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NHTSA 05-08
Monday, May 19, 2008
Contact: Ellen  Martin
Telephone: (202) 366-9550

Click It or Ticket Campaign Cracking Down on
Young Drivers & Passengers Not Buckled Up During Nighttime

Despite a decade of gains in daytime seat belt use, research by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration shows that nighttime belt use continues to be much lower, particularly among young drivers.  

The annual Click It or Ticket seat belt enforcement campaign, launched today by NHTSA Administrator Nicole R. Nason, will focus on nighttime belt use when the odds of being killed in a motor vehicle crash are three times greater. The campaign runs from May 19 to June 1.

“Seat belt use among young drivers and occupants is not what it should be, especially at night when the risk of dying in a crash triples,” Administrator Nason said. “Clearly, we need to do more to make people of all ages understand that—whether traveling by car, SUV or truck—a seat belt is the best way to stay alive, day or night.”

Nighttime seat belt use is often much lower than the nationwide average of 82 percent daytime belt use, according to NHTSA research. The consequences of not buckling up are even more tragic among young passenger vehicle occupants.  Of the 2,926 16- to 20-year-old passenger vehicle occupants killed in 2006, 68 percent were unrestrained.   During the daytime 57 percent of the 16- to 20-year-old occupants killed were not wearing seat belts.

Joining Administrator Nason at the national launch today at Calvin Coolidge High School in Washington, D.C. were Vernon Betkey, Vice Chairman, Governors Highway Safety Association and James W. McMahon, Chief of Staff, International Association of Chiefs of Police. Across the country, law enforcement will issue tickets to seat belt law violators. The campaign is supported by a $7.5 million national and state advertising campaign.  Ads produced by NHTSA in English and Spanish will run across a wide range of highly targeted media, including print, radio, and television.

“Wearing your seat belt costs you nothing,” said Nason.  “But the cost for not wearing one certainly will.  So, don’t risk it with a ticket or worse, your life.  Please remember to buckle up day and night.”

View here the NHTSA research note and study report.

For more information, please visit: www.nhtsa.dot.gov/link/ciot.htm.

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