IDOT, State Police and Local Law Enforcement Partner to Save Lives over Thanksgiving Weekend
Crash Data Reports Illinois Could Reach Consecutive Year with Less Than 1000 Traffic Fatalities
SPRINGFIELD –Illinois is on target to experience its second
straight year since 1921 with less than 1,000 motor vehicle
fatalities. The announcement comes as the statewide Click It or
Ticket /You Drink & Drive. You Lose mobilization heads into the
heavily-traveled Thanksgiving weekend. By the end of the holiday
weekend, Illinois motorists could have seen over 2,000 safety
belt enforcement zones, 68 roadside safety checks and almost
1,000 additional patrols focusing on deadly nighttime hours when
fewer people buckle up and more people choose to drink and
drive.
“The partnership between IDOT, state and local law
enforcement exemplifies our collective commitment and dedication
to traffic safety in Illinois,” said Illinois Transportation
Secretary Gary Hannig. “We strongly urge all drivers and
passengers to continue to buckle-up, properly secure your child
in the appropriate safety seat, never drink and drive and please
silence or place your cell phone in the glove compartment before
driving.”
Illinois law enforcement wants all motorists to arrive safely
at their destination and therefore is boosting enforcement from
now through Thanksgiving weekend. In addition to the safety belt
enforcement, law enforcement will be conducting roadside safety
checks and impaired driving saturation patrols looking for
impaired drivers. Some jurisdictions will conduct “no-refusal”
details whereby law enforcement requests a warrant to draw the
blood of a suspected DUI offender who has refused to be tested.
"The men and women of the Illinois State Police remain
committed to the enforcement and education strategies which make
Illinois roadways safer, and ask for the public's cooperation in
making the upcoming holiday travel a safer and more enjoyable
experience,” said Illinois State Police Acting Director Jonathon
Monken.
During the 2009 Thanksgiving holiday in Illinois, 12 people
were killed in motor vehicle crashes. Tragically, 75 percent of
those killed were not wearing their safety belts at the time of
the crash, where restraint use was known. Of the 12 fatalities,
five deaths involved a drinking driver.
While safety belt use is at a record high of 92.6 percent in
Illinois, 45 million Americans nationwide still fail to buckle
up when they get in a motor vehicle. According to statistics
from the U.S. Department of Transportation, National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), on any given day about 38
passenger vehicle occupants who are not buckled up are killed in
motor vehicle crashes in the U.S.
In 2008 alone, nearly 13,000 unbuckled passenger vehicle
occupants lost their lives on U.S. roadways. It is estimated
that nearly one third of these lives could have been saved if
they had been properly belted. NHTSA statistics also show that
those least likely to buckle up are teens, young adults, males,
nighttime riders, motorists traveling on rural roads and
individuals traveling in pickup trucks.
Regular safety belt use is the single most effective way to
protect people and reduce fatalities in motor vehicle crashes.
Research has shown that when lap and shoulder belts are used
properly the risk of fatal injury to front-seat passenger car
occupants is reduced by 45 percent and the risk of moderate to
serious injury is reduced by 50 percent.
For more information about the Click It or Ticket safety belt
enforcement campaign please visit
www.buckleupillinois.org. |