GOLDBERG
SAYS ABCC TO TARGET BARS SELLING ALCOHOL TO
DRUNK
DRIVERS
Labor Day Weekend Program to Coincide with National Impaired
Driving Crackdown
BOSTON
– The Massachusetts Alcoholic
Beverages Control Commission (ABCC), in conjunction with the National Highway
Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA), will crackdown on impaired
driving this weekend, Treasurer Deb Goldberg announced today. The 2015 national campaign,
"Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over", is in effect through September 7.
The
ABCC will focus enforcement
efforts at bars throughout the Commonwealth known to have sold alcohol to
convicted drunk drivers.
“This enforcement supports safer roads and highways throughout
Massachusetts,” Treasurer Goldberg said. “Our efforts prevent the sale of alcohol
to intoxicated individuals who could place the driving public at risk, while
also establishing a long-term deterrence for bar owners from over-serving.”
According to a report
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), alcohol is involved
in 40 percent of traffic crash fatalities resulting in 17,013 deaths and
injuring an estimated 275,000 people annually. Data indicates that well over 50
percent of drunk driving arrests originate at bars.
In addition to police
stopping impaired drivers on the roads, the ABCC’s Sale to Intoxicated Persons
(SIP) enforcement program is considered an effective tool by Alcohol Law Enforcement (ALE)
officials nationwide.
This weekend, the ABCC
will also be working with police departments that have identified high risk
locations in their communities.
The "Drive Sober
or Get Pulled Over" initiative is funded
by the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) through
the Executive Office of Public Safety (EOPS) Highway Safety Division (HSD) in
conjunction with the ABCC and local law enforcement.
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