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Agencies hope to use more detailed data to drive down crashes

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The intersection of Charles and Raffel roads in Woodstock is set to be improved in 2014 to handle increased traffic from the new high school. (Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com)

The road system in McHenry County is maintained by a hodgepodge of municipalities, townships, the county and the state.

And the system for tracking accidents across the county is equally piecemeal.

Enforcement agencies send accident data to the state, but the state doesn’t track accident locations.

There are 17 townships and 30 municipalities in McHenry County – and that doesn’t count park districts and school districts, many of which maintain their own roads.

Each of these has its own safety and maintenance plans.

“Everybody in some way, shape or form is looking at safety,” said Wally Dittrich, the design manager for the county’s division of transportation.

“All those groups have different amounts of resources, especially when you look at townships. They don’t have engineering departments. Even most of your municipalities don’t have engineering departments.”

The village of Spring Grove tried electronic accident reporting, but is back to doing it by hand because money from the state dried up, Police Chief Tom Sanders said.

“I think there are a lot of good ideas and things out there,” he said. “It just kind of falls flat on its face. It’s manpower and money.”

During the economic downturn, budgets got tight and when people left, positions weren’t filled, he said. If reports were automatic and the state helped out, he said he could see a lot of agencies, the Spring Grove Police Department included, participating.

Spring Grove doesn’t have very many accidents, and 30 percent or 40 percent of the ones it has occur on private property, Sanders said. There’s not so many that staff can’t track them – but to send data on to the county is above and beyond what his officers have time for, he said.

As the Illinois Department of Transportation takes its Driving Zero Fatalities to Reality initiative to the next level, it’s looking to expand access to data and issue data in days instead of months.

The state’s zero-fatalities initiative, started last year, has been most visible in the fatality counts posted on highway message boards.

The state has reached out to McHenry County and seven other counties with the most fatal or severe-injury accidents per road-mile traveled. The other counties are DuPage, Kane, Lake, Will, Winnebago, Champaign and Vermilion.

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