Illinois data shows unbuckled individuals pay high cost for drinking
and driving
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[December 23, 2010]
CHICAGO -- The Illinois Department of
Transportation, health care professionals, and state and local law
enforcement agencies have teamed up statewide to unveil data showing
the tremendous cost of unbuckled motorists driving impaired. The
announcement emphasizes the continued partnership between IDOT and
law enforcement and highlights an increase in late-night enforcement
and safety belt patrols scheduled for the upcoming holiday weekend.
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"People who make the
individual decision to drink and drive will
face many costs they often can never repay," said Illinois
Transportation Secretary Gary Hannig. "A DUI arrest in Illinois can
cost you around $19,000 and a possible visit to jail. A hospital
visit after an alcohol-involved crash can cost over $70,000, and the
costs of the harm done following a senseless death is immeasurable."
The data was released as the Illinois State Police and local law
enforcement step up impaired driving and safety belt enforcement
ahead of the holiday season for a "You Drink & Drive. You Lose." and
"Click It or Ticket" crackdown. Now through the end of the year,
more than 200 local law enforcement agencies will partner with the
Illinois State Police to put an additional $1.3 million in traffic
enforcement on Illinois roadways, to include more than 100 roadside
safety checks and more than 200 late-night safety belt enforcement
zones.
These patrols are combined with a strong radio and TV media
campaign reminding motorists of the high costs associated with
drinking and driving and failing to buckle up. Motorists are being
warned to make the right decisions when traveling this holiday or
risk a ticket, arrest and even jail time.
"Illinois has experienced a decrease in alcohol-related traffic
fatalities this year, and we would like to see that trend continue,"
said Illinois State Police Acting Director Jonathon Monken. "During
the holiday season, state troopers and local law enforcement
officers will be working together to aggressively enforce DUI, seat
belt and child passenger safety laws. Our goal is to help make
holiday travel a safe experience for everyone."
The Illinois Department of Transportation’s Division of Traffic
Safety estimates current DUI costs can reach as high as $19,000,
factoring in expenses such as fines, court costs, insurance fees and
attorney fees. This estimate is for an individual arrested for DUI
only and does not involve the tremendous costs incurred when a crash
happens.
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Hospital costs associated with a serious crash are high in every
case. But data from the Illinois Department of Transportation shows
a significantly higher hospital cost for drivers who were unbelted
and had been drinking ($73,000) versus drivers who were belted and
alcohol-free ($49,000).
The data shows the importance of safety belts in reducing injury
severity, particularly in alcohol-involved crashes, and further
brings to light the fact that drinking and driving and failure to
buckle up is a costly and all-too-often deadly combination. Related
crash data also shows that the highest percentage of
alcohol-involved fatalities occur during late-night hours in
Illinois, as well as the lowest safety belt use.
(See chart on estimated hospital costs by
safety belt usage and alcohol involvement.)
The holiday law enforcement crackdown is funded by federal
traffic safety funds through IDOT’s Division of Traffic Safety and
runs concurrently with a media campaign that reminds motorists: "You
Drink & Drive. You Lose." and "Click It or Ticket."
[Text from
Illinois
Department of Transportation
file received from
the
Illinois Office of
Communication and Information]
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