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Highway Safety Tips

The tips below and  to the left are provided to help prevent injuries while motorists travel the state's highways:

Secure all loose items in your car, including pets.  If a vehicle is traveling at 55 mph and comes to an abrupt stop, anything loose will continue at the same speed inside the vehicle, becoming a dangerous missle.

Steer clear of flooded roads and intersections.  You can lose control of your vehicle in several inches of water, and  your car can be swept away in less than a foot of water.  Flash floods often cause fatalities when motorists try to drive on flooded sections of roads.  If you can't see the markings on the road, don't drive through the water.

Always wear a seat belt.  Seat belts save lives and injuries.  Airbags are designed to work with your seat belt.  Otherwise, the airbag could hit your chest with the force of a baseball bat.

Prevent neck injuries by keeping your car's head restraints up, as high as the top of the ears and as close to the head as possible.

If you become drowsy, open the windows, turn on the radio, or pull over and take a nap, even 20 minutes if you need to.

Watch out for drunk drivers.  Look for drivers who straddle the center line, make wide turns, drift in and out of lanes, are driving too slow or too fast, run red lights or drive at night without headlights.

Don't rubberneck.  Drive by an accident scene at a safe speed and keep your eyes on the road.  Also, don't talk on a cell phone, read a map, apply make-up or have any distratactions while driving.

 

« this page last modified 04/24/09 »


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