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Traffic Tech |
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Technology Transfer Series | ||
| Number 216 March 2000 | |||
LEGISLATION AND ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH A
19 PERCENT REDUCTION IN ALCOHOL-RELATED
FATAL CRASHES IN NEW MEXICO
New Mexico has had a long history of high rates of alcohol-related fatal crashes. In fact, for the past few decades, they have had some of the highest rates in the nation. In 1993, New Mexico passed omnibus legislation to strengthen their DWI laws and create a stronger anti-DWI environment.
Mid-America Research Institute of Winchester, Massachusetts conducted a study for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) of the effectiveness of New Mexico's new legislative package.
There are difficulties in evaluating comprehensive
legislative initiatives such as New Mexico's because
it is nearly impossible to separate the effect of any
one component of the bill from the others. New
Mexico also implemented a long series of bimonthly
DWI checkpoint blitzes accompanied by widespread
publicity, thus combining legislation, visible
enforcement, and public education and information.
Included in New Mexico's Omnibus Bill:
Alcohol-Related Fatal Crashes
Decline 19 Percent
An interrupted time series approach was used in
analyzing the impact of the overall program. The
intervention point was the implementation of a
statewide sobriety checkpoint program, which was
followed immediately by the effective date of most
of the legislative changes.
The data analysis showed a reduction in drunk driving fatal crashes of 19.25 percent. Although this reduction was dramatic, it was not statistically significant, most likely because New Mexico's population is relatively small and the modest sample size requires large absolute reductions in fatal crashes to achieve statistical significance.
Crash trends were also examined in five surrounding states (Arizona, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, and Nevada) as a comparison and showed a reduction of only 3.52 percent -- lending further support to the hypothesis that New Mexico's reduction was due, at least, in part, to their legislative and enforcement activities.
HOW TO ORDER
For a copy of Evaluation of Changes in New
Mexico's Anti-DWI Efforts (19 pages), write to
Office of Research and Traffic Records, NHTSA,
NTS-31, 400 Seventh Street, S.W. Washington, DC
20590, fax (202) 366-7096, or download from the
web http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov
U.S. Department
of Transportation
National Highway
Traffic Safety
Administration
400 Seventh Street, S.W. NTS-31
Washington, DC 20590
Traffic Tech is a publication to disseminate
information about traffic safety programs,
including evaluations, innovative programs,
and new publications. Feel free to copy it as you wish.
If you would like to receive a copy contact:
Linda Cosgrove, Ph.D., Editor, Evaluation Staff
Traffic Safety Programs
(202) 366-2759, fax (202) 366-7096
E-MAIL: lcosgrove@nhtsa.dot.gov