Sixteen people died on state roads in the first four days of this
year, nearly three times the number killed during the same period
last year, the S.C. Department of Public Safety said Monday.
From Jan. 1 to 4 last year, six people died in traffic accidents
statewide, the department said.
None of the motorists killed since New Year’s Day was wearing a
seat belt, agency records show.
State Rep. Joel Lourie called that “tragic.” The Columbia
Democrat is pushing for a state law that would allow police to
ticket motorists solely for not wearing seat belts. Officers can do
it now only if motorists are stopped and charged for some other
offense.
“The statistics today are a tragic confirmation about the need to
push this legislation sooner as opposed to later,” Lourie said
Monday.
A “primary enforcement” law would save 100 lives and prevent
1,700 serious injuries in the first year, Lourie said, citing
studies by state and national transportation agencies.
Lourie’s bill passed the state House and the Senate
Transportation Committee last year.
But Sen. John Kuhn, R-Charleston, a committee member who opposes
the bill, said Monday he does not expect it to pass the Senate — or
even get to the floor for debate — when the Legislature reconvenes
next Tuesday.
“There are a lot of senators on both sides of the aisle who don’t
like this bill,” he said. “Government has got to quit being like Big
Brother, and this is the quintessential Big Brother bill.”
Will Folks, spokesman for Republican Gov. Mark Sanford, said
Monday the governor has “clearly demonstrated he wants to make South
Carolina roads safer.” But Sanford will not decide whether to
support the seat belt bill until he sees “what form it will take as
it goes through the legislative process,” Folks said.
About 20 states have “primary enforcement” laws, Lourie said.
Of the 770 motorists killed last year in South Carolina, 543, or
about 71 percent, were not wearing seat belts, the Department of
Public Safety said.
In 2003, a total of 956 people — the higher total includes
pedestrians, motorcyclists and others — died on state roads,
compared with 1,053 in 2002.
Twenty people, including two pedestrians and two motorcyclists,
died during the 102-hour New Year’s holiday period that started at 6
p.m. Dec. 31 and ended midnight Sunday, the department said.
That was the second-highest number of deaths recorded during a
holiday period in the last decade, the department said. Twenty-one
people died during the 102-hour July 4th holiday in 2000.
Reach Brundrett at (803) 771-8484 or rbrundrett@thestate.com.