Annual Seatbelt-Use Campaign To Begin April 15 at SUNY Oswego

OSWEGO — University Police at SUNY Oswego will deploy special patrols starting April 15 to look for motorists who are not wearing their seatbelts as part of the annual Buckle-Up Day & Night campaign.

Funded by a grant through the state Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee, the seatbelt patrols will operate through April 29.

National Buckle-Up Day and Night traditionally takes place in May as Americans hit the road in large numbers, but University Police received a variance thanks to the college’s commencement in May.

In New York every month, an average of 715 motorists not wearing seatbelts are injured severely enough for hospital treatment, and 153 of them on average require hospitalization.

While more than 90 percent of people comply with seatbelt laws, nearly 10 percent still do not, police said.

Wearing a seatbelt increases one’s survival chances by 60 percent, and motorists will not have to worry about a ticket for not wearing one, police said.

For more information on University Police safety campaigns, visit oswego.edu/police or the Facebook page for University Police at SUNY Oswego.

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1 Comment

  1. Law abiding people? Whatever will they think of next? The Road Safety Office at the World Health Organization believes in law abiding American streets and highways. Many Americans are freewheelers who don’t have a conscience, or care about how awful they look to the youth. They travel with the illusion of local norms, but fail to show a healthy conscience.
    Not wearing a seat belt is part of the failure to show youth, some degree of stewardship among the adult community. When mass disobedience appears, when the stop signs and speed signs are being ignored and everyone is making out like thieves, criminal behaviour is next on the list.
    Where I live the police went to the schools and introduced Captain Click. Desperate measures for desperate adults.

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