Home Brentwood Brentwood Begins Click It or Ticket Campaign as Summer Kicks Off

Brentwood Begins Click It or Ticket Campaign as Summer Kicks Off

by ECT

Brentwood, CA—As summer kicks off and families hit the road for vacations, the Brentwood Police Department and the California Office of Traffic Safety is reminding motorists to Click It or Ticket.

Aimed at enforcing seatbelt use to help keep you and your family safe, the national seat belt campaign will take place May 22 through June 4, 2017 concurrent with one of the busiest travel and holiday weekends of the year.

Officers will conduct several seatbelt enforcement operations during the two week Click It Or Ticket mobilization to help lower California’s traffic deaths. In addition to these special patrols, officers on routine patrol will also be looking for unrestrained drivers and passengers to stop and cite.

“Our law enforcement personnel see firsthand the loss of life when people refuse to buckle up,” said Brentwood Police Lieutenant Walter O’Grodnick. “It’s such a simple thing, and it should be an automatic next step after sitting down in a vehicle.” As the Memorial Day weekend approaches and the summer vacation season ramps up, “We want to keep our community members safe, and make sure people are doing the one thing that can save them in a crash, and that’s buckle up.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), nearly half of the 22,441 passenger vehicle occupants killed in crashes in 2015 were unrestrained. During nighttime hours, that number soared to 57 percent of those killed. That’s why one focus of the Click It or Ticket campaign is nighttime enforcement. Participating law enforcement agencies will be taking a zero tolerance approach to seatbelt enforcement, writing citations day and night. In Brentwood, the ticket cost for an adult seatbelt violation is $162, with penalties for not restraining a child at $465.

In 2015, 545 Californians where killed because they did not buckle their seatbelts according to NHTSA. Nationally, almost twice as many males were killed in crashes as compared to females, with lower belt use rates, too. Of the males killed in crashes in 2015, more than half (52%) were unrestrained. For females killed in crashes, 42 percent were not buckled up.

“Please, help us spread this life-saving message before one more friend or family member is killed as a result of this senseless inaction,” said Lieutenant Walter O’Grodnick. “Seat belts save lives, and everyone needs to remember to buckle up, every trip, every time.”

Funding for these operations is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

For more information on the Click It or Ticket mobilization, please visit www.nhtsa.gov/ciot

You may also like

1 comment

Hang up and drive May 25, 2017 - 11:27 am

A cell phone crack down would be awesome.

Comments are closed.