The Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) presented its 2014 highway safety awards to two individuals who have made a national impact on issues related to impaired driving and highway safety and four programs focusing on the nation’s most pressing highway safety problems at a luncheon as part of its Annual Meeting in Grand Rapids. The Allstate Foundation (www.allstatefoundation.org) and the Foundation for Advancing Alcohol Responsibility (responsibility.org) sponsored the luncheon. GHSA presented its most prestigious honor, the James J. Howard Highway Safety Trailblazer Award, to the Honorable Kathleen Rice, District Attorney for Nassau County, New York, whose efforts to address impaired driving have had significant measurable impact within the county and opened up a national discussion on appropriate penalties for impaired driving fatalities. During her eight-and-a-half years in office, D.A. Rice has used her position to advance highway safety at every level, spearheading prevention programs for teenage drivers, working with state lawmakers to craft stronger traffic safety legislation, creating the county’s first vehicular crimes bureau and piloting a new program of early intervention and intensive supervision for DUI offenders. The Kathryn J.R. Swanson Public Service Award was presented to Joseph Farrow, Commissioner of the California Highway Patrol. Throughout his illustrious 35-year career with the agency, Commissioner Farrow has impacted highway safety at the local, regional, state and national levels. Not only has Commissioner Farrow helped the State of California achieve the lowest level of traffic-related fatalities since the federal government has recorded such data, he has also spearheaded efforts to advance highway safety across the country through his work with the International Association of Chiefs of Police and other organizations. GHSA also presented four Peter K. O’Rourke Special Achievement Awards for outstanding highway safety accomplishments during the previous calendar year to the following individuals and programs:
  • Tim Hollister of Hartford, Connecticut, is an environmental lawyer by day, and also a parent, author, and advocate who has taken an unthinkable personal tragedy and channeled it into an unrelenting drive to save other parents from the same fate. When Tim lost his 17-year-old son Reid in a crash in 2006, he parlayed his grief into action, participating on a task force to overhaul the state’s graduated driver licensing (GDL) law, and eventually launching a national blog for parents of teen drivers, “From Reid’s Dad,” which, in nearly five years of publication, has become a go-to source for parents, driving schools, traffic safety organizations, and law enforcement. In 2013, a selection of posts from his blog was published in the new book, NOT SO FAST: Parenting Your Teen Through the Dangers of Driving, and Tim has continued his active schedule of presentations at national, regional and local conferences.
  • AT&T’s It Can Wait Campaign, a national initiative to combat the dangerous trend of distracted driving, expanded in 2013, engaging more than 1,500 organizations and companies, including three of AT&T’s biggest competitors. The campaign had an impressive year, recently surpassing 5 million pledges, 1 billion impressions on social media and leading more than 4,000 events, activities and proclamations across the country.
  • Judge John S. Kennedy and the Target 25 Program is an anti-DUI recidivism campaign in York County, Pennsylvania, that targets that 25 percent of DUI offenders who are repeat or multiple offenders. Since the program’s inception, the county has experienced a 90 percent reduction in the number of DUI offenders who were arrested for a subsequent DUI offense within the same year, and the percentage of all victims of crime in the county who were victims of DUI fell from 18 percent in 2011 to 6 percent in 2013. In addition, state crash data reveals that York County crashes resulting in an injury or fatality due to a drinking driver fell 21 percent in 2013 compared to the previous three-year average.
  • The Parent’s Supervised Driving Program, developed and published by the nonprofit Safe Roads Alliance, is a resource kit for parents and guardians who are helping their teens learn how to drive. Currently underway in 12 states, the program was actively distributed to more than 160,000 families with permitted teen drivers in 2013 alone, and is expected to reach 1,000,000 families in the coming year. The Program is distributed to all parents through departments of motor vehicles (DMVs) in participating states at the time of teen permitting; this makes parents immediately aware that there is a need for guidance during this phase of the teen driver learning process. Corporate underwriting by State Farm® and Ford Motor Company enables The Parent’s Supervised Driving Program to reach 100 percent of parents of teen learner’s permit recipients in participating states, at no cost to families or to DMVs.