Articles Posted in Car Accident

The Chicago Tribune reported that the University of North Texas is claiming that 16,141 people were killed in car accidents caused by text messaging while driving in the five years between 2002 and 2007.

Our Chicago accident lawyers frequently report on the dangers of distracted driving, and particularly text messaging while driving. However, there is rarely an effort to put a concrete number on the danger, primarily because of a lack of reporting standards at the state and local level.In this study, the university used the federal government’s Fatal Accident Reporting System and texting records from several sources within the wireless telecom industry. Without texting, researchers calculated there would have been 1,925 deaths due to distracted driving. However, text messaging led to a skyrocketing rate that reached 5,988 in 2007.

A law banning the use of cell phones in Chicago has likely led to a reduction in serious and fatal Chicago car accidents. The State of Illinois banned text messaging by drivers at the start of this year.

Among the findings of the report:

-The percentage of traffic deaths caused by distracted driving increased from 11 percent in 1999 to 16 percent in 2008.

-Cities and other urban areas are more prone to distracted driving accidents.

-The last decade has seen an explosion in the popularity of cell phones. One-third of U.S. residents had cell phones in 1999. By 2008, 91 percent of us had them.

-The popularity of text messaging has also skyrocketed, from 1 million texts a month in 2002 to 110 million a month in 2008.

The 6 percent of drivers using a cell phone at any given time has not changed since 2005, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Apparently, what has changed is how we use them.

The study suggests criminal charges and citations for texting while driving and the routine use of cell phone records in accident investigations could help reduce the trend.
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El Sun-Times informo que hubíeron heridas múltiples el sábado por la tarde en un choque en Chicago de carro vs. autobús de CTA en el lado sur. El accidente de automóvil de Illinois ocurrió cuando el conductor de un 1993 Buick Park Avenue choco el autobus por de tras.

El accidente sucedió alrededor de 12:45 P.M. en la 66th Street y Avenida Racine. El autobús fue número 44 Wallace/Racine que fue dirigido al sur en Racine, que fue parado en un semáforo, según una vocera para la Autoridad de Tránsito de Chicago.

Nueve pasajeros en total resultaron heridos y fueron trasladados a hospitales del área, incluyeron ocho del autobús y uno del carro. Se ha reportado que cuatro del los heridos fueron llevados al Hospital Jackson Park y dos fueron llevados a St. Bernard Hospital. Ninguna de las lesiones se supone que ponga la vida en peligro

The Sun-Times is reporting that there were multiple injuries on Saturday afternoon in a Chicago car vs. CTA bus crash on the South Side. The Illinois motor vehicle accident occurred when the driver of a 1993 Buick Park Avenue rear-ended a bus.

The accident happened around 12:45 PM at 66th Street and Racine Avenue. The bus was a number 44 Wallace/Racine that was headed south on Racine that was stopped at a traffic light, according to a spokeswoman for the Chicago Transit Authority.

Nine passengers in total were injured and taken to area hospitals, which included eight from the bus and one from the car. It is being reported that four of the injured were taken to Jackson Park Hospital and two were taken to St. Bernard Hospital. None of the injuries are supposed to be life-threatening.

Despite the historic drop in traffic fatalities, distracted driving remains the third-leading cause of Chicago car accidents and traffic accidents nationwide, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The other day I was cut off in Chicago traffic while I was getting on to the highway by a woman who had a cell phone held up to her right ear and a cigarette in her left hand, so I definitely believe the statistic above is correct.

As we reported earlier this month on our Chicago Car Accident Lawyers Blog, the 33,808 motorists killed in car accidents last year were the fewest since 33,186 died in 1950. The number of serious and fatal accidents declined by about 10 percent. The decline in distracted driving accidents was only about 5 percent — from 6,000 to 5,474 — and distracted drivers still caused 16 percent of all fatal accidents, the same percentage reported in 2008.Only speeding and drunk driving are blamed for more fatal accidents each year. Most alarmingly, safety advocates believe the actual number is likely much higher because reporting standards for distracted driving remain poor, with few state routinely documenting driver distraction at accident scenes.

Authorities from throughout the nation are meeting this week in Washington, D.C. at the nation’s second annual Distracted Driving Summit.

“These numbers show that distracted driving remains an epidemic in America, and they are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Secretary Ray LaHood. “I’m convening our second Distracted Driving Summit in the hopes that we can continue to draw attention to the dangers of distracted driving and work together to save lives.”

Federal statistics indicate that the percentage of fatal accidents blamed on distracted driving has increased since 2005, from 10 percent to 16 percent. Safety advocates point to cell phone use, and particularly text messaging, as a significant contributor to the problem.

Meanwhile, LaHood has already used the conference to take automakers and cell phone makers to task for contributing to the risk of distracted driving, according to the Washington Post.

In opening remarks, the nation’s transportation chief went so far as to suggest that cell phones come with stickers warning of the dangers, just like cigarettes and alcohol. He also chided automakers for adding distracting technology to vehicles instead of working to make them safer.

“In recent days and weeks, we’ve seen news stories about carmakers adding technology in vehicles that lets drivers update Facebook, surf the Web or do any number of other things instead of driving safely,” he said. “Features that pull drivers’ hands, eyes and attention away from the road are distractions.”
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Illinois car crash attorneys from Abels & Annes have recently filed another personal injury lawsuit in the Circuit Court of Cook County. The case stems from an accident that took place on November 19, 2008 at 21 W. 95th St. in Chicago.

Our clients, who were a driver and passenger in 1997 Chevrolet Blazer, were stopped in traffic when they were rear-ended by the driver of a 1997 Dodge Dakota. Our driver sustained low back injuries and the passenger sustained back and neck injuries in the accident.

Due to their injuries, the driver was seen at the ER at University of Chicago Hospital, while the passenger was seen at the Holy Cross Hospital emergency room.

Fewer Chicago bus accidents and trucking accidents should result from distracted driving as a result of a federal ban against text messaging that is now in place nationwide, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced at the nation’s second annual Distracted Driving Summit in Washinton, D.C.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood also announced the law is being extended to train operators and those in-state truckers engaged in hauling hazardous materials.Additionally, employer-backed anti-distracted-driving campaigns will enroll another 1.5 million motorists in the workplace within the next year. And a pilot program in Connecticut and New York — called “Phone in One Hand, Ticket in the Other” — has been proven to increase compliance in much the same way as seat belt campaigns like “Click it or Ticket it.”

All of the measures are part of an aggressive push by the federal government to combat the dangers of text messaging and other forms of distracted driving. As our Chicago accident lawyers continue to report, recent statistics suggest about 5,500 motorists were killed and 500,000 were injured last year in accidents caused by distracted driving. Only speeding and drunk driving were responsible for more carnage on the road.

“We are taking action on a number of fronts to address the epidemic of distracted driving in America,” said LaHood. “With the help of the experts, policymakers, and safety advocates we’ve assembled here, we are going to do everything we can to put an end to distracted driving and save lives.”

The laws aimed at truckers, bus drivers and train operators are important because they create a uniform standard. Part of the concern over laws governing text messaging and cell phone use by drivers is that they create a confusing patchwork of legislation from state to state and even city to city.

Meanwhile, the Network of Employers for Traffic Safety, an entity created by the government to work with private sector businesses, announced that nearly 1,600 U.S. businesses have instituted distracted driving policies covering 10.5 million workers with another 550 organizations adopting plans that will cover an additional 1.5 million workers in the next year.

“I am thrilled that businesses across the country are making anti-distracted driving policies an integral part of their employee culture,” said Secretary LaHood. “President Obama led by example last year by banning four million federal workers from texting behind the wheel. Employers across America are doing the same to help us set an example and keep our roads safe.”

The “Phone in One Hand, Ticket in the Other,” campaign also proved that the combination of law enforcement efforts and public service announcements improved compliance with local cell phone ordinances in Hartford and Syracuse. Each municipality issued about 5,000 tickets during a two-week enforcement blitz. Subsequent observation reported a decline in cell phone use and text messaging of between 38 and 68 percent.
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A significant reduction in the number of Chicago car accidents, as well as serious and fatal traffic accidents elsewhere in Illinois, made the state the safest it has been since 1921, according to 2009 traffic statistics released by the Illinois Department of Transportation.

A total of 911 traffic fatalities were reported in Illinois last year and 89,090 were injured. Those figures indicate about 3 people are killed and 244 are injured every day on Illinois roads. Total economic cost was $5.3 billion.Each fatality cost $1.3 million. An incapacitating injury cost $66,900, while a nonincapacitating injury cost $21,700.

Fatal Accidents in Illinois
-911 motorists were killed in 832 fatal crashes.
-25.7 crashes occurred at intersections.
-77.2 percent occurred on dry roads.
-48.3 percent occurred in daylight.
-56.4 occurred on urban roads.
-31.7 occurred in a crash with a fixed object.

Illinois Pedestrian Accidents
-111 pedestrians were killed in 2009.
-5,231 were injured.
-One in five fatal pedestrian accidents involved a senior citizen; 1 in 20 involved a child under the age of 15.

Illinois Motorcycle Accidents
-A total of 3,846 motorcycle crashes were reported.
-130 riders were killed and 3,152 were injured.

Illinois School Bus Accidents
-133 school-aged children were injured in school bus accidents.
-78 drivers were injured in school bus accidents.

Illinois Semi Accidents
-64 people were killed in tractor-trailer accidents in Illinois.
-3 fatality victims were occupants of tractor-trailers, while 55 were occupants of other vehicles.

Illinois Train Accidents
-One-fourth of fatal train accidents happened at crossings with gates.
-Three-quarters of fatal train crashes happened at crossings with other types of traffic control devices, including signs and flashing lights.

Illinois Work Zone Accidents
-31 people were killed in Illinois work zone accidents in 2009.
-5 of those killed were construction workers.

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Illinois truck accident lawyers from Abels & Annes filed a lawsuit stemming from a truck vs. car accident that took place in Bellwood, Illinois. The accident occurred back on October 18, 2009 at the intersection of 25th and Madison.

The plaintiffs (both driver and passenger) were northbound on 25th St. stopped at a red light at its intersection with Madison Street. At that time there vehicle was rear-ended by a truck.

The accident was investigated by the Bellwood Police Department. After speaking to the parties involved, the police issued the truck driver citation for driving too fast for conditions.

A woman from Chicago was killed a week ago Sunday in an Illinois car crash that occurred in suburban Glendale Heights, according to the Daily Herald. The accident took place around 9 PM at the intersection of Bloomingdale Road and North Avenue.

The victim, Lual Mang, 67, was riding as a passenger at the time of the accident. Glendale Heights police ticketed the driver of the car she was riding in with disobeying a traffic control device and driving without insurance.

The passenger was rushed by ambulance to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood were she was pronounced dead a short time later.

The Chicago Daily Herald is reporting that a man from Carpentersville, Illinois has been arrested and is being held in jail due to his alleged involvement in a DuPage County hit-and-run car accident that occurred early on Sunday in West Chicago. The accident resulted in the death of a 27-year-old Schaumburg resident.

The victim was headed northbound on Route 59 in a 2001 Ford escort when the defendant, who was headed eastbound in a 2003 Ford Explorer, disobeyed a traffic signal. The crash was hard enough to cause the Explorer to flip over. The accident victim was rushed to Central DuPage Hospital where he passed away a short time later.

There were six occupants in the Ford Explorer and they all fled the scene of the accident before police arrived. All of the occupants were found at a home in West Chicago shortly after. The investigation is being handled by the West Chicago Police Department.

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