Drive Safely This Holiday Season

Councilman Ron Fennel, Betty Ann Cook of Chattahoochee Tech (a former Director of the Governor's Office of Highway Safety), and WSB's Capt. Herb Emory join state troopers in urging you to drive safely this holiday season.

Councilman Ron Fennel, Betty Ann Cook of Chattahoochee Tech (a former Director of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety), and WSB’s Capt. Herb Emory join state troopers in urging you to drive safely this holiday season.

Holiday driving safety was the focus of a gathering in Smyrna last week.

The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety and 11Alive join TEAM Georgia and the Atlanta business community to urge safe and sober holiday celebrations. Click here to see our Safe Holiday Brochure with useful tips.

For A Safe and Free Ride Home ask your server to call you a CHECKER CAB: 404-351-1111, or AAA/Budweiser Tow to Go, 1-800-AAA-HELP

TEAM Georgia’s annual Safe Holiday Campaign has strengthened its line-up for 2012, to encourage sober driving and safe holiday gatherings during the coming weeks. Officials from TEAM Georgia and the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety will be joined by metro Atlanta leaders for the launch of the 2012 TEAM Georgia Safe Holiday Campaign on Thursday, Dec. 6 at the Smyrna Community Center. The event will include a model safe holiday celebration.

Now in its second decade, the TEAM Georgia Safe Holiday Campaign urges businesses, private hosts and members of the hospitality industry to put the safety of employees, guests and patrons first during the holiday season.

The Safe Holiday Campaign involves area bars and restaurants to display Safe Holiday information, offer a free non-alcoholic drink to designated drivers, and inform patrons about the free ride home available from Checker Cab. The campaign’s 2012 Safe Holiday Guide will reach thousands of Georgia businesses and private hosts with safe celebration suggestions, plus safety and legal reminders for party goers.

In Georgia, 35 percent of traffic crash fatalities are alcohol-related. Over the past decade, the highest number of crashes in Georgia occurred from October to December.

The chance of a crash being fatal is six times higher in crashes with an impaired driver.