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Contact: Telephone: |
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Mark Cross (512)
463-8585 |
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September 7, 2006 |
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Part of TxDOT’s plan to increase
safety
AUSTIN – There’s proof that more
Texas motorists are buckling up. State transportation
officials today announced safety belt usage in Texas
topped 90 percent for the first time in history.
A record 90.44 percent of motorists are using safety
belts, up from 89.9 percent last year. Since enforcement
and education efforts began in 2002, safety belt usage
in Texas has jumped more than 14 percentage points. This
increase translates into an estimated 1,200 fewer
fatalities and more than 28,000 injuries prevented as a
result of traffic crashes since 2002, according to
transportation officials.
“Increasing safety on Texas highways is something we
work on every day,” said Hope Andrade, a member of the
Texas Transportation Commission. “We are pleased that
more and more Texans are doing their part to make our
highways a safer place by the simple act of buckling
their safety belt every time they get in their
vehicle.”
Transportation officials credit a safety belt
awareness and enforcement campaign called “Click It or
Ticket” with helping drive safety belt usage to an all
time high in Texas.
The Texas Department of Transportation and its
partners, the Texas Department of Public Safety and
local law enforcement agencies across the state, engaged
in the “Click It or Ticket” campaign last Memorial Day
with a single objective: to watch for Texas drivers and
passengers who were not buckled up and encourage them to
comply with safety belt and child safety seat laws.
Texas law requires drivers and front seat passengers
in all vehicles to be secured by a safety belt. Children
under 17 years old must be secured with a safety belt or
a child safety seat. A child under five years old and
less than 36 inches tall must ride in a child safety
seat. A safety belt violation can result in fines up
to $200, plus court costs.
Increasing safety on Texas highways is one of the
five main TxDOT goals, along with reducing congestion,
expanding economic opportunity, improving air quality
and increasing the value of transportation assets.
“Helping people get in the habit of using safety
belts is just one of the many things we are doing every
day to improve safety on our highways,” said Andrade.
Among the TxDOT initiatives she cited were efforts to
install safety barriers in the center median of divided
highways, installing rumble strips along pavement edges,
building wider safety shoulders, dividing busy four-lane
highways, adding dedicated left-turn lanes at busy
intersections and encouraging teen drivers to practice
safe driving habits.
“Working together we can improve safety on Texas
highways,” said Andrade. |