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Friday, July 1, 2011
Police Step Up Holiday Patrols
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Virginia State Police Remind Teens To BUCKLE UP!
New July 1 Seatbelt Law Focuses on 16 & 17-year-old Passenger Safety
As of July 1, 2010, in Virginia:
Children from birth through seven years of age must be safely secured in a child safety restraint (to include booster seats).
Those passengers between the ages of eight and 17 must wear a seat belt while riding in the backseat and front seat of a vehicle.
Existing law requires everyone sitting in the front seat of a vehicle to be buckled up.
"We lose far too many young people in traffic crashes on Virginia’s highways because they fail to use a seat belt," said Colonel W. Steven Flaherty, Virginia State Police Superintendent. "Too many teens think they are invincible; yet no one is a match for what can happen when unbuckled and involved in a motor vehicle collision. The few seconds it takes to buckle up could save your life on the road."
In 2009, 51 young people between the ages of 15 and 20 were killed in traffic crashes statewide. None of them was buckled up.* The death rate was slightly higher in 2008 when 72 unrestrained teens and young adults between 15 and 20 years of age lost their lives in traffic crashes.*
Throughout the summer months, Virginia State Police will be concentrating on occupant restraint violations through enforcement and education as part of the Click It or Ticket campaign. Statistics show that with the proper use of seat belts, drivers and passengers are 40 percent less likely to be fatally injured during a traffic crash.*
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Source: Virginia Highway Safety Office, DMV
Monday, May 24, 2010
National Seatbelt Effort
"You can buckle up a child in a seat belt, booster seat or child safety seat in two seconds," explains Accomack County Sheriff's Deputy Eric Nottingham. "But in an entire lifetime you couldn't get over the grief of a child in your care not buckled up and dying in a traffic crash."
Accomack County Sheriff Larry Giddens says officers will be on the look out for seatbelt usage and that checkpoints will be set up to enhance the awareness.
The mobilization, expected to involve more than 10,000 police agencies, is supported by $8 million in national advertising funded through Congress and coordinated by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
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 pick-up trucks.