Grant will increase DUI enforcement
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Deepa Bharath
The Police Department will use a $157,000 state grant to fund more
sobriety checkpoints and an additional DUI enforcement team during
the weekends, officials said Thursday.
The grant, probably the largest that has been awarded to the
police department’s traffic division, is needed for a city that has
gained notoriety for alcohol-related injury accidents, Costa Mesa
Police Officer Bryan Wadkins said.
In 2002, a two-person DUI team arrested 821 alcohol-impaired
drivers, Wadkins said.
“In spite of that, there were 65 alcohol-related fatal or injury
traffic collisions that year,” he said.
Those accidents accounted for 9.5% of all injury traffic
collisions during that year and ranked Costa Mesa as the worst of 44
cities statewide when it came to traffic collisions involving
alcohol, Wadkins said.
The grant money comes from the California Office of Traffic Safety
through the Business, Transportation and Housing Agency. The
department will use the money to fund an additional two-person DUI
enforcement team during Friday and Saturday nights starting tonight
through Dec. 31, 2005. Officers who sign up to be part of the DUI
team will be paid overtime.
The money will also pay for eight sobriety or driver license
checkpoints and for handouts to educate the public about the hazards
of drunk driving. Part of the funds will also be used for the Every
15 Minutes program at each of the local high schools, which educates
teenagers about the problem.
Drunk driving is a major problem for Costa Mesa possibly because
of the large number of bars and restaurants that serve alcohol in the
city, Wadkins said.
“Our city alone has 139 establishments licensed to sell alcohol,”
he said. “Add to that visitors to Newport Beach and Huntington Beach
who pass through Costa Mesa and use our city as freeway access.
That’s what makes the numbers so high.”
It also presents a major challenge to traffic officers in terms of
time and resources, said Lt. Karl Schuler, who wrote the proposal for
the grant. Schuler was recently transferred from the traffic division
to the patrol division.
“The challenge for us is we need to be vigilant and get impaired
drivers into our custody before they get going and cause accidents,”
said Schuler, who is also the state chair for Mothers Against Drunk
Driving. “Many times, patrol officers are busy with other calls, and
that’s how drunk drivers slip through the cracks.”
The additional enforcement team is likely to produce the desired
result -- to get to drunk drivers before they get on the road, he
said.
“There’s a definite correlation between putting drunk drivers in
jail and having fewer accidents,” Schuler said. “It does work.”
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