SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2009  1:45 pm The Daily Herald | Business Journal | Northsound Dining | County Connection | La Raza
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Jocelyn Robinson, News editor
jrobinson@heraldnet.com
Published: Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Traffic safety grant for seat belt patrols

Snohomish County Law Enforcement agencies have recently received a $2,000 grant from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission to conduct additional seat belt patrols this fall. The funding is geared toward the upcoming Nighttime Seat Belt Emphasis patrols between Oct. 23 and Nov. 8.

Seat belts reduce the risk of injury and death by about 70 percent when worn correctly. As seat belt use has increased during the years, traffic deaths and serious injuries have dropped, falling to 518 in 2008 from 649 in 2001 in Washington state.

“Law enforcement pull over unbuckled motorists all the time, but during these special emphasis patrols, officers are on the lookout for seat belt violators. The idea is to get motorists into the habit of buckling up so we can continue to reduce the death toll on our state’s highways,” said Lowell Porter, Washington Traffic Safety Commission Director.

For years, Washington has been one of the top states for seat belt use. During the last recorded observational survey during 2008 of about 100,000 Washington motorists, seat belt use stood at 96.5 percent.

Part of this high usage rate is because Washington has a primary enforcement seat belt law, so an officer can pull over a vehicle if a driver — or passenger — is not buckled up. If the unbuckled passenger is under age 16, the driver gets the ticket; if the unbuckled passenger is age 16 or older, the passenger gets their own seat belt ticket.

A seat belt ticket in Washington costs $124.

When a motorist is unbuckled, often they are ejected partially or completely from a vehicle. By wearing a seat belt, the risk of being ejected is reduced by 81 percent, according to the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center in Seattle. Nationally, during 2007 more than 14,000 people died in crashes while unbuckled. About half of these people would not have died had they been buckled up, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.



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