Canada's First-Ever Road Safety Chair Created at University of Calgary



The numbers are chilling: last year alone, Alberta roads saw 113,357 collisions and 26,426 injuries — and claimed 385 lives. Improving road safety, it appears, needs to be addressed in Alberta.

The University of Calgary's Department of Civil Engineering believes it. In partnership with the Alberta Motor Association, the department hopes to do research that will ultimately help reduce those numbers.

As part of its 75th Anniversary Legacy Project, the motor association has committed $750,000 towards an endowment fund for Canada's first Road Safety Research Chair. The U of C chair will lead an inter-disciplinary team, which will focus on the complexities of road engineering, vehicle design, driver behaviours and other traffic safety factors.

The move comes in the wake of a provincial injection of cash into Alberta roadways. As well, a worldwide search was made for internationally renowned, senior researchers with outstanding reputations in road safety. The initiative also wants endowment funds to top $3 million, to guarantee funding in perpetuity.

Dr. Tom Brown, P.Eng., professor and head of the Department of Civil Engineering at the U of C, is a leading supporter of the road safety chair. “The university already has a strong transportation engineering group, which includes the department of psychology, and the Van Horne Institute for International Transportation and Regulatory Affairs, along with various engineering departments. This makes it an ideal home for the chair.”

Named to the chair is Dr. Richard Tay, recently with the Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia.

“This is a timely and relevant appointment,” says Don Szarko of the Alberta Motor Association. “Our partnership with the Department of Civil Engineering is a positive step towards increasing the safety of Alberta roadways.”

Industry, governments and academic institutions will be the primary beneficiaries of this chair, says a U of C news release. A home team of safety expertise will serve Alberta's needs. And it will also position Alberta as a leader in road safety research and as an exporter of knowledge and expertise in the area.

It's expected that new initiatives in road safety will be tested within Alberta, resulting in collaboration between industry, municipalities and provincial agencies. That, in turn, should spur the development of local and exportable expertise.


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