Sentences with phrase «recent crash data»

These records contain five years of a driver's most recent crash data and three years of a driver's most recent roadside inspection data from the FMCSA database.

Not exact matches

Julie also led a Collaborative Fisheries Research project in which scientific data on the diet of salmon is collected in partnership with local recreational and commercial fishers, providing data to help understand the recent salmon population crash (Thayer et al. 2013).
In 2012, the most recent year for which data are available, speeding was a factor in more than 35 percent of fatal work zone crashes.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's most recent data from 2012 showed that 697 occupants of large trucks were killed in crashes; approximately 40 percent were not wearing safety belts.
The most recent data indicates California was saddled with $ 185 million in economic costs related to such crashes, on top of the loss of life.
Official crash test data isn't available for the Audi A7 currently, though the performance of the Audi A6 (which was awarded the full five stars in its most recent NHTSA crash test) should mean the Audi A7 will offer more than enough protection should the worst happen.
According to data from the Florida Department of Transportation, there were 1,173 wrong - way crashes on Florida's freeways and toll roads from 2003 to 2012, the most recent years for which data are available.
Recent data reveal sharp increases in motor vehicle crash fatalities in 2015 with the upward trend continuing in 2016.
Unfortunately, the New Hampshire Department of Transportation and Department of Safety have yet to release recent data in regards to vehicle crashes in the state.
In 2007 (the most recent year for which official crash data is available) there were a total of 10,578 crashes reported on Alaska's roads.
The most recent data available, from 2008, shows that California car accidents that resulted in fatalities have decreased by nearly fourteen percent, which brings them to the lowest level since the Department of Transportation started recording crash and fatality statistics in the 1970s.
Department of Transportation and Department of Safety have yet to release recent data in regards to vehicle crashes in the state.
New Mexico crash data demonstrates that numbers were mainly unchanged between 2009 (the most - recent year for which data is available) and 2008.
Traffic accidents are the leading cause of death for US teens, and recent data implies that, after declining for several years, teen deaths caused by car crashes are rising again.
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