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Accidents Cut on Bridges Safer Bridges a Priority
Highland, NY - 2006 was one of the safest years to travel across Hudson Valley bridges, according to statistics released by the New York State Bridge Authority.
Overall, accidents were reduced nearly 22 percent in 2006 across the five spans crossing the Hudson River, averaging one accident for every 343,000 crossings.“Safety is one of our highest priorities,” James Sproat, Chairman of the Bridge Authority said.“We saw a small increase in accidents in 2005, mostly due to a tough winter, and decided to make sure we did everything we could to make 2006 a safer year.”
Increased enforcement, improvements in engineering and mild weather so far this winter all contributed to the decline in accidents. While the majority of accidents are minor - fender-benders, the combination of highway speed on the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge and heavy volume on other bridges means accident prevention is an ongoing effort for the Bridge Authority.The biggest decrease came on the Newburgh-Beacon span, which also has the highest traffic volume of any of the bridges. Accidents dropped from 98 in 2005 to 73 in 2006.
The Kingston-Rhinecliff (30 in 2005 to 18 in 2006) and the Rip Van Winkle Bridges (14 in 2005 to 8 in 2006) also saw significant drops and the Mid-Hudson Bridge, with the second highest volume of any bridge, saw a decrease in accidents (69 in 2005 to 61 in 2006).
The Bear Mountain Bridge, which had the lowest number of accidents for any span, saw a small increase, from 9 to 11 accidents over the entire year.Sproat also complimented the efforts of local police agencies and NYS Troopers who provide enforcement on the bridges and Palisades Park Police who provide additional enforcement on the Bear Mountain Bridge. “Regular patrols and special details make our bridges safer for everyone,” Sproat said.
