May 29, 2009

Click It or Ticket still in effect

_MG_9965Seat belt enforcement zones and roving night patrols continue through the weekend. Planned weekend patrols and zones include:

 

 

 

County Enforcement Location
Allegan Dorr/Wayland Area
Arenac Old M-76 in Arenac County
Arenac Ogemaw/Arenac Counties
Barry Roving
Bay Vermont/Henry
Bay Euclid/Kiesel- Union
Bay Woodside/Trumbull
Berrien Berrien County post area roving
Branch Branch County
Branch Fremont & Central road
Cheboygan Cheboygan County
Clare Hayes, Surrey, Grant, and Linoln Twps
Clare Surrey, Grant, Lincoln & Hayes Townships
Clare M115, US127, & US10
Clare Surrey, Grant, Lincoln & Hayes Townships
Clinton BUS127-CLARK TO HOWE
Delta Escanaba
Eaton City wide
Eaton S/B Mall Dr West s/of Saginaw
Eaton City wide
Eaton S/B Waverly w/of Saginaw
Emmet Emmet County
Emmet US-31 near Wet Conway Rd., Little Traverse Twp. Emmet County
Emmet Anderson Rd., near Intertown Rd.,Bear Creek Twp. Emmet County
Genesee Flint Township, Flint City, Genesee Township, Burton City
Genesee Genesee County
Grand Traverse Garfield,8th St.and S.Airport Rd.
Gratiot Pine River Twp.
Hillsdale Litchfield Twshp.
Hillsdale Fayette Twshp.
Ingham Various
Isabella Isabella County
Isabella Union Twp.
Jackson Brooklyn, Grass Lake, Michigan Center
Kalamazoo NB 9th St. from I-94
Kalamazoo SB 9th St. from Stadium Drive
Kent City wide
Kent County wide
Kent City and county wide
Lapeer County Wide
Lapeer Lapeer
Lenawee W/In their jurisdictional boundries
Lenawee Lenawee County
Livingston Oceola Twp
Mackinac Roving Mackinac County
Macomb 26 Mile Rd / Van Dyke
Macomb 10 Mile Rd / Little Mack
Macomb Van Dyke 15 Mile Rd to 16 Mile Rd
Macomb Garfield
Macomb Gratiot / Stephens
Macomb Van Dyke south of 21 Mile Rd
Marquette US 41/Marquette Township
Mecosta Mecosta County, Big Rapids and Ferris State University Campus
Midland Midland Co.
Montcalm M-91 Wise to Dickerson Lake Road
Montcalm M-46 and Caris Road
Newaygo M-37 and M-82
Oakland Farmington Hills Limits
Oakland Nine & John R
Oakland Rochester Hills Limits
Oceana County Wide
Oceana Harrison and 168th Ave
Oceana Filmore & 144th Ave
Ogemaw Cities of West Branch, Rose City, Townships of Edwards, Ogemaw, West Branch, Churchill, Cumming, Klacking, Horton, Mills, Rose.
Osceola Osceola County
Osceola Old US-131 and 3 Mile Road
Ottawa Tallmadge
Ottawa Holland
Sanilac Sanilac Co. Roving
Shiawassee M-21/Delaney
Shiawassee North half of Shiawassee County
St. Clair St Clair County, Port Huron, Clay Township, Marysville, Algonac
St. Joseph East side of St. Joe Co.
St. Joseph Local Jurisdictions
Tuscola Fremont Township-Special attention M-24 and M-46
Dayton Township-Special attention M-46, Clifford Road, and Mayville Road
Van Buren Van Buren County South Haven, Paw Paw, Covert, Bangor, Decatur, Antwerp Townships
Van Buren Decatur Twp. M-51 betw. Decatur West Limits & 471/2 St.
Washtenaw County/Dexter
Wayne Goddard & Reeck
Wayne Brownstown
Wayne Ford & Sheldon
Wayne Hoover / 7 Mile
Wayne Whittier / Harper
Wayne 8 Mile/Dequindre/I 75
Wayne Township Wide
Wayne PLYMOUTH/EVERGREEN
Wayne TELEGRAPH/SCHOOLCRAFT
Wayne city wide
Wayne N/B Livernois-Grand River-Elmhurst
Wayne M-39 & Pinecrest
Wayne Brownstown
Wayne Outer Drive / E McNichols
Wayne I-94 and Telegraph
Wayne MtElliot/Mack/Charlevoix
Wayne PLYMOUTH/GREENFIELD
Wayne WEST
Wayne Middlebelt & Ecorse

May 22, 2009

Seat belt enforcement continues through Memorial Day weekend

Seat Belt ZoneBuckle Up or Pay Up efforts in 55 counties statewide 

            The message should be loud and clear this holiday weekend: Click It or Ticket when traveling the state’s roads. In an effort to reinforce what has become a habit for more than 97 percent of the state’s motorists, law enforcement officers statewide will continue stepped up seat belt enforcement through the end of the month including the heavily traveled Memorial Day weekend.

            The annual two week Buckle Up or Pay Up, Click It or Ticket mobilization began Monday.  Nearly 5,000 scheduled enforcement hours in 260 seat belt enforcement zones and nighttime patrols are planned for the holiday weekend beginning today.

Enforcement campaigns like this have contributed to Michigan’s high seat belt use rate and decline in fatalities. The goal is to reach out to people who are still not buckling up.

“Wearing a seat belt is the easiest way to stay safe in a crash, and yet some people don’t feel it is worth the small effort to buckle up,” said Michael L. Prince, Office of Highway Safety Planning director. “Forty-one percent of people who died in crashes last year were unbelted; those are deaths that may easily have been prevented.”

While few seat belt enforcement activity reports are in yet, officers have arrested one fugitive and made four felony and three misdemeanor arrests as a result of seat belt enforcement activity.

            Crashes involving unbelted drivers and passengers tend to have more serious consequences than those where people were wearing seat belts. In fact, wearing a seat belt can reduce the risk of serious injury or death in a crash by nearly 50 percent according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Michigan law requires all drivers, front seat passengers and passengers 15 and younger in any seating position in the vehicle to be buckled up. Children must be in a car or booster seat until they are 8 years old or 4’9” tall, whichever comes first.

For a complete list of planned enforcement, visit www.michigan.gov/ohsp.

 -30-

May 19, 2009

Officers out in force

Wearing a seat belt is the easiest and most effective way to stay safe in a crash and right now there’s another good reason to buckle up: law enforcement officers are out in force looking for unbuckled motorists during the annual Buckle Up or Pay Up, Click It or Ticket May mobilization.

From today until May 31, officers in 55 Michigan counties will be working additional federally funded patrols in seat belt enforcement zones. The campaign brings together local, county and state law enforcement officers for one goal: to get motorists to buckle up.

Planned zones and patrols for Tuesday, May 19 include:

County Enforcement Location
Allegan Patterson & 129th Ave.
Arenac US-23 in Standish
Barry W Green St/Market St
Bay Washington/Woodside
Bay Euclid/Salzburg Monitor Twp.
Berrien Old 31 and Hamilton, Berrien Springs.
Calhoun Michigan Ave, Albion
Michigan Ave, Marshall
Cheboygan US-23/Coulson Road
Clinton M100-I96 TO STATE
Emmet Robinson Rd., near Zip St., McKinley Twp., Emmet County
Genesee Burton City
Grand Traverse 3 Mile and Hammond Rds.
Hillsdale US-12/Brown Rd, Moscow Twp.
Ingham Abbott & Saginaw
Ingham Jolly & Hagadorn
Ingham Pennsylvania / Cavanaugh to Jolly
Ingham Haslett & Benson
Ingham Trowbridge/Harrison
Ionia Main/Bridge
Ionia Kent/Grandriver
Jackson East Michigan Ave.
US 127 to Page Ave.
Kalamazoo WB Lovell @ Oak Street
Kalamazoo WB W Michigan Ave at Westmoreland
Kent City wide
Lapeer Genesee/Village West, City of Lapeer
Livingston Grand River / Kissane
Macomb Gratiot / Toepfer
Macomb M-97 / 14 Mile Rd
Macomb N.B. Gratiot / Frazho
Macomb Hall Rd Schoenherr to Hayes
Mason Mason County
Mecosta Northland Dr, Rodgers Heights
Midland 20/Coleman
Montcalm M-57 and Berridge Road
Muskegon Water St. @ Spring
Newaygo City of Newaygo
Oakland Walton & Opdyke
Oakland Telegraph & Quarton
Oakland Fourteen Mile & Farmington
Oakland Nine & John R
Oakland Meadowbrook & Grand River
Oakland Brown & Baldwin (Orion)
Oakland Fourteen & Farmington
Oakland Sashabaw & Maybee in Independence Twp.
Oakland Perry & Glenwood
Ogemaw Court Street (M-30)
Shiawassee M-21 & roads north of M-21
St. Clair Port Huron
Van Buren Arlington/Bangor Twps. CR 681 betw. Bangor south Limits/36th Ave.
Washtenaw US-23/M-14
Wayne Allen & M-39
Wayne Brownstown
Wayne Ford & Beechdaly
Wayne Michigan & Woodcroft
Wayne Whittier / Harper
Wayne Michigan & Inkster Rds
Wayne Plymouth and Inkster
Wayne 7 Mi./John R/Charleston
Wayne 6 Mile & Northville Rd.
Wayne 6 MILE/EVERGREEN
Wayne WEST CHICAGO/WORMER
Wayne Eureka& Dix Toledo
Wayne Northline & Pardee
Wayne W/B Grand River-Livernois-Woodside
Wayne City Wide
Wayne M-85 & Eureka

May 14, 2009

MICHIGAN EARNS NATIONAL RECOGNITION FOR BELT USE RATE

Law enforcement agencies ready for annual enforcement

 Michigan’s steadily increasing seat belt use rate today will earn national recognition and praise from the U.S. Department of Transportation (D.O.T.)  just as law enforcement agencies ready for the annual statewide Buckle Up or Pay Up, Click It or Ticket seat belt mobilization.

Admiral Tom Barrett, U.S. D.O.T. deputy secretary, will present the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s “Champion Award” in honor of Michigan’s successful efforts to increase seat belt use, achieving the No. 1 spot in the country in 2008.

Last year, belt use rose to 97.2 percent, besting the other high belt-use states. At the same time, Michigan traffic deaths dropped 8 percent to 980, the lowest figure since 1925.    

More than 300 law enforcement agencies from 55 counties will have additional officers on the road starting Monday through May 31. Motorists should notice nearly 700 safety belt enforcement zones as well as additional late-night traffic patrols where officers will have zero tolerance for unbuckled drivers. Because seat belt use falls sharply during late night/early morning hours, agencies are stepping up traffic patrols during these times to encourage high compliance both day and night. 

The entire effort is coordinated by the Michigan Office of Highway Safety Planning (OHSP), utilizing federal funds for traffic safety programs. Officers working the zones and nighttime patrols are working additional shifts, not being diverted from their regular duties.

“Despite these challenging budget times, public safety remains a priority,” said Michael L. Prince, OHSP director. “This effort is about saving lives and is funded entirely through federal traffic safety dollars. It does not add extra strain to local or state budgets or manpower.”

The following 55 counties will set up safety belt enforcement zones from May 18-31: Allegan, Alpena, Barry, Bay, Berrien, Branch, Calhoun, Cass, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Clinton, Delta, Eaton, Emmet, Genesee, Grand Traverse, Hillsdale, Huron, Ingham, Ionia, Isabella, Jackson, Kalamazoo, Kent, Lapeer, Lenawee, Livingston, Mackinac, Macomb, Marquette, Mason, Mecosta, Menominee, Midland, Monroe, Montcalm, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oakland, Oceana, Ogemaw, Otsego, Ottawa, Saginaw, Sanilac, Schoolcraft, St. Clair, St. Joseph, Shiawassee, Tuscola, Van Buren, Washtenaw, Wayne and Wexford.

Michigan law requires all drivers, front seat passengers and passengers 15 and younger in any seating position in the vehicle to be buckled up. Children must be in a car or booster seat until they are 8 years old or 4’9” tall, whichever comes first.

For a list of planned enforcement zone and patrols, visit www.michigan.gov/ohsp.

- 30 -

May 11, 2009

Meet “Beep Beep” Man

Meet Michigan’s newest traffic safety partner- Beep Beep Man!

“Beep Beep” Man made his debut in the new Buckle Up or Pay Up, Click it or Ticket ads on TV, radio and on the Web. Look for “Beep Beep” Man and remember to buckle up.

May 5, 2009

Seat belts save lives

WEST MICHIGAN ROLLOVER CRASH SURVIVOR PROMOTES SAFETY BELT USE IN PSA

Three years ago Emily Bowness of Holland was involved in a horrific rollover crash on I-96 in Ingham County, a crash that could have claimed her life if she was not buckled up.

“I remember rolling the first time, and I remember landing,” Bowness said. “I knew I was hurt, but I knew I was alive. Wearing my safety belt saved my life.”

The crash was the result of a merging vehicle causing another vehicle to veer into Bowness’ lane, which then caused her to swerve and rollover. The entire incident was captured on the in-car camera of an Oakland County deputy who happened to be driving behind Bowness on the highway.

The footage made national headlines, and Bowness has been interviewed countless times about her experience, appearing on several television talk shows. In an effort to urge more motorists to buckle up, Bowness worked with the Michigan Office of Highway Safety Planning to promote the use of safety belts through a television public service announcement.