Tag Archives: bestpractices

Calabasas Crash Lessons: 60,000 Hours Knows When to Say No, Or How Expertise Brings Judgment

This is a Sikorsky S-76B helicopter, functionally equivalent to that in the Calabasas crash. As with any helicopter, however, it is only as effective as its pilots.

Lately on the Car Crash Detective, we’ve expanded the scope of the site somewhat to issues of aviation safety. In particular, I’ve been taking a closer look at the 2020 Calabasas crash that took the lives of Kobe and Gianna Bryant, John, Keri, and Alyssa Altobelli, Sarah and Payton Chester, Christina Mauser, and pilot Ara Zobayan. Zobayan on January 26th, 2020. My theory behind the analyses is that there’s something to learn from every discipline, and that connections can be drawn between best practices in auto safety and those in aviation safety, including in the risks we undertake when we are unable or unwilling to follow such practices. We first discussed the intersection of experience and expertise, followed by a review of the costs and benefits of safe systems in pilotage and helicopter safety.

As noted the other day, the three principles behind safe road use (individual behavior, vehicular safety, and societal infrastructure) have easily relatable manifestations in aviation safety. You need pilots with expertise in risk reduction, which comes from experience. You need sufficiently safe aircraft (in this case, helicopters) to permit the pilots to reduce risk and effectively aviate (fly), navigate (deduce where they’re going), and communicate (relay positions to air traffic control and ask for assistance as needed). You need well-designed infrastructure (air traffic control) to allow pilots to do all of the things mentioned above without flying into other aircraft.

Today, I want to continue that discussion and application of best practices in one field to another, retaining the underlying belief that at a core level, these principles may be applied to reduce risk in nearly any potentially dangerous environment. This is part of an ongoing series (see part 1 and part 2). With these tenets in mind, let’s take another look at the comment section of this article on the crash from the Daily Mail.

Aircraft chartering and leasing vs ownership – which is done, which is better?

While there are a range of comments in the article, there were a few that particularly stood out to me weeks ago just after the crash. A user called “Manda” responded to a user called “SlingingStickyGoo” who had stated…

$800 million? Wrong. Also, he didn’t own these. Leasing is a better option anyhow. Nobody owns airplanes or helicopters. They are all leased

There are four main positions in SSG’s post above: 1.) Kobe had a lower net worth than $800 million (which was the value quoted in the top comment that I responded to in the previous post in this series), 2.) Kobe didn’t own the helicopter, 3.) Leasing was a better approach to private aircraft use than purchasing, and 4.) No one pursued private ownership.

The first point is debatable. As previously discussed, Kobe’s net worth before his death may have been anywhere between $500 and $770 million; it’s quite possible it may have been more. At any rate, as noted earlier, even using a mid-range estimate $200 million lower than the $800 million estimate, the price of the helicopter would still have been insignificant.

The second point was accurate. Kobe appears to have leased or chartered the helicopter or its services, much as one would lease a car or charter (rent) an Uber, for a number of years. It isn’t clear which he did. What is clear is that he didn’t own it.

The third point is debatable. I’d argue (and did) that it makes far more sense to purchase a vehicle and personally maintain it if it’s important enough to use as a regular form of transportation than it is to rent it and rely on third hand parties for its upkeep. This goes for cars and aircraft alike. I’d make the same argument for the use of full time chauffeurs and pilots instead of chartered ones.

The fourth point is inaccurate. Private helicopter ownership is lower than leasing and chartering, but that doesn’t mean that they are never privately owned. And private airplane ownership is certainly alive and well among the top 1%, and by all accounts, significantly more popular than private helicopter ownership. Forget CEOs and celebrities; physicians buy planes because they’re within reach of their salaries, simpler to fly than helicopters, and offer significantly more speed and range.

With that said, there was a particular response to SSG’s post that I found fascinating and quite on point. And that’s where we’re going next.

He chooses to control what he can [regarding] safety

As noted above, a user named “Mandy” responded to SSG. Here’s what she had to say:

Sling, I disagree. My husband is one of two pilots who fly for a LA millionaire. His is probably half as rich but employees two pilots exclusively. He owns a 20 million dollar plane. Next week it goes into annual maintenance and updates. He chooses to control what he can in regards to safety. Two pilots, his own plane and over 60,000 hours experience between the pilots. Expensive? Yes. But safer than contract pilots and leasing to save a buck. Honestly what difference does the cost make when it is your life and you are writing it off as business expense. 60,000 hours knows when to say No, cant fly this morning.

This is why I wrote today’s article. This post contains an awful lot of wisdom without using an awful lot of words. Let’s unpack it.

First of all, Mindy noted her disagreement with SSG’s fourth point above, and immediately invalidated it through the experience of her husband. She goes on to note that her husband is one of two pilots employed by someone who might well have been a neighbor of Kobe, albeit with half the net worth. Using our prior estimate of $600 million for Kobe, this places the mystery LA millionaire at $300 million. Not too shabby.

What are our mystery millionaire’s expenses?

Next, we learn that he has a $20 million dollar airplane. But he doesn’t lease or charter it. He owns it (as I suggested Kobe could have with his helicopter).  As with Kobe, this amounts to a small amount of his net worth: specifically, a $20 million dollar plane is only 6.7% of his life savings. It’s a larger part of his net worth, yes, but it’s the equivalent of having $10,000 in savings and buying a $670 limousine. It’s something you can afford if you aren’t pinching pennies, especially if it’s a form of transportation you use on a daily basis.

His is probably half as rich but employees two pilots exclusively. He owns a 20 million dollar plane.

On top of the vehicle’s cost, he has two full time pilots employed. Mandy doesn’t note that they’re full time, but if they fly him exclusively, this suggests they’re paid sufficiently to work with him exclusively and are available on a daily basis. We’ve looked up pilot costs before, so let’s use those again and estimate $200,000 for a pair of pilots. We also looked up maintenance costs for helicopters, but interestingly, those don’t necessarily apply for business jets, which are more expensive to maintain. A better estimate appears to be on the order of a whopping $4.5 million a year.

Now we’re talking. We’re up to $20 million to buy the jet, $200,000 a year to pilot it with loyalty and redundancy, and $4.5 million a year to keep it in legal and working order. The rolling costs are $4.7 million a year. With our $300 million war chest, that’s roughly 1.6% of our net worth earmarked under “business jet expenses” each year.

That said, while it’s bigger than our Kobe estimates, it’s still not that bad. With a $10,000 net worth, it would mean spending $160 a year on a pair of full time drivers, annual maintenance, insurance, and a private garage.

That’s really not that much money in the scheme of things, particularly if you’re still employed and adding to said net worth. But we’re not done yet.

What you pay the most (or the least) for is experience. Expertise. Judgment.

Two pilots, his own plane and over 60,000 hours experience between the pilots.

This is the crux of the article. Mandy goes on to note that the two pilots hired by the millionaire (one of which is her husband) have a whopping 60,000 hours of combined flight experience.

That is huge.

This is exactly what I talked about earlier–about how expertise was the application of experience, and how the experience of pilots is most commonly measured through flight hours. Remember how Captain Sully, whose expertise led to 155 lives saved, had 20,000 hours of flight time?

This man’s pilots each have 50% more time in the cockpit than he does, presuming they have relatively equal amounts of experience. And in either case, when their hours combine (hello Captain Planet!), they have three times as much experience as a pilot renowned for his exceptional judgment.

Ara Zobayan–Kobe’s pilot–had 8,200 hours. A fellow pilot noted that he was rated to fly through instruments but didn’t have any actual experience flying in clouds. These two pilots have more than seven times as much combined experience as he did. They have almost as much experience when combined as the most experienced pilot in history, Ed Long, who racked up more than 65,000 hours (the equivalent of flying nonstop for more than 7 years and 4 months of one’s life) between the ages of 17 and 83.

Mandy knows the value of experience, and she knows her husband’s boss does too.

Two pilots, his own plane and over 60,000 hours experience between the pilots. Expensive? Yes. But safer than contract pilots and leasing to save a buck. Honestly what difference does the cost make when it is your life and you are writing it off as business expense.

Here she drives it home. The millionaire knows he could be spending less money if he cut corners. He doesn’t have to own the plane. He doesn’t have to maintain it as thoroughly as he does. He doesn’t have to have two pilots with three times as much combined experience as a retired airline captain. But he does spend the money because he values his life. And he values the expertise of the people he hired to keep him alive.

60,000 hours knows when to say No, cant fly this morning.

It is difficult to have judgment without expertise. It is difficult to have expertise without experience. Sixty thousand hours of judgment, of expertise, of experience won’t leave the ground on a suicide mission. That many hours won’t keep going instead of turning around if that’s what’s best. That much time in the air is what you want when the only thing that matters, ultimately, is if you land alive.

Look at the passenger manifest. Hundreds of years of life were lost across those nine souls. Even if we just looked at the three children on board, it’s hard to fathom. The average US female life expectancy at birth is around 81 years. A 13 year old would have been cheated out of 68 years of her life. Two of the girls (Gianna and Payton) were 13 while Alyssa was 14. That’s 203 years gone, simply because the pilot flew beyond his competency and lacked the safety systems in his helicopter that could have helped him when he needed them most.

What do we take away from this?

I think Mandy’s summary of her husband’s boss’ mindset is as good as anything else to take away from this tragedy. Choose to control what you can regarding safety. Do so intentionally. To me, that means following best practices to the best of my ability, whether in how I drive, what I drive, or where I drive.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases.  It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.

Calabasas Crash Lessons: The Benefits of Multiple Safety Systems

This is a Sikorsky S-76C, essentially the same kind of helicopter that crashed in the Calabasas tragedy. What could have kept it in the air?

The other day, we discussed the Calabasas helicopter crash that killed Kobe and Gianna Bryant, John, Keri, and Alyssa Altobelli, Sarah and Payton Chester, Christina Mauser, and pilot Ara Zobayan. Zobayan on January 26th, 2020. Zobaya flew a 1991 Sikorsky S-76B helicopter. Specifically, we looked at the intersection of expertise and experience, and drew analogies between the three principles behind safe road use (individual behavior, vehicular safety, and societal infrastructure) and their manifestations in aviation safety.

Today, I want to continue that discussion and application of best practices in one field to another, retaining the underlying belief that at a core level, these principles may be applied to reduce risk in nearly any potentially dangerous environment. This is part of an ongoing series. With these tenets in mind, let’s take a look at the comment section of this article on the crash from the Daily Mail. There’s often a lot of questionable content there, but at times, I’ve come across thoughts as insightful as anywhere else on the Internet.

To what degree could money have bought safety in the Calabasas crash?

The top comment on the article is as follows:

If I’m worth 800 million I’m buying all the safety options for my chopper and paying for a 2nd pilot.

It’s hard to argue with “TheTruth9922”, particularly in light of how the flight turned out. But more broadly, there is much to learn from his comment. First of all, the wealth estimate he posited for Kobe Bryant appears to be roughly accurate; figures floated at the time of his death ranged from 500-770 million. Let’s use Forbe’s estimate of $600 million.

For reference, a Sikorsky S-76 cost approximately $13 million in 2014. Since we’re in 2020, let’s add a million to that and presume one would cost $14 million today. Let’s also add $35,000 to that for a Terrain Awareness and Warning System, or TAWS, per FAA estimates. That figure is small enough to be a rounding error; if a helicopter cost $1,400, it would be the equivalent of an extra $3.50, or an amount small enough to be unnoticeable. So we’re not even going to include it in future calculations. Just know that it’s there.

What about flight recorders, or “black boxes”?

The helicopter also lacked a flight data recorder and a cockpit voice recorder, both of which are known in common parlance as black boxes. Neither will save you in a crash, but both will help people figure out what was going on in the last minutes of your flight if you don’t make it home. A flight recorder can cost up to $15,000, and you want two of them. Incidentally, N72EX, the 1991 Sikorsky S-76B on the ill-fated flight, was originally fitted with both flight recorders when used as a governmental helicopter in Illinois. However, when Island Express bought it from Illinois in March 2016, they removed both. But let’s say we installed them. Add $30,000 to the $14 million. It’s still irrelevant.

How do you keep it from smashing into the ground?

So we’ve got a brand new S-76 with TAWS and flight recorders. TAWS, by the way, is a terrain awareness system. They’re required on all commercial flights in the US and present in 95% of airlines around the globe. Much like flight recorders, TAWS aren’t required on helicopters in the United States. This is still the case despite the fact that the National Transportation Safety Board recommended in 2004 after an S-76A crash involving a controlled flight into terrain (i.e., a situation where the pilots erroneously flew the helicopter into the sea) that they be outfitted in all helicopters meant to seat at least 6 passengers. The FAA ignored the recommendation, although they eventually mandated TAWS systems on air ambulances in 2014, ten years later. The point of such systems is to alert pilots of an imminent risk of flying directly into the ground or sea. We want that.

You can buy helicopter safety, but you can also buy pilot safety through redundancy

At this point, we’ve got a good helicopter with modern safety features. All that’s left is the pilot. But we’re safety oriented, so we don’t just charter one; we hire one–full time. We want someone who isn’t thinking of working somewhere else while working with us, and who knows our specific helicopter like the back of his or her hand. And we don’t just want one, because we want to reduce risks related to health issues in pilots. We also want pilots to be able to get second opinions and have help in complex situations, such as when relying on instruments to aviate, navigate, and communicate in dense flog. So we’ve got two pilots. If they’re full time pilots, we want to pay them enough to ensure they stay well trained and well rested and aren’t moonlighting as Uber pilots or drivers on the weekends or after their shifts end. Per the BLS, in May 2018, a commercial pilot had a median annual wage of around $82,000. Budgeting for two of them, then, brings the salary expenditures to $164,000 a year. Let’s round that up to $200,000. We want happy pilots.

What about maintenance and insurance? Wouldn’t that add up too?

Great point. While values will vary, let’s use the figures from a discussion on a helicopter forum. Including insurance, inspections, fuel, oil (they need oil changes just like cars do), hangar rental, and other random bits of maintenance, $20,000 a year looked like a safe estimate in 2010 for a private helicopter. However, it’s 2020, so let’s make that $22,000 a year. In fact, we’re not going to cheap out on insurance, especially since we may be transporting other people, so let’s just bump the figure up to $30,000 a year to make sure we’re not skipping steps on maintenance or on insurance coverage.

But wait. A different site–one specifically targeting aircraft maintenance costs–with additional information on the S-76B charts maintenance as much more–to the tune of more than $900,000 a year. So to be on the safe side, let’s use a round figure of $1 million for maintenance, fuel, and insurance. It’s a lot, but it’s apparently the price of safety.

How much would it have cost in total to have a safe pilot and safe helicopter setup?

In total, we’re looking at an out the door cost of $14 million for the helicopter and rolling costs of $1.2 million a year for pilot pay and maintenance.

Now let’s look again at Kobe’s net worth.

At $600 million, the helicopter would have immediately sliced off 2.3% of his net worth; the equivalent of buying a $230 limousine (with modern safety features, remember) through $10,000 in savings. In other words, it would have been irrelevant. To extend the analogy, the rolling costs of $1.2 million at his pay grade would have been the equivalent of our $10,000 high roller dropping an additional $20 each year on a pair of full time drivers, annual maintenance, and a private garage.

This has become too ridiculous to type. Which makes it all the sadder.

The dangers of being penny-wise and pound foolish

None of these prices had any meaning whatsoever at his income level. He could have had two trained, full-time pilots, a brand new helicopter (which itself would have been unnecessary, as a maintained helicopter can be used for decades, just as a maintained airplane) with modern safety features, and all maintenance-related expenses cared for without thinking twice.

Two full time pilots might have had the judgment to stay on the ground that day. Had they flown, the additional set of eyes, ears, and brains might have led to safer decisions–including that to turn around or switch to instrument-based flight. Two full time pilots who intimately knew their helicopter and had any and all safety features they could ever have asked for might have been able to avoid crashing into the ground with what appears to have been a complete loss of control and orientation of the helicopter that day.

Sometimes, safety is worth paying for. When driving, that doesn’t mean buying the latest vehicles. It does mean following best practices as a driver (which might mean spending money on high-weight car seats or winter tires if you see snow each year). It does mean using vehicles with, at a minimum, ESC and side impact airbags (and not simply buying the cheapest vehicles possible for your adolescent or college-aged drivers). It does mean choosing safe infrastructure whenever possible (even if that means spending a bit more on gas to find safer roads).

Part 3 in this series is here.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases.  It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.

Expertise is the Application of Experience: Lessons from the Calabasas Crash

Experience is the application of expertise. The more you’ve been through a situation, the better you are at handling it.

It’s been three weeks since the Calabasas helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant and eight additional occupants of a 1991 Sikorsky S-76B helicopter.  Out of respect to the deceased, here is the rest of the manifest:

“..his 13-year-old daughter Gianna; her teammates, 14-year-old Alyssa Altobelli and 13-year old Payton Chester, and their parents Keri and John Altobelli (head baseball coach at Orange Coast College) and Sarah Chester; basketball assistant coach Christina Mauser; and pilot Ara Zobayan”

I focus nearly exclusively on auto trauma, but that’s simply because it’s my area of expertise. It’s what I’ve spent the most time learning about, so it’s what I’m most qualified to talk about. With that in mind, the principles behind safe road use (individual behavior, vehicular safety, and societal infrastructure) apply in a wide range of disciplines, including in aviation safety (which we’ll briefly discuss today), water safety (many adults and children die each year due to drownings related to boating, swimming, or cold water immersions), fire safety (again, there are many deaths related to home fires each year), and elsewhere. Today, we’ll focus on air safety. I don’t have the background to extensively discuss the degree to which pilot behaviors, the safety of the S-76B, or the US’ aviation infrastructure may have led to the unfortunate outcome that claimed 9 lives on January 26th, 2020. However, as noted above, I do believe we can glean information through the application of best practices in one field to another, if we work from a sufficiently low, base level. After all, everything is connected if you see things broadly (or simply) enough. With that said, we’ll start with a saying I’m fond of using with my wife:

Expertise is the Application of Experience

I thought of this some time ago before heading off to bed. I’m surely not the first person to have come up with the idea; there are very few truly novel ideas on a planet with 7 billion people as capable as you or I, but simply differences in opportunities afforded to us to make our ideas known. With that said, to me, it simply means that when you’re qualified as an expert, it means either you or others perceive you to have much more knowledge than the average person about something. It doesn’t really matter what it is; someone who has a lot of experience fiddling around with teeth is called a dentist, for example. I happen to have spent a fair amount of my free time learning about road safety. The point is that expertise, or being an expert, simply means you’ve got a lot of experience with something. To quote Becky Bailey, you can’t teach what you don’t know. And you can’t claim (or more importantly, use) expertise if you lack experience.

In aviation, expertise (applied experience) is largely measured in flight hours

This is why in aviation, pilots are rated by their flight hours. You can’t obtain an airline transport pilot certificate in the United States (what you need to fly airliners), per the Federal Aviation Administration, which legislates such things, without at least 1,500 flight hours in addition to a range of other requirements. You also need to be at least 23 years old, The minimum age requirement, incidentally, dovetails with prior discussions we’ve had on the CCD about the folly of encouraging 16-year-olds to get behind the wheels of multi-ton vehicles (cars, minivans, SUVs, and pickup trucks) and pilot them at highway speeds, as is the case throughout the United States. You’ll remember that Norway, which has both one of the lowest rates of car deaths per capita on the globe as well as one the most demanding driver education programs on the planet, restricts licensure to 18-year-olds. It makes perfect sense when you see how likely young drivers (specifically young men) are likely to be involved in fatal collisions when they start driving in adolescence, and how this risks drop with time. However, leaving age aside, the key point again is that expertise comes from experience. You can’t have the former without the latter. Chesley Sullenberger, known as “Captain Sully”, gained fame for safely landing US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River in New York after losing both engines due to bird ingestions, with 155 lives saved. He retired a year later. After more than 40 years of flying experience, how many flight hours did he rack up?

Twenty thousand.

How many did Ara Zobayan have?

Per various reports, he had more than 10 years of flight experience and more than 8,200 flight hours.

Eight thousand hours are nothing to scoff at. They were paired, after all, with 10 years of flying time. But I can’t help but wonder if he and his passengers would still be alive today if he’d simply been a more experienced pilot. Or, of course, if he had flown with another pilot, as was custom with the helicopter he piloted that day. What is clear is that he appears to have flown beyond the bounds of his expertise that day in the fog, and unfortunately, nine people lost their lives as a result.

Safe driving is no different from safe piloting–it means knowing and abiding by our limitations

I’ll take another look at the crash from the angle of experience, with additional attention given to pilot behaviors and vehicular safety–that of the helicopter–in another article. However, if there’s a takeaway from this sad and from all accounts, thoroughly preventable tragedy, it might simply be found in quoting Harry Callahan in Magnum Force: a man’s got to know his limitations. Or to state it inclusively, when working in life and death situations, it’s essential to know just where our competences end, and not venture beyond them. We must not overestimate our expertise, because it is bounded by our experience.

When driving a car, to frame this squarely within the bounds of driver behavior, this means observing the speed limit as if our lives depend on it. It means remembering that the speed limit is just that–a limit, and that we have no obligation whatsoever to reach it if conditions are not appropriate. It means driving in the daytime instead of at night whenever possible. It means using winter tires in the cold months if we live in a region with snowfall, even if–as is the case throughout the United States–winter tires aren’t actually required by law. It means using our headlights when we drive in the daytime–not so we can see, but so others can see us. It means choosing divided highways whenever possible and limiting ourselves as closely as possible to 43 miles per hour when driving on undivided highways.

It means avoiding a single drop of alcohol before we get behind the wheel with the knowledge that there isn’t a safe amount of alcohol a man or woman can consume before getting behind the wheel. It means understanding that driving while drowsy can be just as dangerous as driving after drinking, and that the only cure is to pull over and get some sleep (or to avoid driving to begin with). It means remembering to use seat belts 100% of the time, and ensuring that every occupant does the same. It means choosing appropriate restraints for child passengers, which can be summarized as rear-facing seats until at least 5 and booster use from then on until at least 10 to 12.

It means a lot of things to keep in mind and do so often that they don’t have to be remembered because they become automatic. It means approaching driving a car with the same level of attention as we’d expect a pilot entering a cockpit, because the stakes are just as high.

Parts 2 and 3 in this series are here and here respectively.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases.  It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.

Only 71% of US Motorcyclists Wear Helmets, Only 19 States Require Them

Motorycles aren’t safe. But if you ride one, make it safer by using a helmet 100% of the time.

I don’t often write about motorcycles. They combine the worst elements of cars and pedestrians: they propel people at high speeds without significant protection. The statistics reflect this; you’re roughly 30 times more likely to die per mile of motorcycle use compared to each mile driven in a car. To me, that’s an unacceptable level of risk for increases in fuel efficiency and the wind in my hair. So to be clear, I don’t recommend motorcycles for anyone beyond professional riders using them on closed circuits.

That said, if you’re going to ride one, ideally you’ll do so safely. Unfortunately, that’s not what our laws encourage in the United States. Tonight I was reading (as is often the case) one safety article after another, and came to the United States’ section in the 2019 International Transport Forum (IRTAD) Road Safety Annual Report. There were a number of interesting bits of information, including how we lost 37,133 people to road trauma in 2017, representing a 1.8% drop compared to 2016’s bloody tally of 37,806. However, the part that stood out to me for today’s article involved the current state of motorcyclists. The IRTAD report, as usual, was filled with sensible thoughts.

Wearing a helmet is essential for a motorcyclist, but most states don’t ask you to

For motorcyclists, wearing a helmet is the most effective passive safety habit. In the United States, currently 19 states require helmets for all motorcyclists. Most other states require helmets for certain riders, and a few have no helmet law.

The first sentence is basic but crucial information. Wear a helmet when motorcycling. It’s as essential as a seat belt when driving. However, not every motorcyclist does so. Part of why is because only 19 states actually require all users to do so. Imagine a world where only 19 states required drivers to use seat belts.

The truth is that things are almost that bad. Only 34 states require front seat seat belt use to the point where individuals may be ticketed for noncompliance without other laws broken. In 15 additional states, you can’t be stopped for not using a seat belt in the front seat unless another law is being broken. In New Hampshire, the 50th and least competent state when it comes to this issue, adults can’t be stopped for sitting in the front seats without seat belts.

Rear seat laws are even worse. Only 18 states have primary seat belt laws for rear passengers. Another 10 have secondary laws, and the remaining 22 backwards states don’t have any laws about using seat belts in rear seats.

In total then, only 18 states have primary seat belt laws for both front and rear passengers. It’s reflected in our compliance rates; we’re at 89.6% for front seat occupants and only 76.1% for rear seat occupants.

Remember, seat belts are essential everywhere, every time.

This is ridiculous, and merits an article all on its own. Another day. Today let’s just focus on how only 19 states require all motorcyclists to use helmets.

That’s ridiculous. When you don’t require safe behavior, people tend to choose (wait for it…) unsafe behaviors. This occurs with seat belt use. States without primary laws have lower rates of belt compliance than states with such laws. Does the same effect occur with helmet compliance? Let’s see.

Most motorcyclists use helmets, but fewer do when they aren’t required

In 2018, the average wearing rate of a DOT-compliant motorcycle helmet meeting DOT safety standard FMVSS218 was 71%. Use of non-compliant helmets was 9% (an increase when compared to 2017) and 20% had no helmet. Among states with universal helmet laws, 83% were wearing DOT-compliant helmets with an additional 13.7% wearing nonDOT-compliant helmets. In states without universal helmet laws, 56.9% were wearing DOT-compliant helmets and an additional 3.5% were wearing non-compliant helmets

Yes! While 71% of motorcyclists use proper helmets, this percentage jumps to 83% in states requiring all motorcyclists to use helmets and falls to 57% in states without such laws.

People are poor assessors of risk. When we don’t have to use safety gear, we generally don’t–unless there’s been lots of cultural education and pressure to do so. We don’t have that in the United States when it comes to avoiding risky behavior like riding motorcycles without helmets.

As of June 2018, 19 States and D.C. required all motorcyclists to wear helmets. Twenty-eight States required only a subset of riders or motorcycle passengers to use helmets (such as those under age 17, 18, or 21). Three States, Illinois, Iowa and New Hampshire, had no motorcycle helmet requirement.

After the 19 states with universal helmet laws, there are 28 that essentially only mind if children don’t have them, meaning adults are free to ride without helmets and smash their brains to bits. That covers 47 states. There are three terribly backwards ones that don’t require helmets at all, for anyone, ever. Note New Hampshire’s ignominious presence again. They also show up on the list of states with the most backwards car seat laws. It’s a general state-level opposition to safety, unfortunately.

We’re far less likely to use helmets in the US compared to in other rich countries

Overall helmet usage rates in the United States are much lower than in most other OECD countries.

At this point, this bit of information likely won’t come as a surprise. In a country that, for the most part, doesn’t mind whether or not most motorcyclists wear helmets, far fewer people wear them than in countries that actually make this a priority for public health and safety. Remember, only 19 states require universal helmet compliance, just as only 18 states require seat belt use for all passengers to the extent that people may be ticketed for noncompliance without additional identified violations.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: safety isn’t nearly as much of a priority in the United States as it is in our fellow rich countries. We believe in the nonsense of individualism here, and tend to exclusively blame individuals when things go wrong instead of looking for society-based solutions and society-based protections for the good of…well, society. It’s the wrong approach, and it’s why we continue to stick out like a sore thumb in comparison to so many other rich countries in so many areas.

We need to be able to learn from other countries. There are better ways to do things when it comes to protecting our population. And part of those ways involve legislating sensible behaviors like helmet use for motorcyclists.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases.  It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.

Swedish Traffic Cameras Reduce Speeding, Save Lives

Traffic safety cameras save lives. Let’s talk about why they’re used in Sweden and why they aren’t used here.

There are a number of reasons why it’s safer to be an adult or child  interacting with road traffic in Sweden than in the United States. However, just about all of them can be sorted into one of three categories: driver behaviors (including the use of best practices with car seats), vehicular safety, and road infrastructure. Today’s article is no exception. We’ve talked about how red light cameras reduce collisions and increase safety in the United States (despite fierce opposition to them throughout the country). Today we’ll take a look at traffic cameras, or road safety cameras as they’re known in Sweden, and the impact they have on speeding and road casualties. The upshot is that they reduce injuries, save lives, and are seen quite favorably among Swedes (who enjoy staying alive and unmaimed). Let’s take a closer look at the technology and its implementation.

Why are road safety cameras used in Sweden?

Per TrafikVerket, which is Swedish for the Swedish Transport Administration, road safety cameras are obvious, logical technology:

Speed ​​is the factor that has the greatest impact on the serious consequences of a traffic accident. Road safety cameras contribute to reduced speed, which saves lives.

They make no bones about it. Speed is the X factor. It’s what turns a crash from the kind you walk away from to the kind you’re remembered for a week later before being lowered into the ground. When discussing kinetic energy, as we often do on the CCD, it’s the part that’s squared. You multiply the mass of the object (e.g., the car you’re driving and the passengers inside) by its velocity. You then multiply that value by its velocity one more time. Speed is what kills you. You can run into a semi-trailer and walk away from it–if the speed is low enough. You can be hit by a train while standing naked in front of it and live to tell the tale–if it’s moving slowly enough.

Speed is what separates a fender bender from a crumpled heap of body parts and metal. Road safety cameras discourage speeding. Lower speeds save lives. This is why you want road safety cameras everywhere.

How many lives do traffic cameras save each year in Sweden?

At present, there are about 2,000 traffic safety cameras along the state roads. They save about 20 lives a year. In addition, more than 70 people per year are saved from being seriously injured in traffic.

Twenty lives a year may not sound like much. On the other hand, they’d certainly sound like more if you counted yourself, your spouse, your children, and just about anyone else you cared about. A family of four–two children, two parents–killed or alive due to speed cameras would certainly see the value in them. Remember this when advocating against the additions of effectively painless safety features. All you need to do to reap the benefits of safety cameras is install them and teach police to monitor and process them. Most of the work is done automatically.

Something else to keep in mind is that Sweden already does such a great job of managing road traffic trauma that there just aren’t that many deaths to be had there. They currently have a death rate per capita of around 3.2 per 100,000 per the 2019 road safety annual report by the International Transport Forum, or IRTAD. I enjoy reading their reports each year. Here’s the section on Sweden. You’ll note that they actually had an increase in deaths year over year, moving from 252 deaths in 2017 to 324 in 2018, which is where their per capita rate of 3.2 comes from. With that said, they still have one of the lowest rates of death in the European Union. For comparison, more than 3 times as many individuals die per capita in the US; our figure was 11.4 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2017, to a total of 37,133 deaths.  You can see the full report here or look at individual countries (they’re mostly OECD members).

What is public opinion like regarding road safety cameras in Sweden?

The most important success factor for road safety cameras is that road users understand that cameras save lives. The Swedish Transport Administration’s annual surveys show that more than 70 percent of Swedes have a positive attitude towards the traffic safety cameras. The positive attitude has been at a high level since its inception in 2006.

This is perhaps the most important difference between Sweden and the United States. There is a much greater cultural respect for communal safety there. To put it bluntly, Swedes are far more likely than Americans to support policies that help fellow Swedes than Americans are to help fellow Americans. There, the majority of Swedes think traffic safety cameras are a good thing because they reduce speeding and save lives. There aren’t people hopping mad in large numbers about how their personal rights to drive at high speeds are being infringed by Big Government. It isn’t that Swedes enjoy receiving speeding tickets. It’s that they understand that reduced rates of speeding means a greater likelihood of themselves and their loved ones making it home each night. Presumably they also don’t like other people needlessly dying due to irresponsible and preventable behaviors. This cultural respect for safety is also seen in the Swedish approach to car seat safety, which is the best in the world, as well as in other elements of life tied to road safety, such as mandatory daytime running lights, required winter tires, low alcohol driving limits, and a wealth of Vision Zero policies.

Safety is a pretty neat thing. It means more people get to live. It’s a communal way of thinking–the idea that what benefits my neighbor benefits me, rather than the idea that my neighbor and I are in constant competition for resources, and to hell with anyone who isn’t under my roof.

If they’re such a good idea, why aren’t they in the United States?

This is the inevitable question that arises after learning about good ideas in other countries. The reasons are, as usual, political. We have a long history of cultural brainwashing related to the automobile in American society. Our cities and roads were built around it, and life was designed to require it in large portions of the country. We drive more than people in any other country on the planet, and it’s a significant part of why our death tolls–37,000 needless ones each year–are as high as they are. People have been trained to respond, much like Pavlov’s dogs decades ago, with anger and foaming at the mouth when presented ideas related to traffic calming. We’ve been taught to see high speeds, running over pedestrians, and other kinds of reckless, fruitless behavior behind the wheel as good, right, normal, and part of being red-blooded Americans. There’s certainly blood as a result of these ways of thinking, but there’s nothing right about it.

Are there any legitimate arguments against speed cameras?

In a word, no.

Speed cameras are based on the fundamental ideas that a.) speeding kills, and b.) enforcing safe speeds leads to (unsurprisingly) less speeding and safer speeds.

In this country, however, we still have plenty of people (mostly young and middle-aged men) arguing that speeding isn’t unsafe (hence our ever-rising speed limits across the country) and that it doesn’t need to be enforced (hence our tacit acceptance of speeding throughout our society and throughout law enforcement, aside from when people of color are involved).

The arguments that speed cameras are unnecessary are nonsensical. The numbers are clear. We lose more lives per capita to road trauma than citizens in just about any other wealthy country. We also have a much poorer level of enforcement of speeding laws (and much higher speed limits) than just about all the other rich countries.

There’s plenty of evidence that the use of speed cameras in countries that use them in large numbers (such as Sweden and Norway) see significant declines in speeding and speed-related casualties. There’s very little evidence that speed cameras are simply used to harvest money from freedom-loving citizens (one of the most frequent straw-men used in discussion in the United States).

Speed cameras exist to encourage responsible behavior. If we don’t see our cars as giant toys, pedestrians as speed bumps, and roads as race tracks or obstacle courses, following safe speeds and encouraging others to do so through automated enforcement isn’t nearly as threatening as heartening. The goal, after all, is for everyone to make it home safely. It isn’t to get where we’re going as recklessly as possible without getting pulled over. If you doubt this, just ask the dead.

If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases.  It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.