Between 2018 and 2022, around 180 motor vehicle occupants were killed annually in crashes across BC. Statistics from this period indicate that over 70% of these fatalities were male, and about 26% were individuals younger than 25 years old.2
In the same timeframe, there was an average of 1,152 hospitalizations of motor vehicle occupants each year in B.C., which equates to approximately 3 hospitalizations per day. Of these injured individuals, about 56% were male. The most common type of injury among these motor vehicle occupants was fractures (63%).3
In 2023, the total costs related to transport incidents involving motor vehicles (including motorcycles, cars, buses) in British Columbia amounted to $347 million, making up 60% of the costs from transport incidents. This included $205 million in direct costs, like healthcare expenditures, and $142 million in indirect costs, such as lost productivity.4
The objective of this study is to identify and compare key factors that contributed to improvements in speed management policy and practice in BC, Canada, and the State of Victoria, Australia—specifically, automated speed enforcement and 30 km/hr speed limits. Key learnings will be used to recommend improvements in each jurisdiction.
Despite public outcry, automated speed enforcement (ASE) is highly effective in reducing road traffic injuries and deaths. In 2018, a province-wide survey of British Columbians showed a high degree of acceptance of ASE and highlighted the critical elements needed to maintain public support. Findings of this survey were published in the Journal of Transport and Health.
1.BC Vital Statistics, Ministry of Health. Retrieved from BCIRPU Injury Data Online Tool (2022). Available from: https://data.injuryresearch.bc.ca/DataTools/Mortality.aspx [Based on 2013-2022 statistics]
2. ICBC. Fatal victims. Available from: https://public.tableau.com/shared/FGSGT2WJ7?:toolbar=n&:display_count=n&:origin=viz_share_linkhttps://data.injuryresearch.bc.ca/datatools/TASDataTool.aspx
3. Discharge Abstract Database (DAD), Retrieved from Health Data Platform, Ministry of Health
4. Rajabali F, Zheng A, Turcotte K, Bruin S, Pike I. (2022). Cost of Injury in British Columbia 2022. BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit: Vancouver, BC. [Cost from 2018 converted to 2023 dollars using the Bank of Canada inflation calculator]
5. Fraser Health (Sep 09, 2021). Dutch reach. Available from: https://youtu.be/rMxCSHGb25s