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Crime & Safety

Leesburg Police Encourages Motorists to Wear a Seatbelt

The 'Click It or Ticket' campaign is scheduled to run throughout the holiday period.

Police and safety officials in Leesburg are warning citizens to make sure they buckle their seat belts over the Thanksgiving Day holiday period or they'll run the risk of getting a ticket.

“Whether you’re going across town or across the state this Thanksgiving, make sure you and everyone riding with you is wearing their seat belts,” said Leesburg Police Lieutenant Jeff Dube. “You may be enjoying the Holiday but rest assured that police will be out in force as part of this year’s Click It or Ticket campaign, making sure your road trip is as safe as it can be.”

This year’s Click it or Ticket campaign will run throughout the holiday period, with officers actively looking for violators. Dube noted that although national seat belt use, at 85 percent, is at an all time record, “far too many people are still not buckling up, and far too many are paying the ultimate price.”

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According to the latest data from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), more than 23,000 passenger vehicle occupants died in motor vehicle traffic crashes in 2009 across the nation, and almost half (11,512) were not wearing seat belts. 

Nationally, during the Thanksgiving holiday period in 2009, the latest year for which data are available, which ran from 6 p.m., Wednesday, November 25, to 5:59 a.m., Monday, November 30, 303 passenger vehicle occupants died in vehicle crashes, including 115 during daylight hours and 187 during the night. One person died during an unknown time period.

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Nationally, night time is the worst for seat-belt use, according to NHTSA’s statistics. Of the 187 passenger vehicle occupant fatalities occurring at night during the Thanksgiving holiday in 2009, 54 percent died with their seat belts unfastened while 49 percent of the fatalities during daylight hours were not wearing seat belts.

“Fastening a seat belt takes only a second or two, and costs you nothing," said Sgt. S.M. McVay, traffic management unit supervisor for the Leesburg Police Department. "Not wearing a seat belt, especially during this Thanksgiving period, will definitely cost you a ticket at the very least, and maybe even your life.”

Seat belt use is the single most effective way to protect people and reduce fatalities in motor vehicle crashes, according to NHTSA. Research has shown that when lap and shoulder belts are used properly, the risk of fatal injury to front seat passenger car occupants is reduced by 45 percent, and the risk of moderate to serious injury is reduced by 50 percent.

For more information about the Click it or Ticket campaign for highway safety during Thanksgiving, visit www.TrafficSafetyMarketing.gov

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