Site icon Vermont Daily Chronicle

Vermont’s passing problem

by VDC Staff

Vermont may be small, but its roads carry an outsized risk. The state’s rate of fatal crashes during overtaking maneuvers sits at 5.57 per million residents — nearly 45% above the national average of 3.84. On Vermont’s rural roads, a split-second misjudgment while passing another vehicle can turn deadly.

That finding comes from a study by personal injury firm Easton & Easton, LLP, which analyzed federal crash data across all 50 states from 2020 through 2024. Researchers calculated a standardized fatality rate per million residents for each state, then ranked them.

Vermont lands at No. 7 nationally — sandwiched between Alabama (5.63) and Hawaii (5.13), a tight cluster where differences between states are razor-thin.

The gap widens sharply when Vermont is measured against the safest states. Rhode Island’s rate is just over three times lower, New York’s more than three and a half times lower, and Massachusetts over four times lower. The starkest contrast is with neighboring New Hampshire, which posts an extraordinarily low rate of just 0.86 per million — making Vermont’s figure more than six and a half times higher.

Year-to-year trends in Vermont are volatile, which isn’t surprising given the small population. Fatal overtaking crashes climbed from one in 2020 to a peak of eight in 2023, then dropped sharply back to one in 2024. With numbers that small, a single bad year can swing the statistics dramatically — but the five-year average tells a consistent story of elevated risk.

Full report and methodology: Google Doc

Exit mobile version