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Issue: # 200814 June 5, 2008
Click It--Don't Risk It Chronicle
In This Issue
Nebraska's April Traffic Crash Fatalities Lowest since 1943!
Persuasive Writing at UNO
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Greetings!
This story was on Good Morning America on May 27, 2007.  read the story
 
"Most motorists grizzle and gripe about getting traffic tickets. But one Illinois driver believes a $25 moving violation saved his life.

Tim Ignasiak was making his 5:30 a.m. drive to work Thursday when he noticed the flashing lights of Hickory Hills police officer Terry Murphy, indicating him to pull over. "I knew I was busted," Ignasiak said. "There was no way of getting out of it."  Sure enough, Murphy cited the Palos Hills resident for failure to wear his seatbelt and issued a $25 ticket. Ignasiak then buckled up and drove off, still angry about the violation.

But his bad day got worse when another vehicle ran a red light and smashed into his jeep.

"I pulled through the intersection and a green car came out of nowhere," Ignasiak said. "And hit me, pushed me right around, turned my car right around. The fear and everything just rushes to your head. I thought I was gone. I couldn't feel anything."  His vehicle was smashed but Ignasiak walked away without a scratch because of his seatbelt.

"It definitely saved my life," he said. 

His good fortune is not surprising, given that seatbelts reduce car crash fatalities by as much as 50 percent, according to the National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration.

Ignasiak thought back to the officer who issued his ticket, for which he is now thankful. "He's the guardian angel," he said of Murphy. Ignasiak's wife even called Murphy to thank him personally.
 
For the first time, the Ignasiaks found themselves grateful for a ticket. Indeed, Ignasiak said it was the best $25 he has ever spent."

Nebraska's April Traffic Crash Fatalities Lowest since 1943!
dept of highway safety logo
 
During the month of April 2008, 9 persons were killed in traffic crashes on Nebraska
roadways, according to data collected by the Nebraska Department of Roads.

¨ The 9 fatalities were the lowest April total since 1943
¨ These 9 fatalities occurred in 8 crashes
¨ Six of the 8 vehicle occupants killed were not using safety belts
¨ No fatalities occurred on the Interstate, eight happened on non-Interstate highways, and one
took place on local roads
¨ Eight of the fatalities occurred in rural locations
¨ Four of the fatalities were age 75 or older
¨ One of the fatalities was a motorcyclist
 
While fatalities are down, safety belts remain an issue.  Keep up your efforts to spread the word about safety belt safety.
Persuasive Writing at UNO
On May 28 Click It presented Safety Belt information at a UNO class for ESL business students.  After the presentation, students from a variety of locations including Korea, Taiwan, Colombia, Saudi Arabia, Japan and more evaluated the types of persuasion used.  As you might expect, facts and statistics, emotional appeals, and audience involvement were used.  What are all the different kinds of persuasion you have used or can think of using to encourage Nebraskans to buckle up? 
 
Invite Click It to your next club meeting, class, or any other event that needs a speaker.  Let's spread the word that everyone needs to buckle up every trip, every time.  
The "Click It Chronicle," our Click It Campaign e-letter, published whenever there is news, is available to all those interested in increasing safety belt usage.  Please share this information freely. Take the information, copy to friends, businesses and organizations with the same concerns.  Using the information provided will help reduce the needless fatalities and injuries on our highways and the associated costs. To subscribe to this e-letter, join the coalition, or be removed from the list, contact the Click It Team at cidri@safenebraska.org.