About The Utah Highway Safety Office

Our Mission

Our mission is to create awareness that inspires safe roadway behavior, ultimately reducing serious injuries and fatalities on Utah roads.  

Our Vision

Our vision is to create a culture where roadway users take responsibility for their safety and the safety of others.

Who We Are

Our ultimate goal is to reach zero traffic fatalities, as the loss of one life is too many.

Each year, under the authority and approval of the Governor and Public Safety Commissioner, the HSO produces a Highway Safety Plan (HSP) designed to help us reach that goal. Utah is proud to support 47 evidence‐based highway safety grants.

To support the HSP, Utah applied for and received $4,708,208 in federal highway safety funding. This grant funding supported campaigns aimed at Occupant Protection, Traffic Data, Impaired Driving, Law Enforcement Programs, Police Traffic Services, and Vulnerable Roadway Users like cyclists, pedestrians, motorcyclists, and e-scooter riders.

Contact Our Team

The Highway Safety Office is located at 4499 South 2700 West, 2nd Floor, Taylorsville, UT 84129.
Reach us Monday through Friday, 8:00 am – 5:00 pm, at 801-965-4400. 

Our dedicated team is committed to promoting traffic safety behavior change.  We analyze data from traffic crashes, traffic citations, and DUI arrests throughout the state to identify deadly trends.  We use that knowledge to develop messaging campaigns and safety programs to help every roadway user get home safely.  Fatal crashes claim more than 300 lives here in Utah every year; we are dedicated to reducing that number to Zero.

Meet The Team
team photo with 11 members of the HSO team

Traffic Safety Behavior Change

Most crashes are not accidents; they are preventable. The loss of even one life is too many. Crash data reveals the factors that contribute to deadly crashes on Utah roadways. Typically, five harmful yet preventable behaviors are contributing factors in traffic deaths here in Utah: speed and aggressive driving, drug/alcohol impairment, not wearing a seat belt, driving drowsy, and driving distracted.

Police Officer and parent buckling a child into a car seat.