Opinion: Drivers of Maine, what exactly is your hurry?

The people sharing the road with you are someone’s grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, sons and daughters.

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Have you ever considered how many traffic fatalities on Maine roads are acceptable to you? Is it 100 fatalities? Is it 50? Is it 25? As of Aug. 28, a total of 112 people have died on Maine roads since Jan. 1.

That is 112 people who did not arrive at their destination safely; 112 people who left behind and likely shattered the emotional lives of the people who loved them. That’s 112 people who will never again attend holiday celebrations, birthday parties, weddings or family gatherings. How can any number greater than zero be acceptable? Lauren V.



Stewart is the director of the Maine Bureau of Highway Safety. Safe driving cannot be the sole responsibility of federal and state government entities, auto manufacturers, legislators, law enforcement officers or driving instructors. Safe driving is the responsibility of each one of us that uses the public roads for transportation as a condition of our privilege to drive.

We each must have a conscious and vested interest in being responsible road users and genuinely caring about the people we are sharing the road with, and we must keep that spirit of sharing and caring in the forefront of our minds, always, when driving. After all, the people sharing the road with you are someone’s grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, sons and daughters, and any one of them could be yours. Treat them as if they are yours.

What does that really mean? It means making good choices and decisions when behind the wheel. It means taking your single most important task – driving – as seriously as you would take any other dangerous activity that you are going to engage in, like using a chainsaw, hunting or white-water rafting, all of which require pre-planning to ensure your safety. Just because you may drive every day does not make it a less dangerous activity.

It means ensuring that you and your passengers are appropriately secured with seat belts or child restraints. It means ensuring that you are wearing the best available safety gear when biking or motorcycling or wearing bright and reflective clothing when walking. It means ensuring that you are awake, alert, not distracted and sober when planning to get behind the wheel.

It means anticipating roadway hazards and people pulling out in front of you. It means looking out for animals and people on the sides of the road, and it means thinking about what is on the other side of the bend in the road or crest of a hill that you can’t yet see. It means driving defensively, not aggressively.

Remember that people are human, and humans are fallible. Anticipate that the people around you may make mistakes, they may be unsure of where they are going; give them some grace and distance. And it means slow down.

Slow down. Speeding has accounted for 27% of fatal crashes in the last five years in Maine. That equates to 216 people that we will never see again.

Even when it doesn’t seriously injure or kill someone, speeding is a selfish act. Speeding means you probably didn’t leave enough time to account for speed limits, increased traffic, roadway construction or any other factor out of your control. If you’re in a hurry to get to wherever you are destined, you’re likely thinking about you and only you, which is taking your focus off your safe driving.

Even small increases in speed can increase the risk of injury and death for drivers and passengers. Higher driving speeds increase braking distance and provide less time to process information and act on it. What role will you play in helping Maine achieve zero roadway fatalities? Is your hurry worth your life or the life of another person? We invite you to add your comments, and we encourage a thoughtful, open and lively exchange of ideas and information on this website.

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