A study of electronic billboards and traffic safety commissionedtThe Federal Highway Administration was supposed to have been completed in 2009, but it remains cloaked in mystery.
Billboard companies are moving aggressively to plant digital signs along U.S. highways and city streets. But debate persists on whether the eye-grabbing displays, which typically change messages every 6 to 8 seconds, pose a risk to traffic safety.
Combatants in the billboard wars -- including local and state officials under industry pressure to permit more of the lucrative signs -- are eager for a study by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). They have hoped that the much-anticipated study, launched in 2007, would help clarify some key safety questions.
Yet the politically sensitive research, which was supposed to have been wrapped up in 2009, remains cloaked in mystery. All the FHWA has said, time after time, is that the study is under review.
It turns out that officials may be afraid to make an embarrassing admission.
According to records obtained by FairWarning under the Freedom of Information Act, expert reviewers have told the FHWA that the study appears to have been botched. The key findings vary so wildly from previous research that, as one reviewer put it, they “are not plausible.”
The agency has refused to answer questions. “We have no one available to be interviewed,” said spokesman Doug Hecox, adding that “internal discussions about the draft of the study are ongoing.” He would not say if FHWA plans to toss the research or try to salvage it.
The hundreds of pages of agency emails and other records reviewed by FairWarning, however, speak loudly about the political and financial stakes, as well as industry efforts to influence public opinion.
The unreleased draft, which drew withering critiques from two experts, gave the billboard industry what it wanted, the documents show. Those results indicated that drivers’ glances at billboards were exceedingly brief, suggesting that the displays aren’t a threat to traffic safety.
Yet the billboard industry, led by the Outdoor Advertising Association of America, was deeply worried. The trade group campaigned to remove a study consultant that the industry accused of having an anti-billboard bias and brought out its own studies to frame public debate while the FHWA was still studying the issue.
Digital signs proliferate
Today, of more than 400,000 billboards in the U.S., estimates of digital displays range from slightly more than 2,000 to as many as 3,200. The industry has been adding hundreds of the more-profitable signs each year.
The FHWA study followed a controversial memo by the agency in September 2007 that appeared to green light the digital expansion. The memo stated that electronic displays were not prohibited under longstanding federal-state agreements that ban “intermittent’’ or ‘’flashing’’ signs.
Anti-billboard groups, including Scenic America, denounced the memo as farcical, saying billboards that alternate content every few seconds are the exact definition of “intermittent’’ signs. Responding to attacks, the FHWA said that it was only clarifying existing policy.
Stung by backlash from the memo, the FHWA launched its study. It relied on sophisticated instruments to monitor how long drivers on fixed routes in Reading, Pa., and Richmond, Va., glanced at digital billboards.
“Lots of interest from all sides,” said an email from senior agency official, referring to the research. “There is huge money involved here, so the interests are getting pretty strident.”
A consulting firm, Science Applications International Corp., was hired to run the study. It brought on Jerry Wachtel, a Berkeley-based traffic safety expert, as an adviser. Science Applications declined comment.
The industry at the time was smarting from a report by Wachtel for Maryland transportation officials. They had asked him to review two industry-sponsored studies that the industry said confirmed the safety of digital billboards. Wachtel’s report said both studies were biased and misleading.

Scenic America
A Clear Channel digital billboard advertises itself through electrical wires in Sarasota, Fla.
In a seemingly orchestrated campaign, several industry groups and members of Congress fired off letters attacking Wachtel and seeking his removal from the FHWA study. In its letter to Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, the outdoor advertising association blasted what it called Wachtel’s “high-profile activism.”
Five House members from Pennsylvania — Democrats Jason Altmire, Christopher Carney and Tim Holden, and Republicans Charles W. Dent and Todd Russell Platts — signed a letter to FHWA Administrator Victor Mendez complaining of biased remarks by Wachtel at a hearing on billboards in their state. His involvement, they wrote, “may undermine the credibility of ongoing federal research.”
Billboard industry's political donations
All five lawmakers have received campaign support from billboard executives or political action committees since 2006, according to research by the Washington-based Center for Responsive Politics. The donations totaled at least $26,484.
Altmire spokesman Richard Carbo said in an email that the congressmen “were concerned that the reports from the Federal Highway Administration were not unbiased. That was the only purpose of the letter.”
In fact, Wachtel’s role was limited and his involvement basically had ended by the time of the protests. However, FHWA officials wanted to avoid any appearance of caving in. “I think we have to be very careful in dealing with this issue,” one official said in an email. “We do not want industry dictating whom we may or may not employ on our projects.”
Responding to the outdoor advertising association, FHWA Associate Administrator Gloria Shepherd wrote: “We are well aware of the sensitive nature of this research. … I can assure you that we will be monitoring’’ the work “to be sure it is accomplished in an objective manner.”
Wachtel, who has worked for billboard companies in the past, told FairWarning that “in their eyes, I have been both the world’s smartest guy and the world’s worst individual. I’m the smartest guy when I tell them what they want to hear.”
In response to questions from FairWarning, the association said in an email that “OAAA and the outdoor industry support fair research. In fact, we’ve researched traffic safety for years. …The results have not indicated a correlation between digital billboards and traffic accidents.”
Records show that FHWA officials rebuffed a Freedom of Information request from an industry lawyer to disclose the research locations, saying they would be kept secret “until the tests are completed to protect the integrity of the results.”
But the industry found out, anyway. It launched its own studies in Reading and Richmond and blared the results. “Digital Billboards Not Linked to Accidents,” a press release said.
Records show the FHWA study was submitted in September 2010, and circulated for internal review in the fall. “The final report is scheduled to be released to the public in December 2010,” an agency memo said.
However, the review continued into 2011, when the two outside experts criticized it. Identified only as “REVIEWER 1” and “REVIEWER 2,” they concluded that the data appeared to be wrong.
Distracted driving research has sought to find the amount of time when drivers looking away from the road raises the risk of a crash. In the scientific literature, glance times associated with a higher crash risk have been variously estimated at 2 seconds, 1.6 seconds or three-quarters of a second.
Almost impossible
In the FHWA study, recorded glances were so brief that none came close to 2 seconds or even 1.6 seconds. Only about 1 percent were above three-quarters of a second.
In fact, the average was slightly below one-tenth of a second -- a number both expert reviewers considered almost impossible.
“The reported glances to billboards here are on the order of 10-times shorter than values reported elsewhere,” one reviewer wrote. “The pattern of results certainly raises questions over the quality and legitimacy of the underlying data.’’
The other said, “The data reported as average glance durations are not plausible.”
Two other experts contacted by FairWarning confirmed that the data was highly suspect.
Alison Smiley, president of Human Factors North, Inc., in Toronto, said the glance times were “extremely short’’ and substantially at odds with her own studies.
Paul A. Green, a research professor at the University of Michigan Transportation Institute, said glances so brief would mean the drivers “never really looked’’ at the billboards.
“It’s a flaw in the data,” Green said. “You wonder, if they made this mistake did they make other mistakes?”
FairWarning is a nonprofit, online investigative news organization focused on public health and safety issues.



How about some kind of laser beam to flash advertisements on your windshield every now and then that would be fun.
I like the flashing signs placed by Penn DOT over a freeway heading into Pittsburgh. It often flashes a message to proceed cautiously (perhaps by not looking at elevated signs?).
How can this even be in question (to say nothing of needing an expensive study)? The signs are obviously distracting and dangerous. That they remain legal is yet another in-your-face indication of what really controls our "democratic" political process: $$$.
I think they'd be a lot nicer if they slipped in some television programs between the ads.
l am more distracted by the signs. If I see something I want to "read" it changes before I can read it. How much can you read in six seconds? Then you have to watch to see if the message you wanted to see will come back before you pass the sign. One town here got involved in a debate with a sign owner. Seems the city can display changing signs at places owned by the city such as coliseum, stadium etc. but the retailer could not. Don't know how that will turn out. I can definitely see them as more distracting. As for the studies perhaps the first one was screwed and the second one was right.
These are hugely dangerous, but so are billboards in general. What makes these worse than standard, static billboards? The light. In bad weather or at night (and especially in bad weather at night), these effect a driver's ability to see. They need to go.
The study has been and is being done.....by the advertising companies.
If these signs did not grab and hold the attention of motorists, these companies would not make the huge investments to replace conventional signs with their digital counterparts.
Loss of focus (on driving) does not necessarily translate into more traffic accidents. However, that is surely a reasonable assumption.
I know these things are out there, but to be dead honest, I don't pay them the slightest bit of attention. They're just ads for things I'm either already buying, and thus need no further prompting, or for things I will never buy, and thus am incapable of noticing.
Indigo-Rage....it's the driver in front or beside you that had better not be distracted by one of these signs or you could be "toast"
I hear you Sylvia - safest place to be on the road is behind me ;-)
Alot if not most of America has sold out for money. Time for a revolution
Those things are the worst, they are blinding, during rain especially, but of course nothing will be done about it until some Nader-ite writes a book and points fingers.
I was driving on I-40 east somewhere between Nashville and Knoxville last night just after dusk. There was a sign that was blindingly bright. It was really a hazard to my vision. I typically don't mind these signs but this one needed to be toned down considering the time of day.
Susan Penny Young...dusk is the worst time...eyes have trouble adjusting for some reason...
glad you got safely by that sign
How about getting rid of ALL billboards? I'm for that.
David you get my vote. Billboards of any type are a blight on the landscape. Just imagine how pleasant a drive would be if you didn't have a single billboard to block the scenery.
Electronic billboards are, for the most part, useless. I passed at least half a dozen on my way to work and I'll be damned if I can remember what any of them read. Even the one, diplaying the time & temperature is drawing a blank for me. Ask yourself, "Of all the electronic billboards you see on a daily basis, how many of them do you REALLY remember?"
...they count on this stuff working on the deeper levels of the brain...and signs do this to people...
...no need to have the conscious mind even remember this stuff
...but that makes these signs dangerous for a whole bunch of reasons in addition to road safety
I can tell you that these digital billboards are a huge distraction and a highway safety hazard. There are dozens of these bill boards as you drive along Interstate 15 in Southern Nevada from The California State line into Las Vegas.
The messages change quickly and drivers watch or try to read what they say before the next message. They slow down hoping a message they missed will repeat before they pass it. Some use rapid "flash" messaging that pulls your attenton from the road.
When there is so much concentration on the dangers of distracted driving with electronic hand held devices, where is the differance? They should be ruled a danger and taken off of the roads.
At least they were able to get what they asked for under the Freedom of Information Act. People have been trying to get data from taxpayer funded global warming alarmists under the Freedom of Information Act and the warmists keep refusing to release the data.
There needs to be some sort of standards to reduce glare along high speed roads. The worst offenders are gas stations (convenience stores) and car dealers. The lighting needs to be the downcast type that doesn't throw light to the sides. They really ruin your night vision. They are also so bright that many people leave those over lit convenience stores without turning on their headlights.
Love the signs. They're clear, they're bright.... and you see them far enough ahead of you as you drive it only takes split seconds to read. One thing I noticed is the signs must have an automatic dimmer for night time viewing since they are not distracting at night.
Bludemon - Did your parents give you a flashlight and tell you to go and play in the closet when you were young?
Bludemon...it's the other driver being distracted that you have to think about...not everyone sees these signs the way you do & may you never "run into" anyone who has difficulty with the intense light!
Please stop the installation of these obnoxious signs!
If they install these signs on toll roads I should get a discount for having to put up with the distraction.
good one Joyce!
Most drivers I encounter would be distracted by just about anything. I doubt they even see the billboard because they are busy texting, stuffing their fat face with fast food, or yelling at their sont-nosed BD kids. The sad fact is most people have no business being behind the wheel in the first place - their are simply to stupid to handle it.
Big Trouble... each one of these "bright lights who drive distracted" love being super-hyped to the point where their adrenal glands die & then later they wonder why their bodies give out!
They are a total distraction! That is their intended purpose, for God's sake!!! What is advertising intended to do if not grab your attention? This is simply an unacceptable taking of that to the extreme. There a couple near me that I would like to treat to a shotgun blast! One of them displays fireworks-like explosions at a fairly rapid rate and is totally impossible to ignore, not to mention that it is bright enough to temporarily inhibit night vision! This this is a public menace! Time to ban these things or at least put a limit on their brightness!
The city I am from started using these quite some time ago. I don't see much of a hazard when you drive by them on a daily basis because eventually you don't care what they say. Tourists and travelers are the ones I would be worried bout being distracted in an unfamiliar place.
Instead of spending billions on advertising,it might be a good idea to spend it on quality and customer service
what the federal government screwed up ANOTHER study! stop the presses. it is common sense they are dangerous. they keep changing content and drivers are watching. that is why the industry is installing them. if this goes thriough, it is obviously a political decision, not a safety decision.
Money, money, money....moooonney!
I don't worry too much about the jerks who get killed while using their cellphones while driving, but I DO care about the other people they kill in the process.
The police should be able to access the records of any phone registered to a driver in a crash. If the records show the phone was being used at or seconds before the crash, the driver should be presumed guilty of distracted driving and prosecuted accordingly.