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Lewes - Although “It’s Good Being First” Office of Highway Safety officials were still exceptionally pleased with Delaware’s second place designation on Friday August A17th. That’s when Lt. Governor John C. Carney, Jr. signed a proclamation making Delware the second HERO state in the nation, and OHS announced a new partnership with the New Jersey based HERO campaign to promote designated drivers. The announcement came at a press event held at Delaware State Police Troop 2 in Newark, which also outlined details of Delaware’s participation in the National Impaired Driving Crackdown which has just begun. “Drunk
driving is a crime that can all too often turn deadly. Promoting the use
of designated drivers is another strong tool we can use to protect the safety
of our citizens,” said Lt. Governor Carney. The HERO Campaign for Designated Drivers was created by the parents of Naval Ensign John R. Elliott. Ensign Elliott was killed in a head-on collision with a drunken driver just weeks after graduating from the Naval Academy in 2000. On July 22nd of that year, Elliott, who drove from Annapolis, Maryland through Delaware to his home state of New Jersey for his mother’s birthday, was struck head on by an impaired driver in Salem County. The driver had been arrested earlier in the evening on DUI charges but was released after posting bail. That driver was also killed. Bill and Muriel Elliott created the HERO campaign in John’s honor to end the scourge of drunken driving by celebrating the designated driver as a HERO. “The HERO Campaign is a positive legacy for our son,” said Bill Elliott. “At the U.S. Naval Academy John was named the outstanding HERO (Human Education Resource Officer) for his service to his fellow midshipmen. Now the heroes will be the designated drivers who keep our highways safer in John’s memory.” Delaware OHS officials plan to implement the HERO Campaign by distributing posters and table tents to bars and restaurants and encourage them to provide free non-alcoholic beverages for those who agree to be designated drivers, as well as distribute designated driver pledge cards at sobriety checkpoints and on college campuses. Dover Downs Hotel & Casino implemented the HERO program on their own in 2006 and hope the state’s other casino facilities will do the same. Office of Highway Safety Director Tricia Roberts announced that the sobriety checkpoint conducted Friday evening by Delaware State Police Troop 2, would be dedicated in Ensign Elliott’s memory. The dedication is the second in OHS’s Dedicated DUI Checkpoint Initiative, which is aimed at remembering the victims of impaired driving, honoring the families who keep their memories alive and demonstrating OHS’s and the law enforcement community’s dedication to removing drinking drivers from the roads. “Through this program we hope to remind the public of the tragic consequences of drinking and driving and make it real to them by sharing the story of how ordinary people were taken from us all too soon because of one person’s decision to get behind the wheel after drinking,” said Director Roberts. DUI
enforcement in the form of checkpoints and saturation
patrols will be stepped up nationwide this week as
all 50 states join together for the start of the national
impaired driving crackdown, whose slogan is Drunk Driving.
Over the Limit. Under Arrest. It runs through
Labor Day weekend. In Delaware
27 State and law enforcement agencies will conduct
DUI saturation patrols for the crackdown in addition
to 10 checkpoints scheduled as part of the state’s
ongoing Checkpoint Strikeforce campaign. Checkpoint
Strikeforce is the nation’s first regional
DUI checkpoint campaign. It involves the states of
Delaware, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West
Virginia, and Washington D.C. # # # |
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| The John R. Elliott Foundation • P.O. Box 700, Somers Point, NJ 08244• 609.272.0100 • Toll-free 1-866-700-4376 • info@herocampaign.org | |||||||
The John R. Elliott Foundation
is a a 501 c (3) not-for-profit corporation |
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