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Updated: Monday, 03 Oct 2011, 3:03 PM EDT
Published : Monday, 03 Oct 2011, 3:03 PM EDT
(State Farm) - A new report by State Farm shows the number of deer-vehicle collisions have dropped for the third straight year. Overall, Indiana ranks 25th for the liklihood of a motorist being involved in one of these crashes.
Using its claims data, State Farm® estimates there were 1.09 million collisions between deer and vehicles occurred in the U.S. between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011. That’s 9 percent less than three years ago and 7 percent fewer than one year ago.
Among those states that experienced the largest decline, Michigan (23 percent), West Virginia (22 percent), Connecticut (22 percent), Louisiana (19 percent) and Arkansas (18 percent), all states where at least 2,500 deer-vehicle collisions occur per year. There were 23,000 fewer deer-vehicle altercations in Michigan alone. Indiana is down 11 percent.
For the fifth year in a row, West Virginia topped the list of states where an individual driver is most likely to run in to a deer. Using its claims data in conjunction with state licensed driver counts from the Federal Highway Administration, State Farm calculated the chances of a West Virginia motorist striking a deer over the next 12 months at 1 in 53, an improvement over a year ago when the odds were 1 in 42.
Iowa remained second on the list. The likelihood of a licensed driver in Iowa hitting a deer within the next year is 1 in 77. In third, South Dakota (1 in 81), Pennsylvania (1 in 86) is in fourth, and Michigan rounds out the top five (1 in 90).
Montana is sixth, followed by Wisconsin and Minnesota. North Dakota and Wyoming round out the top 10. In eight of the top 10 states (Minnesota and Wyoming are the exceptions), the rate of deer-vehicle
State Farm’s data shows that November, the heart of the deer migration and mating season, is the month during which deer-vehicle encounters are most likely. More than 18 percent of all such mishaps take place during the 30 days of November. A confrontation between a deer and a vehicle will occur once every five seconds in the United States in November (roughly equivalent to the time it took you to read this sentence).
Deer-vehicle collisions are three times more likely to occur on a day in November than they are on any day between February 1st and August 31st. October is the second most likely month for a crash involving a deer and a vehicle. December is third.
The average property damage cost of these incidents during the final half of 2010 and the first half of 2011 was $3,171, up 2.2 percent from the year before.
State Farm issued the following tips for avoiding a deer-vehicle crash:
Here are tips on how to reduce the odds of a deer-vehicle collision involving your vehicle becoming part of the story we tell next year:
To see a U.S. map showing the liklihood of deer-vehicle collisions by state, click here.
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