Buckle Up NY, Click it or Ticket campaign taking place
The New York State Police is teaming up with local law enforcement to conduct a seatbelt and child safety seat enforcement period, which runs through June 4, as part of the annual “Buckle Up New York, Click it or Ticket” campaign.
State Police Superintendent George P. Beach II said, “As the summer travel season begins, we are joining with our law enforcement partners to strongly encourage the proper use of seatbelts and child safety seats in motor vehicles. Wearing a seatbelt is a simple measure that dramatically reduces the risk of severe injury or death in a crash. We will continue our efforts to reduce the senseless tragedies caused by those who ignore New York’s seat belt laws.”
During the two-week enforcement campaign, the State Police will supplement regular patrols with special seatbelt and child safety seat details, in addition to conducting safety restraint checkpoints.
During last year’s campaign, troopers and local law enforcement issued more than 28,000 adult and child safety restraint violations.
Under New York state law:
¯ All front-seat occupants must be properly secured, regardless of age;
¯ All rear-seat passengers under 16 years of age must be properly secured;
¯ Children up to the age of 4 must be properly restrained in a federally approved child safety seat that is attached to a vehicle by a seatbelt or universal child restraint anchorage (LATCH) system.
¯ Children less than age 4 but weighing more than 40 pounds may be restrained in a booster seat with a lap/shoulder safety belt. However, a child safety seat that accommodates higher weights can be used.
¯ Children ages 4, 5, 6 and 7 must be properly secured in an appropriate child restraint system, one for which the child meets the height and weight recommendations of the child restraint manufacturer.
¯ A vehicle’s safety belt is not a child restraint system.
¯ Children riding in booster seats must be secured with a combination lap/shoulder seatbelt (State Police advise motorists to never secure a child in a booster seat with only a lap belt).
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that seatbelts saved 13,941 lives in 2015 nationally and could have saved another 2,804 if people who weren’t wearing them had done so. In New York, NHTSA estimates seatbelts saved 443 lives in 2015 and another seven children under age 5 were saved by car seats. The NHTSA also estimated another 55 lives could have been saved with 100 percent compliance.




