Illinois Awarded Funds to Offer
Advanced Training on Detecting Impaired Driving
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[May 06, 2017]
SPRINGFIELD
— Illinois is one of five states to receive a federal training grant
from the Governor’s Highway Safety Association and the Foundation
for Advancing Alcohol Responsibility to combat drug-impaired
driving. The grant, to be administered by the Illinois Department of
Transportation, will fund 10 Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving
Enforcement (ARIDE) classes statewide. This is the second year
Illinois has received the funding.
“We are gratified to be awarded this important funding again this
year,” said Priscilla Tobias, director of IDOT’s Office of Program
Development and the Governor’s Highway Safety representative from
Illinois. “Impaired driving deaths in Illinois are down compared to
a decade ago, but recent years have shown an uptick in fatalities,
demonstrating the problem is far from being solved.”
The ARIDE program trains law enforcement officers to detect
impairment caused by more than just alcohol. The advanced training
will help officers identify drug-impaired drivers that otherwise
could have been pulled over but not arrested because warning signs
were missed.
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The total grant amount is $20,000. The Illinois Law Enforcement
Training and Standards Board Mobile Team Units will conduct 10 classes at 10
different locations to give access to law enforcement agencies in every region
of the state. Each class will train up to 25 officers.
The ARIDE curriculum was developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, with input from the International Association of Chiefs of
Police and the Virginia Association of Chiefs of Police. Since 2009, more than
1,300 officers have received ARIDE training in Illinois.
[Illinois Department of
Transportation] |