"No" to Funds, Reduced Accident Rates: Seatbelt Law Rejected by House Committee

 

It seems that neither the promise of federal funds nor the prospect of being able to save precious lives every year are enticing enough for Georgia’s lawmakers to pass a seatbelt law that would require all pickup truck drivers to buckle up, thus reducing the number of accident fatalities. The House Consumer Affairs subcommittee has voted 4-3 against a bill that would require pickup truck drivers above the age of 18 to fasten their seatbelts. The Senate had earlier approved the bill, like it has done over the last 3 years. Each year, the House has blocked the bill, ensuring that pickup truck drivers continue to be able to drive without buckling up, and increasing their chances of being killed or seriously injured in an accident.

 

With the rejection of the bill, Georgia continues to be the only state that does not require adult pickup drivers to compulsorily wear seatbelts. In January this year, I had listed out a series of benefits that could motivate lawmakers to pass the bill including a $4 million grant that the state could receive if it would bring pickup drivers under mandatory seatbelt laws. There had been expectations this year that the $4 million grant would be enough incentive for lawmakers to pass the bill. After all, Georgia is currently battling a budget deficit, and federal funds could have been used to kick start road safety improvement programs that have been stagnant for a while due to lack of funding. Proponents of the seatbelt law, including Atlanta car accident lawyers had hoped that the grant would result in funding for the expansion of Georgia’s trauma care network. The House however, has chosen to reject the bill, although supporters have moved to have the measure reconsidered another day.

 

The measure to make seatbelts mandatory for all pickup drivers has had huge support within the state, with a majority of Georgians supporting such measures. Critics of the bill argue that pickup drivers don’t need a law to be motivated to wear seatbelts, and that the prospect of walking away with minor injuries after an accident should be sufficient incentive for drivers to buckle up. It’s a fact that people are more likely to obey cold, hard laws. After all, most motorists are aware of the dangers of drunk driving, and yet thousands of people are killed or seriously injured in alcohol-related crashes every year. Those numbers would have been far greater if weren't for the presence of strong DUI laws that prevent so many from getting behind the wheel in an intoxicated state.

 

The seatbelt law could result in approximately 24 lives saved per year and more than 400 injuries prevented.  That alone should be enough motivation to pass the bill.

Georgia Sees Drop In Accident Deaths in 2008

Across the country, most states reported some dramatic declines in accident related fatalities last year, including our very own Georgia, which saw a decline of 12 percent in the accident fatality rate.

That welcome news comes to us via a survey by the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) which has just released the findings of a survey of 44 states. 40 of those states, including Georgia, reported a decline in their accident death rates last year. Leading the list was Massachusetts, which had an admirable 29 percent drop in the death rate. Georgia's death rate drop was marked at 12 percent. These findings only corroborate what other auto safety agencies have been reporting for a while now. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)has also reported nationwide declines in accident rates, and the reasons being attributed to the decline are many. The most common theme however seems to be the increase in gas prices last summer, and the economic recession that quickly followed. When people are worried about job safety, they tend to take fewer unnecessary road trips, and also seem to drive slower in order to save on fuel. Slower driving leads to fewer of those devastating high speed crashes that often involve fatalities. 

 

In 2008, many states also instituted efficient and well executed traffic enforcement programs to crack down on drunken drivers and speeding motorists. Seatbelt use in 2008 also rose to more than 80 percent. Automakers have also made safer cars due to increased customer demand for better safety features. All this has meant that you are less likely to become a statistic if you are involved in a car wreck.

 

As a Peachtree City and Atlanta accident lawyer, I have been a passionate advocate of enhanced efforts to reduce the possibility of accidents and deaths. This Georgia Wrongful Death lawyer can help victims of other motorist's negligence obtain compensation for their injuries.

Change in Georgia Seat Belt Laws Could Mean Less Severe Injuries, Plus $4 Million

If the following prospects are not tempting enough for Georgia's lawmakers to mandate seatbelt use on all pick up trucks:

  1. Reduced number of injuries during car accidents.
  2. Substantial drop in fatalities from collisions, and
  3. More Georgia residents walking from their mangled cars unscathed instead of dead or maimed - - - 

there is another carrot that is looking juicy to our nearly-bankrupt state. It comes in the form of a $4 million grant that Georgia would be eligible for if it would only stop holding out on a complete extension of its current seat belt laws to cover all motor vehicles in the state.

Currently, children and adults in all vehicles are required to buckle up, but pickup drivers have so far been exempt from the seat belt laws. That exemption is the only thing standing between Georgia and a $4 million federal grant that the federal government has tied to stricter seatbelt laws. The money might have seemed like something we could ignore in years gone by, when there wasn’t a $2.3 billion budget deficit staring us in the face. Now more than ever, the prospect of a $4 million grant is looking more attractive than ever, and proponents of measure, including auto safety experts, insurance companies as well as this Atlanta car accident lawyer, have been joining in the chorus for stricter seatbelt laws. Lawmakers who have been pushing to include pickups have found that the budget deficit has given their proposal a strong boost.  Currently, Georgia is the only state to exempt pickup drivers from mandatory seat belt laws.

 

Seatbelts Can Prevent Atlanta Car Accident Injuries and Deaths

 

The use of seatbelts, along with air bags, are the most important safety features we can avail ourselves to and if what it takes for the state's pick up drivers to buckle up is a law that requires them to, then so be it. As an Atlanta, Peachtree City and Newnan car accident attorney, I have often seen the effects of the failure to wear a seat belt in car crashes, and the long term effects they can have on a person's life and on the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Any law that can prevent more serious and permanent injuries on the roads of Georgia, certainly gets a thumbs up from me.