 
Senator Lanza Announces End-of-Summer "Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over" Crackdown on Impaired Driving
Andrew J Lanza
August 21, 2015
The New York State Police will today ramp up enforcement efforts as  part of a national crackdown on impaired driving. The 20-day campaign, Drive  Sober or Get Pulled Over, runs from Aug. 21 to Sept. 7 (Labor Day) and is aimed  at significantly reducing deaths and injuries caused by motorists driving drunk  or impaired by drugs. The New York State Police, together with the important  work of local law enforcement, will be vigilant in screening for impaired  drivers.”
Governor Cuomo's Traffic Safety Committee 2014 annual report found that while the number of alcohol-related crash injuries were  down in New York State by nearly 800 over a five-year period starting in 2009,  364 people were killed in such crashes in 2013 and about 30 percent of New  York’s crash fatalities are alcohol-related. Additionally, according to the  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 10,076 people were killed  nationwide in crashes involving a driver with a blood-alcohol concentration  (BAC) of .08 percent or higher 2013. 
In New York State, .08 percent BAC is the  legal threshold for driving while intoxicated, but many offenders are arrested  at nearly twice that level: statewide, the average BAC of those arrested for  alcohol-impaired driving is more than .14. Alcohol, however, is just one  substance contributing to traffic fatalities. Drugs other than alcohol, such as  marijuana and cocaine, are a factor in about 18 percent of motor vehicle driver  deaths, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration  says.
Even when drunk or impaired  driving does not end in death or injury, its effects are particularly costly.  The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that the annual  economic cost of alcohol-related motor vehicle traffic crashes in the United  States totals $49.8 billion. 
On November 1, 2014, stronger penalties were enacted in New York  to deter impaired driving. Drivers convicted of DWI or DWAI three or more times  in 15 years face a Class D felony charge, up to seven years in prison, and a  fine up to $10,000.
New York’s anti-impaired driving  enforcement campaigns are funded by the Governor's Traffic Safety Committee and  STOP-DWI, a comprehensive and financially self-sustaining highway safety program  that allows participating counties to qualify for the return of all fines  collected for alcohol and other drug-related traffic  offenses.
To learn more about the risks of  impaired driving and for traffic safety tips, visit the DMV website and the Governor's  Traffic Safety Committee website.
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