
Click It or Ticket
The District has one of the strongest,
most comprehensive seat belt laws in the nation. After the law was
enacted in 1997, seat belt use increased 24 percent. Injuries were
prevented. Lives were saved.
It takes a few
seconds to fasten a seat belt. It's so simple. Yet it can be the
most significant action you can take to protect your life and those
you care about.
Buckling up
dramatically increases your chance of surviving a crash. And it's
your best weapon against a drunk, tired, or aggressive driver.
You Will
Be Pulled Over
Unlike many other states, District law allows police to stop a vehicle
solely because its drivers and passengers are not properly buckled
up.
In addition,
the Metropolitan Police Department is an active participant in the
National Safety Council's Air
Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign.
Each spring and fall, the Department participates in the annual
Operation ABC (America Buckles-up Children) Mobilizations - nationwide
crackdowns on drivers who are not buckled up or who do not properly
secure their child passengers.
$50
Fine & 2 Points
That's the penalty for not having your seat belt properly buckled
at all timesfor
drivers and all passengers, in front and back seatswith
few exceptions. Drivers are responsible for seat belt compliance
for all passengers.
Drivers who
fail to properly secure their child passengers face even stiffer
penalties: a $75 fine and 2 points for a first offense, and a $150
fine for fourth and subsequent offenses. DC law now requires that
all children under the age of 8 be properly seated in an infant,
toddler or booster seat, and that 8- to 16-year-olds be secured
with a safety belt. (More
details on DC's Child Passenger Safety Law.)
Why It's
So Important
- Traffic crashes
are a leading cause of death in the USsomeone
is killed every 13 minutes and injured every 9 seconds.
- Wearing seat
belts is the most effective way of cutting the death toll. Seat
belts saved over 11,000 Americans in 2000.
- Over half
of the people killed in traffic crashes in 2000 were not wearing
seat belts.
- We all pay
for those not wearing seat beltsin
higher taxes, health care and insurance costs.
No ExcusesZero
Tolerance
"It
doesn't fit. It's uncomfortable."
Readjust it, see your dealer for an extender, or purchase one of
any number of seat belt aids available.
"But
I'm a good driver."
You may be, but others aren't. Seat belts protect everyone.
"I was
going to put it on."
Buckle up - every trip, every time.
For More
Information
Contact the Metropolitan Police Department's Traffic Coordinator's
Office at (202) 727-4313 for more information.
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