THP Joins Governor’s Highway Safety
Office For Click It Or Ticket 2011
“The nationwide Click it or Ticket campaign is especially important during the summer holiday travel season,” said Department of Safety and Homeland Security Commissioner Bill Gibbons. “Hopefully, the high-visibility enforcement efforts of the Tennessee Highway Patrol will remind motorists to always buckle up. It will save them the cost of a ticket and maybe even their lives.”
The
2011 Memorial Day holiday period begins at 6 p.m., Friday May 27, and will end
at 11:59 p.m., Monday, May 30. Thirteen people were killed on
Preliminary
figures show that 1,030 people were killed on
“We are proud to be one of many law enforcement agencies cracking down on motorists who fail to wear their seat belts,” THP Colonel Tracy Trott said. “Our young people have the highest percentage of any age group to be killed and unrestrained in traffic crashes. It’s important that we lead by example and buckle up every time we get in a vehicle.”
Among
passenger vehicle occupants ages 13 to 15 years old who were killed in crashes
nationwide in 2009, 67 percent were not buckled up – the highest percentage for
any age group, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA). In
“By creating greater public awareness, the Click it or Ticket campaign has helped increase the 2010 national seat belt usage rate climb to 85 percent,” said GHSO Director Kendall Poole. “More traffic deaths can be prevented if motorists simply start wearing their seat belts. It’s a fact; seat belts clearly save lives.”
According to NHTSA, in 2009, nearly two-thirds (62 percent) of those killed in traffic crashes at night were not wearing their seat belts, compared to 44 percent of the passenger vehicle occupants killed during the daytime hours of 6 a.m. to 5:59 p.m. nationwide. When worn correctly, seat belts have been proven to reduce the risk of fatal injury to front-seat passenger car occupants by 45 percent, and by 60 percent in pickup trucks, SUVs and minivans.
Drivers can expect to see plenty of State Troopers on the road, enforcing seat belt laws and looking for aggressive and impaired drivers. More than 70 checkpoints are scheduled throughout the long holiday weekend in an effort to reduce fatalities and serious injury crashes in the state.
For more information on the 2011 Click it or Ticket initiative, visit www.NHTSA.gov.
In
2011, preliminary statistics indicate 314 people have died on