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MINI-PLANNER Dear Editor: St. Patrick’s Day has become a big night out for many Americans, particularly young adults. But it is also a very dangerous night out due to impaired drivers. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 32 percent of all traffic fatalities on the nation’s highways around St. Patrick’s Day in 2003 were the result of impaired drivers with blood alcohol content levels of 0.08 percent and above. That’s why [Local Leader/ Organization] is joining with other federal, state and local highway safety and law enforcement officials across the nation to remind all of those who plan on using alcohol during St. Patrick’s Day festivities this year to act responsibly by designating their sober drivers before the parties begin. Whether you are just meeting a few friends after work at the corner pub or attending the big local parade or party, if you plan on using alcohol, never drive while impaired – and never let your friends drive if you think they are impaired. Designating a sober driver before the local celebration begins and making sure friends don’t drive drunk are just two of several, simple steps to help avoid a tragic crash or an arrest for impaired driving. If you are attending a St. Patrick’s Day celebration and plan on using alcohol, remember to:
If you are hosting a St. Patrick’s Day party:
Impaired driving is one of America’s deadliest problems. Nationally, more than 17,000 people died in alcohol-related highway crashes during 2003. Every 30 minutes, nearly 50 times a day, someone in America dies in an alcohol-related crash. Hundreds of thousands more are injured each year. According to NHTSA, about three in every ten Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at some point in their lives. Driving impaired or riding with someone who is impaired is simply not worth the risk because the consequences are serious and real. Not only do you risk killing yourself or someone else, but the trauma and financial costs of a crash or an arrest for driving while impaired can be really significant. Please remember. Don’t test your luck this St. Patrick’s Day. Friends Don’t Let Friends Drive Drunk. Designate your sober driver in advance – before the festivities begin. ###
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