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Read morePeople behave strangely (and too often, dangerously) on Halloween.
Adults wear costumes that conceal their identities. Children walk the streets at night, asking for candy.
It’s probably not surprising that your car is almost twice as likely to be vandalized on Halloween than on any other day of the year. Or that emergency rooms report a spike in patients, especially with hand injuries and broken bones.
But the odds are that Halloween 2015 will be even more strange—and even more dangerous—than it has been in years past.
Here’s why.
On the average Halloween night, between 40-50% of fatal crashes involve a drunk driver.
When Halloween is on a Friday or Saturday, more people go to parties or to bars.
Saturday is already the most dangerous day of the week on U.S. roads, with more car crash deaths than any other day.
In 2009, the last year Halloween fell on a Saturday, Oregon State troopers arrested twice as many drivers for DUII than the year before.
The grim reality: the fatality rate for child pedestrians is two to four times higher on Halloween than on any other day of the year.
And it’s not just children at risk.
Overall, Halloween ranks as the third-deadliest day of the year for pedestrians, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
The sun will set around 6 p.m. in the Pacific Northwest on Saturday, October 31.
Most trick-or-treating happens between 5 and 9 p.m. Since it’s not a school night, children and teenagers may be out later than usual.
Daylight Saving Time ends on Sunday, November 1, at 2 a.m.
That’s an extra hour of sleep for some people … and an extra hour of Halloween partying for others.
Saturday + More people drinking and driving + Millions of pedestrians + Dark night + Extra hour
= A Scary Halloween 2015 .
If you’re taking kids trick-or-treating:
If you’re going out or driving anywhere:
Whatever you do, please be safe this Halloween.