Carson City Sheriff's Office conducts a crosswalk sting at Fairview Drive and Gordon Street in June 2016.
Carson City Sheriff’s Office conducts a crosswalk sting at Fairview Drive and Gordon Street in June 2016.

The number of traffic fatalities in Carson City and throughout Nevada rose in 2016 compared with data from 2015, statistics from the Nevada Departments of Transportation and Public Safety show.

Data from the NDOT-DPS report include fatalities from motor vehicle crashes as well as accidents involving pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists.

Carson City saw a sharp increase in the number of traffic fatalities in 2016, the NDOT-NDPS report shows. There were seven fatal accidents reported in the Nevada state capital in 2016 compared with only two the previous year, representing a 250 percent increase over 2015 figures.

Four pedestrians were killed in accidents versus motor vehicles in 2016 compared with one in 2015. There were also no motorcycle fatalities in Carson City the previous year, but one in 2016.

There were 302 fatal crashes statewide in 2016 — an increase of five over 2015 — plus an additional 25 pedestrian fatalities around Nevada last year. Data shows that 327 total traffic fatalities — including pedestrian deaths — occurred on Nevada roads in 2016, one death more than the previous year.

The number of lives lost on Nevada roads increased by 30 between 2016 and 2015, the report shows. Total year-end traffic deaths could be adjusted based on ongoing traffic crash investigations.

Traffic fatalities statewide reached an all-time high of 432 in 2006.

“Every death on Nevada roads is a tragedy, and a loved one who will not be coming home,” said NDOT Director Rudy Malfabon. “When each person thinks about themselves and their family, the only acceptable traffic safety goal is zero fatalities. That’s why, for our state, there is no other acceptable goal than zero fatalities. Transportation and safety agencies across Nevada will continue working every day to save lives on Nevada roads.”

Unsafe driving behavior and an increasing number of miles traveled on Nevada roads may be two contributing factors to the traffic deaths.

On average, the amount of miles traveled on Nevada roads increases nearly four percent every year. When compared to the amount of miles traveled on Nevada roads, traffic deaths have dropped from an average of just over two deaths per every 100 million miles traveled in 2005 to 1.3 fatalities per 100 million miles in 2015.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reports that approximately 94 percent of traffic deaths are the result of driver behavior.

“We focus on the driving behaviors and issues that lead to the most deaths and injuries on Nevada roads,” NDOT Chief Traffic Safety Engineer Ken Mammen said. “Our goal is cutting the yearly traffic fatality average in half by 2030, with an ultimate goal of zero fatalities on Nevada roads. And we do that through the enforcement, engineering, emergency medical response and public education strategies defined in our Nevada Strategic Highway Safety Plan.”

To help save lives, traffic safety partners across the state utilize enhanced enforcement, engineering, emergency medical and educational strategies in six emphasis areas: pedestrian, intersection, seatbelt and motorcycle safety, as well as reducing impaired driving and limiting lane departure crashes by focusing on distracted driving.

During the last fiscal year’s Joining Forces heightened enforcement campaigns, Nevada law enforcement officers issued more than 76,000 citations to help reduce impaired, unbuckled, distracted or otherwise unsafe driving.

In 2016, NDOT completed pedestrian safety improvements on State Route 160 in the Las Vegas Valley and Sun Valley Boulevard in the Reno area, joining numerous other roadway safety enhancements made by NDOT and partner agencies statewide.

In addition, zero fatalities public education campaigns have reached over 97 percent of Nevadans, with traffic safety messages displayed more than 182 million times on Nevada TV, radio, billboards, social media and more.

“For more than ten years, there was at least one traffic death over the Fourth of July holiday weekend,” said Nevada Office of Traffic Safety Administrator Amy Davey. “In 2016, the Nevada Department of Public Safety partnered with Uber and Mothers Against Drunk Driving in reminding Nevadans to never drive impaired, and, thankfully, there were no lives lost on Nevada roads during the Fourth of July weekend. It is one example of how Nevadans can truly come together to keep our roads safe.”

As hard as state and local agencies have worked over the years to reduce traffic deaths, the responsibility ultimately befalls the individual to ensure safe driving habits are practiced.

“We work every day to help everyone be safe on the road,” Nevada Highway Patrol Trooper Jim Stewart explained. “But, ultimately we know that reaching zero fatalities relies on each and every person on the road, and we want to remind everyone to always be safe on Nevada roads.”

To learn more about Nevada traffic safety, log on to the NDOT-NDPS Zero Fatalities traffic safety campaign web site here.