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Truckers are the third largest motorist group using Nevada's highways, and commercial trucking accidents occur regularly in Las Vegas. When a truck crash happens, serious injuries and fatalities are a common result.
Common causes of commercial truck accidents in Las Vegas
According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a large percentage of trucking crashes are caused by:
Motorcycle accidents are a common occurrence in Las Vegas and across Clark County, Nevada. Given the warm weather year round, Las Vegas is a popular motorcycling destination. Since there are so many bikes on the roads, the number of collisions is high. Because there is a large number of visitors to Vegas at any given time due to the tourism industry, many motorcycle crashes are caused by these drivers who don't know the roads well, have been drinking, or who are distracted by the sights.
Given the dry weather year-round, bicycling is a popular outdoor sport in Nevada and the Las Vegas region. To support the interests and safety of bicyclists, Las Vegas has 444 miles of bike lanes and 102 miles of paved off-road trails.
Las Vegas is a major tourist destination, with millions of people from around the world visiting each month. Since walking is a primary way of getting around Vegas, it makes sense that there are more pedestrians on the streets than in other cities the same size. It also makes sense that the sheer numbers of pedestrians means a higher number of pedestrian accidents.
NTSB Official says the accident would not have happened if currently available safety upgrades had been in place, but Congress refuses to fund them
This week in Boston, a man left his 1-year-old daughter locked in his SUV in a Quincy parking lot outside the MBTA Red Line, forgetting that the sleeping baby was in the back seat. Already on the train, the panicked dad called 911 as soon as he realized his mistake. Thankfully, for once, this all-too-familiar story has a happy ending as police were able to get into the locked vehicle, where the little girl was still safely sleeping on a mild day.
Everyone agrees that texting while driving is bad, but two new studies show that 1) everyone is doing it, anyway, and 2) it’s not our only problem.