Stark County second in state in deer-vehicle crashes
Drivers are more likely to collide with a deer in Stark than almost every other county in Ohio.
Stark had the second highest rate in the state last year for deer-vehicle crashes.
Authorities here were summoned to 630 crashes, according to the Ohio Insurance Institute.
Stark was topped only by Richland County, which totaled 648 deer-vehicle crashes last year. Hamilton had 617, Summit with 552 and Williams with 528, the agency said.
Carroll County was among the lowest in deer-vehicle crashes with 44 handled in 2010. Carroll had the fifth-lowest rate in the state, followed by Coshocton, 41; Meigs, 39; Morgan, 33; and Monroe, 15.
Lt. William Weirtz of the Ohio Highway Patrol’s Canton post, which handles a vast majority of Stark’s deer crashes, said that when it comes to deer-vehicle collisions, the numbers are getting ready to spike because it’s mating season.
His agency handled 372 deer-vehicle crashes in 2010, he said. So far this year, troopers here have responded to 166 deer-related crashes.
“(Deer crashes) are very much calendar-driven,” Weirtz said. “The majority of deer are taken in November, which is the peak of rut season.”
More deer moving around in search of mates mean more traipsing across the highways and therefore, more hazards for Ohio drivers.
In November 2010, troopers responded to 94 deer crashes, Weirtz said. That number was 67 in October and dropped to 65 in December.
While deer can do a lot of damage to a vehicle that hits one, they also can kill. Weirtz said he has responded to two fatal human crashes blamed on deer.
There is no peak day of the week for deer crashes, he said, but there are specific times of the day when deer seem to find their way onto the road more often.
The peak times for deer crashes are 5 a.m. to 7 a.m. and from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., he said.
And drivers aren’t the only ones thinning Ohio’s herd.
Deer hunting season, also in November, saw hunters taking 238,475 deer last year, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources at www.dnr.state.oh.us.
The insurance institute said the natural resources department estimates the state’s current deer population at about 750,000.