Stronger seat belt
law on the books
PAMELA
HAMILTON Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Buckle up or pay $25.
That's the message of a new South Carolina law that allows police
officers to pull over adult drivers if anyone in the car is not
wearing a seat belt. Under the old law, officers could ticket adult
drivers for seat belt violations only if the car was first stopped
for another offense.
Gov. Mark Sanford allowed the bill to become law without his
signature on Wednesday after hinting for weeks that he would veto
the bill. Sanford said he decided not to veto the bill because it
merely strengthens a "well-intentioned, but flawed" law that has
been on the books since 1989.
"I don't like this bill. I've been clear on that," Sanford said.
But, "I think that my real role is to enforce the laws that are
created by the legislative branch - some I'll like, some I won't
like."
The new law, which will take effect six months from June 9,
imposes a $25 fine for those who violate the law. It bars seat belt
citations from being reported to insurance companies or being used
as evidence in court.
Those provisions weaken the law, making it unlikely to encourage
drivers to wear seat belts, Sanford said.
"I would anticipate that this bill would not prove the results
that people are looking for," Sanford said.
Advocates say the new will save lives. State Public Safety
Department statistics show that 269 of 365 motor vehicle occupants
who died so far this year were not wearing seat belts, agency
spokesman Sid Gaulden said.
"In a lot of cases, unbelted people are ejected," said Donna
Carter, state chairwoman for the South Carolina chapter of Mothers
Against Drunk Driving. "A lot of injuries are sustained once the
body leaves the car, and they're most of the time fatal."
South Carolina will join about 20 other states with primary
enforcement of their seat belt laws, according to Mothers Against
Drunk Driving.
The law should save about 50 to 80 lives within the first year in
South Carolina, said Max Young, who heads the Public Safety
Department's Office of Highway Safety.
In other states that have enforced such laws, seat belt usage has
gone up by about 10 percentage points and statistics show that five
to eight lives are saved for every percentage point increase in
usage, Young said.
If the same holds true for South Carolina, seat belt usage should
go up to 76 percent. "That's what I'm hoping for or even higher,"
Young said.
Legislators have tried for the past two years to strengthen the
state's seat belt law. In 2004, a bill was bottled up by a few
senators who said forcing people to wear seat belts infringed on
their personal
freedoms. |