Georgia SHSP/TRCC Leadership Meeting mattmontgomery  at:  1/2/2008  

News from the latest Governor's Strategic Highway Safety Plan Leadership and Traffic Records Coordinating Committee Meeting




"Every Life Counts--Strive for Zero Deaths and Injuries on Georgia Roads"




On November 28th, transportation and law enforcement leaders from Georgia's main state agencies met at the Department of Transportation Headquarters for a joint Governor's Strategic Highway Safety Plan Leadership and Traffic Records Coordinating Committee Meeting.







The Georgia Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP) Leadership team was formed to identify strategies to reduce serious injuries and fatalities on Georgia's roadways and to maximize and leverage existing safety resources by multidisciplinary agencies and professionals.







The Georgia Traffic Records Coordinating Committee (TRCC) Leadership Team was formed to help expedite the creation of a statewide electronic traffic record system which will automate and provide real-time data in the field of crash reporting. Such a system will provide immediate feedback and help in fast-response efforts in engineering, law enforcement, and planning to the field of highway safety.







Among the many topics discussed by the SHSP Team at this meeting was implementing a speed management program, flexible funding eligibility, and current 4% fatality reduction goals as seen in the latest fatality targeting tool, the Fatality Surveillance System.







The TRCC portion of the meeting focused on upcoming projects from the Strategic Plan that scheduled for funding with NHTSA Section 408 funds. Including in the funding is the deployment of TraCS, the first step towards a universal and statewide electronic database system for Georgia law enforcement agencies.




The joint meeting was also memorable for the honoring of retiring DOT Commissioner Harold Linnenkohl for his dedication to highway safety in Georgia and welcoming incoming GDOT Commissioner Gena Abraham.




FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE GOVERNOR'S STRATEGIC HIGHWAY SAFETY PLAN, CLICK ON:




HTTP://WWW.GAHIGHWAYSAFETY.ORG/SHSP




FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE GEORGIA TRAFFIC RECORDS COORDINATING COMMITTEE, CLICK ON




HTTP://WWW.GAHIGHWAYSAFETY.ORG/GTRCC.HTML




TO VIEW OTHER GOHS NEWS ITEMS, CLICK HERE




TO GO TO THE GOHS HOME PAGE, CLICK HERE

  

     AJC Article on mattmontgomery  at:  1/2/2008  




'Drive Safer Sunday" Growing Nationwide




Article from the Atlanta-Journal Constitution with special thanks to Staff Writer, Cameron McWhirter




The campaign "Drive Safer Sunday" —- urging motorists to drive carefully on this, the busiest and most dangerous day of the year —- was started in 2004 in Atlanta by grieving parents who had little idea of where their efforts would lead.




Only three years later, it has grown into a full-fledged national public safety campaign —- with a major corporate backer —- that is drawing attention from coast to coast.




"We're particularly focused on reducing the number of collisions between big trucks and passenger vehicles," said Steve Owings, a Buckhead financial adviser who co-founded the nonprofit Road Safe America with his wife, Susan, after they lost a son in a truck crash.




"We just need to get more civilized where our roads are concerned."




TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE, CLICK ON:




http://www.ajc.com/search/content/metro/stories/2007/11/25/traffic1125.html




TO VIEW OTHER GOHS NEWS ARTICLES, CLICK HERE




TO GO TO THE GOHS HOME PAGE, CLICK HERE

  

     GOHS Planner Elected to the National Child Passenger Safety Board mattmontgomery  at:  1/2/2008  




GEORGIA HIGHWAY SAFETY PLANNER ELECTED TO NATIONAL CHILD PASSENGER SAFETY BOARD




It comes down to matter of simple math: Half the victims killed in crashes here and across the country last Thanksgiving weren’t wearing safetybelts when they died. So this Thanksgiving, police everywhere are looking for unbuckled drivers and passengers. And they’re writing more tickets to save more lives.




To accomplish their life-saving mission, law enforcement officers across the state are sacrificing time with their families to make sure your family is safe on the roads during the Thanksgiving travel period. Officers are conducting high visibility roadchecks and concentrated patrols to make sure everyone on Georgia highways is securely buckled-up in seatbelts, child safety seats, or booster seats.




At the Georgia Governor's Office of Highway Safety (GOHS), Occupant Protection Planner Amy Edwards knows what life-savers child passenger safety seats can be.. Because motor vehicle crashes are still the Number One Killer of our kids in America.




This year, the Thanksgiving enforcement campaign marks a special milestone for Amy Edwards. While Amy was working to encourage safety seat use during Click It Or Ticket, she learned she was selected to serve on the National Child Passenger Safety (CPS) Board. There, along with twenty other highly motivated highway safety advocates, she will help the Board guide the nation in setting, maintaining and improving child passenger safety measures on a nationwide basis.




The National Child Passenger Safety Board works collaboratively with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and with Safe Kids Worldwide to provide technical guidance to states and organizations. Its mission is to maintain the quality and integrity of the National CPS certification program.




According to GOHS Deputy Director Spencer Moore, “We are honored that Amy is one of just five members selected to this national Board this year. She will serve a three year term that begins immediately. What’s more, Georgia is fortunate to now have two representatives on this Board-- GOHS Director Bob Dallas also serves on the National Child Passenger Safety Board.”




Georgia’s newest CPS Board member said it has long been one of her goals to bring new insights to Georgia’s Child Passenger Safety programs. Said GOHS Planner Amy Edwards, “I’m excited about the highway safety contacts, opportunities, and insight from this Board. I think they’ll be immeasurable for Georgia.”




But Amy Edwards also knows life-saving is ultimately a local responsibility. That’s why she’s encouraging every parent and caregiver to make sure to buckle-up their kids in age and size appropriate car seats and booster seats this Thanksgiving.. And why she supports Click It Or Ticket enforcement not only during this Thanksgiving holiday, but for every trip, every seat, every time.




FOR A LISTING OF CHILD PASSENGER SAFETY SEAT FITTING STATIONS IN GEORGIA, CLICK ON:




http://www.gahighwaysafety.org/stations.html




TO VIEW OTHER GOHS NEWS ITEMS, CLICK HERE




TO GO TO THE GOHS HOME PAGE, CLICK HERE

  

     Click It or Ticket Thanksgiving Continues through November 25th mattmontgomery  at:  1/2/2008  




Photos and Commentary from the Thanksgiving 2007 Click It or Ticket Kickoff




Click It or Ticket, Georgia's safety belt enforcement campaign, started on November 12th and will continue through November 25th. Police, sheriff’s deputies, and state troopers in Georgia will be cracking down on unbuckled drivers and their passengers in order to save lives.




GOHS and Lenox Square teamed up for the kickoff press conference for CIOT on November 19th. To learn more about this great event, click on:




http://www.gahighwaysafety.org/ciotthanks2007




TO VIEW OTHER GOHS NEWS ITEMS, CLICK HERE




TO GO TO THE GOHS HOME PAGE, CLICK HERE




 

  

     Click It or Ticket Press Conference on November 19th mattmontgomery  at:  1/2/2008  

BUCKLE-UP! FOR A THANKSGIVING SAFETY UPDATE:
LOW SEATBELT USE = HIGH FATALITY PREDICTIONS
Operation CLICK IT OR TICKET underway




It’s a fact of life.. And death: Failure to use safety belts is a major contributing factor in more than half of Georgia’s Thanksgiving holiday traffic deaths.




The heavily-traveled Thanksgiving weekend is one of the most dangerous and deadliest times of the year due to low safety belt use. Nationwide, more than half of all traffic crash victims killed during the last Thanksgiving holiday weekend were NOT wearing their safety belts.




On Thanksgiving Day 2006, five people were killed just in Georgia.. Another three died on Georgia highways the next day.. Followed by ten more Georgia fatalities before the holiday weekend had ended here. When it was over, the four-day Thanksgiving holiday weekend had claimed the lives of 18 people and injured 1,099. “For those who think it just can’t happen to you, there were 2,618 injury or fatality crashes in Georgia alone during that short holiday travel period,” said Director Bob Dallas of the Governor's Office of Highway Safety (GOHS).




“We truly agonize over those Georgia families that could have been spared the heartbreak of making funeral preparations while other families were making holiday travel arrangements to be with their loved ones,“ said GOHS Director Dallas. “It’s just so clear that safety belts save lives.”




And yet day or night-- Georgia or nationwide-- unbuckled drivers and their passengers continue to pay the price.. With their lives. That’s why police, sheriff’s deputies, and state troopers in Georgia will be cracking down on unbuckled drivers and their passengers when Operation Click It Or Ticket begins Monday, November 12, 2007 and continues through the Thanksgiving holiday travel period to Sunday, November 25th.




According to the latest NHTSA data, during the 2005 Thanksgiving holiday season, 376 people died during the daytime hours in passenger vehicle crashes between 6:00 a.m. and 5:59 p.m. and nearly the same amount, 347 people, died at night.




“High holiday fatality and injury predictions are the reason we’ve asked every law enforcement agency in Georgia to participate in the November Click It Or Ticket campaign,” said Director Dallas. “The GOHS safetybelt enforcement initiative coordinates high-visibility road checks and concentrated patrols so that officers from Rome to Rincon and from Cochran to Cuthbert will write tickets to remind motorists to wear their safety belts.”




Now through the end of the year is also the time when police see a noticeable increase in the number of drunk drivers on our highways. “So safety belts should become a part of every family’s holiday tradition,” said Director Dallas. “They’re not just for the long road-trips to grandma’s house. They’re lifesavers for the cross town shopping hop to the mall too. For safety’s sake, everyone should be buckled-up, every seat, every trip, every time.”

Because, the carnage doesn’t quit at Thanksgiving: The tragic truth is 31,415 passenger vehicle occupants died in crashes across the nation in 2005 and more than half of them weren’t wearing seat belts either.




That’s the reason MADD-Georgia is partnering with the Governor's Office of Highway Safety to promote their “Tie One On For Safety,” public awareness project this Thanksgiving.




The familiar MADD red ribbons tied to car antennas are symbols of driver pledges to drive safe, sober, and buckled-up in support of MADD’s Campaign to Eliminate Drunk Driving. More than six -million ribbons are distributed every year as reminders to support safer roads, free from drunk driving.




MADD joins GOHS this Thanksgiving holiday, asking law enforcement everywhere to be out in force to crack down on drivers and passengers who aren’t buckled-up, because seat belts are still the best defense in a crash caused by a drunk driver.




The red ribbon campaign also calls for intensive, high-visibility law enforcement efforts that include sobriety checkpoints and saturation patrols. MADD’s Tie One On For Safety campaign runs Thanksgiving through New Year’s Day, when road travel is the heaviest of the year and impaired driving typically increases.




“I’ve said it before; this is not about writing more tickets. It’s about saving more lives,” said Dallas. “And I’ll keep saying that until we stop seeing needless deaths on Georgia highways because drivers and passengers won’t invest the three seconds it takes to protect them from sudden death or serous injury by buckling up the standard safety equipment that comes free with their ride. Unfortunately too many folks still need a tough reminder. So, in Georgia, if you don’t click it, you should expect a ticket!”




The Atlanta GOHS Click It Or Ticket kick off news conference is scheduled for Monday, November 19th at 1030AM in the Macy’s parking lot, beneath the Great Tree at Lenox Square.




Contact your local law enforcement agency for information about Click It Or Ticket enforcement road checks, patrols and campaign activities in your community.




TO VIEW OTHER GOHS NEWS ITEMS, CLICK HERE




TO GO THE GOHS HOME PAGE, CLICK HERE

  

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