
The NTSB is prioritizing eliminating speeding through the implementation of a comprehensive strategy.
The NTSB is prioritizing eliminating speeding through the implementation of a comprehensive strategy.
A comprehensive new safety research report from the National Transportation Safety Board examines the crash risk associated with different drugs, including alcohol, and the prevalence of use among drivers.
New York City is the first in the nation to equip 50 city fleet vehicles with telematics technology that keeps them moving at the appropriate speed and no faster.
A new Ipsos survey finds overwhelming support from U.S. consumers for equipping all new cars with alcohol-impaired driving prevention technology.
NTSB is calling for mandates that would leverage new in-vehicle technologies that can limit impaired drivers from operating their vehicles as well as technologies to prevent speeding.
Join Bruce Landsberg, vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), to explore the hot-button issues in roadway safety at the Fleet Safety Conference Nov. 9-11.
A new report finds that Utah is the only state that has lowered its blood alcohol concentration (BAC) limit to 0.05 to comply with one of the key recommendations made by the National Transportation Safety Board nearly a decade ago.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s 5-Star Safety Raring Program evaluates a vehicle’s crashworthiness, but not its crash-avoidance technologies.
Six months ago, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended EV manufacturers clarify how to suppress a high-voltage lithium-ion battery fire after a crash. Several have done so while others are still in progress.
NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy recently challenged safety leaders to use the Safe System Approach in their communities to combat the dire traffic fatality problem.
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