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Many states have tried to improve their enforcement of driving laws and public outreach. In South Dakota, for example, state troopers are required to devote several hours a year to give presentations discouraging drunken driving or promoting seat belt use. "There isn't a civic group in the state that should have to worry about what's going to be on the next agenda for them if they want to have somebody come talk about traffic safety," said Jim Carpenter, South Dakota's highway safety director. Carpenter said an estimated 119 motorists died on South Dakota roads in 2008, compared with 146 in 2007 and 191 in 2006. But many safety groups said it was unclear if the fatality numbers will continue to drop once the economy improves. If the projections hold, 2008 would be the first year since 1992 when traffic fatalities dipped below 40,000. Even with the declines, more than 100 people die on U.S. roads everyday. "We still have too many people who are dying in car crashes," said Jacqueline Gillan, vice president for Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety. ___ On the Net: NHTSA: http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/ Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety: Insurance Institute for Highway Safety:
http://www.saferoads.org/
http://www.iihs.org/
[Associated
Press;
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