New statistics reveal increase in pedestrian fatalities

Date published: 26 September 2018


New Department for Transport (DfT) road casualty statistics released today, 27 September, reveal that in 2017, pedestrians accounted for more than a quarter (26%) of road fatalities in Great Britain – up 5% on the previous year.

14% of children killed on roads in 2017 were between 7-9am and 23% were between 3-5pm – school run hours.

Tanya Braun, Head of Policy at Living Streets, the UK charity behind the walk to school campaign comments: “These are heart-breaking figures. People walking do not cause congestion, road danger or toxic air levels, and yet they’re the ones paying the price on our roads.

“The current justice system is simply not an effective deterrent to dangerous behaviour. We are calling for an urgent review of how the justice system deals with mistakes, carelessness, recklessness and deliberately dangerous behaviour by all road users.

“We also need to see many more measures which protect pedestrians, particularly the most vulnerable ones like children: lower speed limits in urban areas, more time to cross at light-controlled crossings, better street maintenance and constraints on pavement parking.  

“Cars on the school run are a huge part of traffic in the morning peak. By creating safer school walking routes and investing in proven behaviour change initiatives, we can help reduce the number of cars on our roads, improving safety for everyone.

“October is International Walk to School Month. We want as many families as possible to swap the school run for a school walk – helping to reduce congestion and improve road safety.”  

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