The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has been awarded a $1,845,385 grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety for a year-long program of special enforcement and public awareness efforts to prevent traffic related deaths and injuries.
The department will use the funding as part of the ongoing commitment to keep our roadways safe and improve the quality of life through both enforcement and education.
After falling to a 10-year low in 2010, the number of persons killed on roadways has climbed nearly 17 percent across the state, with 3,429 fatalities in 2015.
Particularly alarming is the rise in pedestrian and bicycle fatalities that now comprise nearly 25 percent of all traffic deaths, along with the growing dangers of distracting technologies and the emergence of drug-impaired driving.
This grant funding will provide opportunities to combat these and other devastating problems such as speeding and crashes at intersections.
“Unsafe behaviors account for 94 percent of traffic crashes,” OTS Director Rhonda Craft said. “This grant emphasizes the two most effective ways to change behaviors – education and enforcement. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, with assistance from the Office of Traffic Safety, will use these tools to help keep streets safe.”
Activities that the grant will fund include:
* Educational presentations
* DUI checkpoints
* DUI saturation patrols
* Bicycle and pedestrian safety enforcement
* Motorcycle safety enforcement
* Distracted driving enforcement
* Seat belt and child safety seat enforcement
* Speed, red light, and stop sign enforcement
* Warrant service operations targeting multiple DUI offenders
* Compilation of DUI “hot sheets,” identifying worst-of-the-worst DUI offenders
* Specialized DUI and drugged driving training such as Standardized Field Sobriety Testing, Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving Enforcement, and Drug Recognition Evaluator
* Court “sting” operations to cite individuals driving from DUI court after ignoring their license suspension or revocation
While alcohol remains the worst offender for DUI crashes, the Sheriff’s Department supports the new effort from OTS that aims to drive awareness that “DUI Doesn’t Just Mean Booze.” Prescription medications and marijuana can also be impairing by themselves, or in combination with alcohol, and can result in a DUI arrest.
Funding for this program is from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
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3 Comments
That works out to about 1 deputy per station?
Education is the best way this money will be spent.
And let’s see some more hard work by our officers IN traffic such as finding erratic motorcyclists (they exist in droves) and the weaving speedsters in and out of lanes, and not the guy going 80 in the 65, all alone.
At the end of the day, results fuel the purpose and generate the revenue for these grants to continue.
Where I’m curious is how do you judge results? For example, thank’s to Uber/Lyft drunk driving arrests should be going down and according to my friend’s knowledge from CHP officers, it is. Therefore, when you see the results of 3500 people stopped, and instead of 3 arrests, now 1, (hopefully 0) are these still effective and working? Will/are DUI checkpoints worth our taxpayer costs?
Yea!