Killed by a Traffic Engineer: Shattering the Delusion that Science Underlies our Transportation System

killed-by-a-traffic-engineer

Killed by a Traffic Engineer is a new book by Wes Marshall published by Island Press is a must read for all who works in the Transportation Industry.

From Publisher below.

In the US we are nearing four million road deaths since we began counting them in 1899. The numbers are getting worse in recent years, yet we continue to accept these deaths as part of doing business. There has been no examination of why we engineer roads that are literally killing us.  

Fixing the carnage on our roadways requires a change in mindset and a dramatic transformation of transportation. This goes for traffic engineers in particular because they are still the ones in charge of our streets.

In Killed by a Traffic Engineer, civil engineering professor Wes Marshall shines a spotlight on how little science there is behind the way that our streets are engineered, which leaves safety as an afterthought. While traffic engineers are not trying to cause deliberate harm to anyone, he explains, they are guilty of creating a transportation system whose designs remain largely based on plausible, but unproven, conjecture.

Thoroughly researched and compellingly written, Killed by a Traffic Engineer shows how traffic engineering “research” is outdated and unexamined (at its best) and often steered by an industry and culture considering only how to get from point A to B the fastest way possible, to the detriment of safety, quality of life, equality, and planetary health. Marshall examines our need for speed and how traffic engineers disconnected it from safety, the focus on capacity and how it influences design, blaming human error, relying on faulty data, how liability drives reporting, measuring road safety outcomes, and the education (and reeducation) of traffic engineers.

Killed by a Traffic Engineer is ultimately hopeful about what is possible once we shift our thinking and demand streets engineered for the safety of people, both outside and inside of cars. It will make you look at your city and streets—and traffic engineers— in a new light and inspire you to take action.

https://www.amazon.com/Killed-Traffic-Engineer-Shattering-Transportation/dp/1642…

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/book/1144359295?ean=9781642833300

https://bookshop.org/p/books/killed-by-a-traffic-engineer-shattering-the-delusio…

Contents

Part I: What Are We Doing Here?
Chapter 1: Bad Medicine
Chapter 2: Deal or No Deal
Chapter 3: Murder Incorporated
Chapter 4: Hand-Me-Downs
Chapter 5: Passing the Buck
Chapter 6: Won’t Someone Please Think of the Children?
Chapter 7: Little Lies
Chapter 8: Science versus Faith
Chapter 9: Killed by a Traffic Engineer?
Chapter 10: The Three E’s
Chapter 11: You Could Learn a Lot from a Dummy
Chapter 12: License to Drive
Chapter 13: Good Cop, Bad Cop
Chapter 14: Can We Fix It?
Chapter 15: Fast Times
Chapter 16: Safety for Whom?
Chapter 17: Full of Hot Air
Chapter 18: How Much Is Your Life Worth?
Chapter 19: The Cost of Doing Business
Chapter 20: Do Better, Be Better

Part II: Mismeasuring Safety
Chapter 21: The Relativity of Safety
Chapter 22: Exposing Exposure
Chapter 23: The Mirage of More Mileage
Chapter 24: Why Didn’t the Chicken Cross the Road?
Chapter 25: Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff
Chapter 26: The Conflict Conflict
Chapter 27: Conflating Congestion
Chapter 28: Aiming in the Wrong Direction

Part III: Make No Mistake
Chapter 29: The Human Error False Flag
Chapter 30: What Is Predictable Is Preventable
Chapter 31: The Errors beneath the Errors
Chapter 32: Tip of the Wrong Iceberg
Chapter 33: Bad Apples
Chapter 34: Wishful Technological Thinking
Chapter 35: Not So Simple
Chapter 36: I Wish I Knew
Chapter 37: Why and Why Not?
Chapter 38: Cold, Wet, and a Little Embarrassed

Part IV: I Feel the Need for Speed
Chapter 39: Disconnecting Speed from Safety
Chapter 40: What’s Up with That?
Chapter 41: Reasonable and Prudent
Chapter 42: Lukewarm Chicken
Chapter 43: Be Careful What You Wish For
Chapter 44: Designing for Speed
Chapter 45: Above Minimum
Chapter 46: The Fundamental Physics
Chapter 47: Common Knowledge

Part V: Designing Time
Chapter 48: Forecasting Overkill
Chapter 49: An Origin Story for the High-Injury Network
Chapter 50: It’s a Tradition
Chapter 51: One-Way Conflicts
Chapter 52: Inconvenient Evidence
Chapter 53: Unclear Zones
Chapter 54: The Fuzzy Math of Urban Freeways

Part VI: A Bird’s-Eye View
Chapter 55: Not If You Leave Your Cul-de-Sac
Chapter 56: What’s Your Function?
Chapter 57: Bigger and Badder
Chapter 58: Between Isn’t Through
Chapter 59: One Shining Moment
Chapter 60: Doing Our Jobs?
Chapter 61: Ain’t That America
Chapter 62: Well, That Didn’t Work

Part VII: OK Data, Don’t Mess This One Up
Chapter 63: Statistically Significant Nonsense
Chapter 64: Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story?
Chapter 65: We Don’t Know What We’re Missing
Chapter 66: Better Data, Better Insights

Part VIII: The Blame Game
Chapter 67: The Liability Boogeyman
Chapter 68: The Guidelines Won’t Save Us
Chapter 69: Hard to Say I’m Sorry
Chapter 70: If Only
Chapter 71: Safer Designs Please

Part IX: Standard Issue
Chapter 72: The Pirates’ Code
Chapter 73: Don’t Blame the Manuals
Chapter 74: Level of Frickin’ Service
Chapter 75: Unfinished LOS Business