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Monday, December 23, 2024

TxDOT Urges Texans to Avoid a DWI This Labor Day


  keysCourtesy TxDot,Officers Work Overtime During Statewide Drunk Driving Crackdown

 AUSTIN, TX — From today through Sept. 6, the Texas Department of Transportation, police departments, and sheriff’s offices across the Lone Star state are working together to reduce impaired driving during the annual Drink, Drive, Go to Jail campaign.  Law enforcement statewide will be working overtime to find and arrest impaired drivers through the Labor Day holiday weekend.

 “Last year during the two-week crackdown, officers around the state worked nearly 18,000 combined hours of overtime specifically looking for intoxicated drivers,” said Colonel Steve McCraw of the Texas Department of Public Safety. “If we pull you over and you’ve been drinking, you’ll be arrested.”

 Convicted first-time DWI offenders can pay a fine of up to $2,000, lose their driver’s license for up to a year, and serve 180 days in jail. Safety officials say other costs associated with an impaired driving arrest and conviction can add up to more than $17,000 for bail, legal fees, court appearances, court-ordered classes, vehicle insurance increases, and other expenses.

 Of course, the consequences of driving under the influence can be much worse. In 2009, there were 27,108 alcohol-related crashes in Texas that resulted in 955 deaths and 17,542 injuries (preliminary data).  In 2008, 25 percent of people killed in alcohol-related crashes in Texas were between the ages of 20 and 25.  More alcohol-related crashes occur between 2am and 3am than any other hour of the day.

  “The only way to be sure you’ll avoid a DWI is by never getting behind the wheel after drinking alcohol,” said Carol Rawson, TxDOT’s Traffic Operations Division Director. “This Labor Day weekend, we’re reminding Texans that there are many options they can choose for getting home that don’t include drinking and driving.”

 To get the word out, TxDOT is running new television spots, radio ads, billboards, web and mobile phone ads along with targeted messages in major market bar and restaurant districts. Traditional and alternative media efforts will raise awareness of the consequences of a DWI conviction and the alternatives available to Texans: calling a cab, designating a sober driver ahead of time, using public transportation, staying put, calling a friend or family member for a ride, and more.

 TxDOT is also illustrating the choice between getting a sober ride or risking a DWI by driving after drinking through the use of “Cop/Cabs”—unique vehicles that are a police patrol car on the front end and a taxi cab on the back end. The Cop/Cabs will serve as mobile billboards for the “Choose Your Ride” message, incorporating modified patrol cars from police departments and sheriff’s offices in communities with a high incidence of alcohol-related fatalities.  

 The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission and Mothers Against Drunk Driving are partnering with TxDOT and law enforcement in the Drink. Drive. Go to Jail campaign.

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