DETROIT (AP) — A government agency is recommending that all 50 states enact laws requiring bicyclists to wear helmets to stem an increase in bicycle deaths on U.S. roadways.
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The recommendation was among several issued by the National Transportation Safety Board after a hearing Tuesday on bicycle safety. The agency says 857 bicyclists died in crashes with motor vehicles in the U.S. last year, a 6.3% increase over 2017. Bicycle deaths rose even though total road deaths fell 2.4%.
The NTSB also found that improved road designs to separate bicycle and vehicle traffic, and making bicyclists more visible through clothing, lights and technology would reduce the number of cyclist deaths.
NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt says if changes aren't made, more bicyclists will die.
The #Bicycle Safety Research Report includes safety recommendations that address roadway design, conspicuity, collision avoidance technology, and injury mitigation. These recommendations, if implemented, will save lives and increase the safety of bicyclists. pic.twitter.com/SmwJBaGZzy
— NTSB (@NTSB) November 5, 2019