IDOT, MADD, ISP, and local police agencies rollout largest
ever Labor Day Crackdown
Nearly 1,600 special patrols aimed at
drunk driving; new PSA sharing personal experiences to debut
SPRINGFIELD- The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), Illinois State
Police (ISP) and local law enforcement agencies are teaming up with Mothers
Against Drunk Driving (MADD) to launch the most aggressive campaign ever
targeting impaired drivers throughout the state of Illinois. The statewide
enforcement and education campaign will take place during a 17-day period
(August 18 –September 4) centering on the Labor Day weekend, the last major
holiday of the summer.
“We know millions of Americans will be celebrating Labor Day
by going to parties and hitting the roads, but you should know
police across the state will be hitting the roads too, looking
for drunk drivers,” IDOT Secretary Timothy W. Martin said. “With
more than 40-percent of our state’s traffic fatalities involving
alcohol, we need to be aggressive and increased enforcement is a
way to save more lives.”
The Illinois partnership is part of a national campaign being coordinated
with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The national
crackdown combines the mobilization of thousands of law enforcement agencies in
all 50 states backed by a major media buy to raise awareness of the consequences
of driving impaired.
Here in Illinois, the Labor Day, You Drink & Drive. You Lose campaign is a
combined $1.7 million education and enforcement effort to get drunk drivers off
the road. Statewide, 248 agencies will be teaming up with the Illinois State
Police to conduct more than 220 roadside safety checks and nearly 1,400
saturation patrols.
“Holidays are a time when people get caught up in the festivities and make
bad decisions,” said Susan McKinney, Executive Director or MADD Illinois.
“That’s why MADD is joining forces with America’s law enforcement and highway
safety officials to send a clear message to drivers: If you drive drunk this
Labor Day, you will be arrested. No exceptions. No excuses.”
Nationally, $11 million will be spent on a public awareness campaign; the
largest advertising campaign since You Drink & Drive. You Lose was introduced in
1999. In Illinois, state and local law enforcement efforts will be backed by a
more than $700,000 media buy to spread the message against impaired driving.
IDOT is also debuting a new Public Service Announcement aimed at reducing the
number of impaired drivers on Illinois roadways. The PSA, called True Stories,
was produced internally and displays a true story about Illinois residents
revealing their personal experiences with drunk drivers. This PSA will be
broadcast statewide during the Labor Day enforcement period, and more True
Stories will follow.
“Hundreds of law enforcement officers with a special emphasis on
zero-tolerance will be deployed statewide throughout the next 17 days,” Illinois
State Police Director Larry Trent said. “We will be taking a focused approach to
identify and arrest anyone who decides to drink and drive. The message is simple
and clear: If you drink and drive, you will have to face the consequences.”
According to the NHTSA, studies reveal that nearly 97 percent of the American
public sees drinking and driving by others as a threat to their families and
themselves. Americans support tougher enforcement and rank impaired driving
ahead of healthcare, poverty, the environment and gun control as an issue of
importance.
Motorists can also expect enforcement agencies to be checking for compliance
with Illinois’ primary enforcement safety belt law, in addition to checking for
impairment. Since Governor Blagojevich signed the primary safety belt law, the
usage rate has increased from 76 percent to 88 percent, and the number of
fatalities has dropped to the lowest levels in 60 years.
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