Click It or Ticket— Saving Lives and Increasing Seat Belt Use
- Seat belt use saves thousands of lives across America each year.
In 2011 alone, seat belts saved an estimated 11,949 lives nationwide.
- In fatal crashes during 2011, 77 percent of passenger vehicle
occupants who were thrown from their vehicles were killed. However, only 1 percent
of crash victims who were buckled up were totally ejected from their vehicles, compared
to 31 percent of those who were unbelted.
- Statistics show nighttime drivers are less likely to buckle
up compared to daytime drivers. 10,135 passenger vehicle occupants were killed in
motor vehicle traffic crashes at night (6 p.m. to 5:59 a.m.) in 2011. Of those killed
in nighttime crashes, 62 percent were not wearing seat belts (compared to 43 percent
of occupants killed during daytime hours of 6 a.m. to 5:59 p.m.).
- In 2011, of the 21,253 passenger vehicle occupants who were
killed in motor vehicle crashes nationwide, 52 percent were NOT wearing seat belts
at the time of their fatal crashes.
- Younger motorists—young men in particular—are most at risk.
Among teens and young adults, ages 18-34, who were killed in fatal crashes in 2011,
64 percent were NOT buckled up at the time of the crash—the highest percentage of
any age group. The number jumps to 66 percent when only men in this age group are
included.
- Pickup truck drivers and passengers are also at risk. In 2011,
65 percent of pickup truck occupants who were killed in traffic crashes were not
buckled up at the time of the crashes, compared to 46 percent of passenger car occupants
who were killed from not buckling up.
- In the state of California, the fine for driving without your
seatbelt can be expensive. The minimum ticket cost of an adult seat belt violation
in California is $142 and up, and a minimum of $445 for not properly restraining
a child under 16. If the parent is not in the car, the driver gets the ticket.
- The national Click It or Ticket mobilization has increased
seat belt use and saved many lives over the years, but there is still much more
that can be done. High-visibility enforcement and encouraging loved ones to buckle
up can turn thousands of lives lost into many more lives saved.
Information presented on this web page is collected from the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) web site. The information presented on this web page
is considered public information and may be distributed or copied. Please visit
www.nhtsa.gov for more
information.