NADA Joins Noble Effort
The National Automobile Dealers Association has joined a safety campaign that's near and dear to me: getting motorists to use seat belts, even if it means slapping them with traffic tickets. Only 20 states have primary seat-belt laws on their books, notes NADA Chairman Alan Starling, a Florida dealer. Seat belt use in these states is significantly higher than in states with secondary seat-belts laws,
September 1, 2003
The National Automobile Dealers Association has joined a safety campaign that's near and dear to me: getting motorists to use seat belts, even if it means slapping them with traffic tickets.
Only 20 states have primary seat-belt laws on their books, notes NADA Chairman Alan Starling, a Florida dealer.
Seat belt use in these states is significantly higher than in states with secondary seat-belts laws, where police must first ticket a motorist for another violation before issuing a seat-belt violation.
So NADA and other groups are urging all states to adopt primary seat belt laws, which would allow the police to stop and ticket motorists for the sole but egregious offense of not wearing seat belts.