From: Indiana Criminal Justice Institute Traffic Safety Division
Indiana Seat Belt Usage Rate Reaches a Record High
INDIANAPOLIS, IN. – Hoosiers are buckling up in record numbers, according to observational field surveys conducted following the May, 2007 “Click It or Ticket” enforcement campaign. Data collected by the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute’s Traffic Safety Division indicates that 87.9% of all drivers and passengers in Indiana wear their seat belts. The increase comes as Governor Mitch Daniels signed a law on May 10, 2007 strengthening Indiana’s seat belt law, which requires that all occupants be buckled in seating positions regardless of the type of vehicle driven. This figure, the highest in state history, represents a 3.6% increase compared to the 84.3% seat belt rate last year.
“This is a major victory for traffic safety in the state of Indiana,” said Mike Cunegin, executive director of the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI). “We are confident that this increase in seat belt usage will translate into lives saved on Indiana’s roadways. This level of compliance shows that Hoosiers now recognize that buckling up can drastically reduce death and serious injury on our roads.”
This year, the highest rate of seat belt usage, more than 93%, was among female drivers and passengers. Male drivers and passengers, in contrast, were buckled up at a rate of roughly 82%. Seat belt usage among pickup truck drivers and passengers increased by more than 10% - from 54% in 2006, to nearly 65% reported this year.
“The Indiana Department of Transportation invests millions of dollars annually to provide safe roads for Hoosiers, yet clicking a seatbelt can do more to protect motorists from death or serious injury than any tool in our safety toolbox,” said INDOT Commissioner Karl B. Browning. “We are extremely pleased that more Hoosiers than ever before have committed to buckling up as they travel Indiana’s roadways.”
During the “Click It or Ticket” enforcement campaign law enforcement officers statewide cited nearly 20,000 drivers and passengers for not complying with Indiana’s new primary seat belt law.
“Traffic accidents are inevitable,” said Paul Whitesell, superintendent of the Indiana State Police. “The severity of injuries is quite often optional. Anybody who studies the matter seriously recognizes that seat belts save lives and reduce the severity of injury. Those of us in law enforcement are encouraged by newer statistics on seat belt use and are hopeful that such use continues to improve.”
“With continued enforcement and education to the public it is very possible that we may break our current record high and reach a 90% seat belt compliance rate next year,” said Ryan Klitzsch, Traffic Safety division director at the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute. “This would make us one of the safest states in the nation and will certainly save countless lives every year, something we should all be proud of.”
John
Augustine, CFA- Chief Economic & Market Strategist with Fifth Third Bank, shares the following 10 Portfolio Plays for the Summer. In
an environment of...
Relative
calm around fiscal a...
Jo Frost has teamed up with pro football player and 2012 most valuable player
Adrian Peterson to call on people living with potentially life-threatening
(severe) allergies to Show Us Your in of...
Horsefeathers Gifts Making a Splash Nationwide To learn more about Horsefeathers click here: http://www.horsefeathersgifts.comor http://tristatehomepage.com/fulltext/?nxd_id=613002...
Inspector Gadget segment Rachel Nadeau showed the My Charge AMP 3000 external power bank (http://www.mycharge.com/) and the Nite Ize Talk Anywhere LED Light....