Press Release

​Sven Miller, Commander
Office of Community Outreach & Media Relations
601 North 7th Street, Sacramento, CA 95811

Contact:

​Fran Clader
Director of Communications
(916) 843-3310

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
10/8/2019
19-29

GRANT WILL HELP CHP ADDRESS SPEED, AGGRESSIVE DRIVING, AND STREET RACING


SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Speed and aggressive driving continue to be a major cause of death and injury on California roadways. With federal funding, the California Highway Patrol (CHP) is embarking on a lifesaving endeavor to reduce crashes caused by speed and aggressive driving.

The CHP received a $1.5 million grant for the Regulate Aggressive Driving and Reduce Speed (RADARS) IV program. The goal of RADARS IV is to reduce the number of fatal and injury traffic collisions attributed to speed and the number of people killed and injured in those collisions. To achieve this, the CHP will increase enforcement and add public awareness campaigns statewide, focusing on speed-related causes of crashes. Additionally, RADARS IV will focus on street racing and sideshow activities, which are a growing problem statewide.

“Speeding not only endangers the life of the speeder, but everyone on the road around them,” CHP Commissioner Warren Stanley said. “The RADARS IV grant enables our officers to improve highway safety and help prevent dangerous driving and deadly crashes.”

In Federal Fiscal Year 2016, speed was a factor in approximately 45 percent of all fatal and injury collisions in California. That year, 36,297 speed-related crashes resulted in the death of more than 370 people and injury to nearly 53,000 others.

Funding for this program was provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

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