| Accident
Reconstruction Network > News >
May 2005 >05/05/05
Accident Reconstruction
News Article
Increased Enforcement of Safety Belt Laws Starts This Month
After 20 Years, One in Five Texans Still Not Buckling
Up
AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 5, 2005--The Texas
Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is marking the 20th anniversary of
Texas' safety belt laws by kicking off the largest-ever statewide Click
It or Ticket education and enforcement campaign. Thousands of state troopers
and local officers will be patrolling Texas highways and streets between
May 23 and June 5 to issue citations to drivers and front seat passengers
not wearing safety belts. Drivers whose children aren't buckled up also
will be ticketed.
Thanks to the state's safety belt laws, federal officials
estimate that 17,800 fewer Texans have been killed in traffic crashes since
1985 and 420,000 injuries have been prevented, resulting in economic savings
that top $77 billion. In the past twenty years, the safety belt use rate
in Texas has climbed from 14 percent to 83 percent.
TxDOT says its goal this year is to get at least another 3
percent of Texans -- roughly 350,000 drivers -- into the habit of buckling
up. That's why officials are directing stepped-up law enforcement efforts
at the one in five Texans who don't fasten their safety belts. They include
pickup drivers and passengers, teens and parents whose children aren't properly
secured.
"Most people know the benefits of safety belts, but sometimes
it takes the threat of an expensive citation to get drivers and passengers
to obey the law," said Carlos Lopez, TxDOT's division director of traffic
operations. "Since we started participating in the national Click It
or Ticket initiative three years ago, safety belt compliance in Texas has
climbed by almost 10 percent."
With almost 4 million pickups on the road in Texas, this year's
Click It or Ticket campaign also includes a special focus on pickup drivers.
"In a crash, pickup trucks are twice as likely to roll
over as cars, but their occupants buckle up less than any other group of
drivers and passengers on Texas roads," said Georgia Chakiris, the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's regional administrator.
"We want people in pickups to know their chances of surviving a rollover
crash increase by up to 80 percent if they buckle up in their trucks."
Drivers and front seat passengers are required to use safety
belts in Texas. Children under 17 must be buckled up, whether they ride
in the front or back of a vehicle. Child safety seats are required for children
under four years of age or less than 36 inches tall. Fines for violations
range from $25 to $200, plus court costs.
Contact:
TxDOT Public Information Office
Mark Cross, 512-463-8588
Source: Texas Department of Transportation
###
Back to Accident
Reconstruction News |