan, contact FHWA's Office of Highway Safety at (202) 366-1153 or see
the secretary's statement released on Nov. 28, 1995, upon the president's signing
of the National Highway System Designation Act. The secretary's statement is on page
32 of the Winter 1996 issue of Public Roads.

Frederick G. (Bud) Wright Jr. is the director of FHWA's Office
of Highway Safety.