Unbuckled motorists face crackdown
Marisa O’Neil
Buckle up or pay up, local police are warning.
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police departments will be writing
more tickets to motorists who aren’t wearing seat belts starting
Thursday. The weeklong campaign is part of a statewide effort to get
more people to wear their safety belts.
Some people still don’t realize police can pull them over just for
not wearing a seat belt, Costa Mesa Police Officer Bryan Wadkins
said.
“People tell us all the time, ‘You’re not allowed to pull us over
for that,’” he said.
Those caught unbuckled can get $85 citations, Wadkins said. And
drivers can get tickets if they’re buckled up but their passengers
aren’t.
The California Office of Traffic Safety is promoting the message,
“Buckle up. If you won’t buckle up to save your life, then buckle up
to save yourself a ticket.” Both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
received grants from the agency to hire extra officers for the
increased enforcement periods.
Extra officers will be on duty from Thursday to Aug. 18 just to
look for people driving without their seat belts fastened, Newport
Beach Police Sgt. Steve Shulman said. The added enforcement is about
education, he said.
Statewide, nearly 9% of people don’t wear their seat belts,
according to the California Office of Traffic Safety. If everyone in
the state wore them in 2001, 571 lives would have been saved and
13,063 serious injuries would have been prevented, they reported.
“We have a really good usage rate compared to other parts of the
country,” said Marilyn Sabin, a spokeswoman for the agency. “But that
last 8% equals about 3 million people. That’s more than the
population of about 20 states. We’re doing a really good job but feel
we need to get the rest of the folks to buckle up.”
During the last increased enforcement period, from May 24 to June
6, Costa Mesa officers wrote 1,649 tickets for seat belt violations.
Locally, officers have seen a 5% increase in seat belt usage, Wadkins
said.
“A lot of times, people are not paying attention,” he said.
“Everyone is in such a hurry. It’s just one of those things people
overlook. People need to get in the habit from a young age, so they
feel uncomfortable without it.”
A second period of increased seat belt enforcement will run from
Sept. 2 to Sept. 8.
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