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22 Nov 2007
Safety
Important Points Concerning Your Safety
* It is up to all of us to be responsible motorists. Driving safely sets a good example for others, especially young people.
* Remember, traffic crashes and traffic citations increase insurance rates and drive up costs for all vehicle owners, drivers, and operators.
* Exercise courtesy on the road, stay within speed limits, wear your safety belt, use child safety seats correctly, and don’t drive impaired.
5:21 pm
Chief Tony Bates
22 Nov 2007
Safety
Alcohol and Driving
Drinking and driving facts:
* More than 1.6 million drivers were arrested in 1992 for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. That’s an arrest rate of 1 for every 108 licensed drivers in the U.S.
* An estimated 40 percent of all motorist can expect to be involved in an alcohol-related traffic crash some time during their lives.
5:20 pm
Chief Tony Bates
22 Nov 2007
Safety
Speed
* Exceeding the posted limit or driving too fast for conditions is one of the most prevalent factors contributing to traffic crashes. The human and economic sacrifice is unacceptable.
* Few drivers view speeding as an immediate risk to their personal safety, but speeding reduces a driver’s ability to steer safely around curves on highways or objects in the roadway. It extends the distance necessary to stop a vehicle and increases the distance a vehicle travels while a driver reacts to danger.
Effects and Costs of Speeding
* Thirty-one percent of all fatal crashes were speed-related.
* Drivers involved in speed-related fatal crashes were more likely to have a history of traffic violations.
* Ninety percent of fatalities in speed-related crashes occurred on non-Interstate highways.
* The chances of death or serious injury double for every 10 mph over 50 mph a vehicle travels.
* Only 19 percent of drivers involved in speed-related fatal crashes were using safety belts.
* Of all drivers involved in speed-related fatal crashes, 56 percent were under the influence of alcohol.
* Passenger cars use approximately 50% more fuel traveling at 75 mph than they do at 55 mph.
* The cost of speed-related crashes is estimated at $24 billion each year, or $744 per second.
Special Notation
The primary aim of traffic law enforcement is to reduce traffic crashes, injuries, and death through fair, impartial, and reasonable enforcement of traffic laws.
5:19 pm
Chief Tony Bates
22 Nov 2007
Safety
Child Safety Seats
Statistics show that children who are not protected by safety restraints face serious risk.
* Motor vehicle crashes kill more children than any disease or other type of accident.
* Traffic crashes are the leading cause of death in children over the age of one year.
* More that 2,000 infants in the U.S. are at serious risk of injury or death each year by riding on adults’ laps.
* Restraining children in safety seats can save countless lives as well as millions of dollars in treating injuries.
5:17 pm
Chief Tony Bates
22 Nov 2007
Safety
Buckle Up!
You can reduce this tragic tool: obey traffic safety rules, drive defensively, keep your vehicle in good mechanical condition, and wear safety belts. Don’t drink and drive. Here’s why you should Drive Safely:
* Lifetime odds are 1-in-3 that you will be seriously injured in a traffic crash and 1-in-100 that you will be killed.
* More that 40,000 people die each year in traffic crashes.
* Traffic accidents account for more fatalities each year than homicides, deaths from work-related accidents or airplane crashes.
* More than half of all road-related fatalities are automobile passengers who might have lived if they had used safety belts.
5:16 pm
Chief Tony Bates
22 Nov 2007
Safety
You would write safety tips and bulletins and use this category for them.
4:15 pm
Chief Tony Bates