State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report Federal Fiscal Year 2015 prepared for U.S. Department of Transportation National Highway Traffic Safety Administration prepared by Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety Douglas A. Ducey Governor State of Arizona Alberto C. Gutier Director and Governor’s Highway Safety Representative State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report Federal Fiscal Year 2015 prepared for U.S. Department of Transportation National Highway Traffic Safety Administration prepared by Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety 1700 West Washington Street Executive Tower, Suite 430 Phoenix, Arizona 85007 December 2015 Contact Information Name: Alberto C. Gutier Title: Director, Governor’s Office of Highway Safety Governor’s Highway Safety Representative Street: 1700 West Washington Street Telephone: (602) 255-3216 Suite/Room: Suite 430 Fax: (602) 255-1265 City, State: Phoenix, AZ Email: agutier@azgohs.gov Zip: 85007 Web Address: www.azgohs.gov This Annual Report is dedicated to citizens of Arizona, whom we serve. Arizona State Capitol Museum State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table of Contents 1.0 2.0 Arizona GOHS Program Overview .................................................................... 1 1.1 Executive Summary....................................................................................... 1 1.2 Accomplishments .......................................................................................... 2 1.3 Looking Forward ........................................................................................... 3 1.4 1.5 Introduction .................................................................................................... 4 Arizona GOHS Mission ................................................................................ 5 1.6 Arizona GOHS Organization ....................................................................... 5 1.7 Strategic Partners ........................................................................................... 7 1.8 Legislative Update ......................................................................................... 7 Highway Safety Performance .............................................................................. 8 2.1 Progress Assessment ..................................................................................... 8 2.2 3.0 Highway Safety Trends .............................................................................. 10 Program Areas ...................................................................................................... 17 3.1 Accident Investigation (AI) ........................................................................ 18 3.2 Alcohol and Other Drugs (AL) .................................................................. 23 3.3 Emergency Medical Services (EM) ............................................................ 37 3.4 Motorcycle Safety (MC) .............................................................................. 41 3.5 Occupant Protection (OP) ........................................................................... 44 3.6 Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety (PS) ............................................................ 52 3.7 Police Traffic Services (PT) ......................................................................... 56 3.8 Traffic Records (TR)..................................................................................... 63 3.9 Planning and Administration (PA) ........................................................... 67 4.0 Cost Summary ...................................................................................................... 70 5.0 Addendum – Seat Belt Survey........................................................................... 75 i List of Tables, continued List of Tables Table 1.1 Arizona Crash Factors as Percent of Total Fatalities 2014 ..................... 4 Table 2.1 Arizona Highway Safety Performance Report ....................................... 9 Table 2.2 Arizona Highway Safety Trends ............................................................ 10 Table 3.1 Performance Targets and Measures (Accident Investigation) ............ 18 Table 3.2 FFY 2015 Accident Investigation Projects .............................................. 19 Table 3.3 Performance Targets and Measures (Alcohol and Other Drugs) ....... 23 Table 3.4 FFY 2015 Alcohol and Other Drugs Projects ......................................... 24 Table 3.5 DUI Task Force Statistics (DUI Arrests – Select Holidays) ................. 31 Table 3.6 DUI Task Force Statistics (by Calendar Year) ....................................... 32 Table 3.7 Performance Targets and Measures (Emergency Medical Services) ...................................................................................................... 37 Table 3.8 FFY 2015 Emergency Medical Services Projects ................................... 38 Table 3.9 Performance Targets and Measures (Motorcycle Safety) .................... 41 Table 3.10 FFY 2015 Motorcycle Safety Projects ...................................................... 42 Table 3.11 Performance Targets and Measures (Occupant Protection) ............... 44 Table 3.12 FFY 2015 Occupant Protection Projects ................................................. 46 Table 3.13 “Buckle Up Arizona…It’s the Law!” Campaign ................................... 49 Table 3.14 Performance Targets and Measures (Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety) ......................................................................................................... 52 Table 3.15 FFY 2015 Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Projects .................................. 53 Table 3.16 Performance Targets and Measures (Police Traffic Services) ............. 56 Table 3.17 FFY 2015 Police Traffic Services Projects ............................................... 57 Table 3.18 FFY 2015 Traffic Records Projects ........................................................... 64 Table 3.19 Performance Targets and Measures (Planning and Administration) ......................................................................................... 67 Table 3.20 FFY 2015 Planning and Administration Projects .................................. 68 ii Table 4.1 Highway Safety Program Cost Summary ............................................. 71 Table 5.1 Seat Belt Survey Summary Data ............................................................. 75 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 List of Figures Figure 1.1 Organizational Chart .................................................................................. 6 Figure 2.1 Fatalities...................................................................................................... 11 Figure 2.2 Serious Traffic Injuries.............................................................................. 11 Figure 2.3 Fatality Rate ............................................................................................... 12 Figure 2.4 Unrestrained Passenger Vehicle Occupant Fatalities .......................... 12 Figure 2.5 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities ...................................................... 13 Figure 2.6 Speeding-Related Fatalities ..................................................................... 13 Figure 2.7 Motorcycle Fatalities ................................................................................. 14 Figure 2.8 Unhelmeted Motorcycle Fatalities .......................................................... 14 Figure 2.9 Drivers Age 20 or Younger in Fatal Crashes ......................................... 15 Figure 2.10 Pedestrian Fatalities .................................................................................. 15 Figure 2.11 Bicyclist Fatalities ...................................................................................... 16 Figure 2.12 Percent Observed Seat Belt Use for Passenger Vehicles ...................... 16 iii State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 1.0 Arizona GOHS Program Overview 1.1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report (AR) for Federal Fiscal Year (FFY) 2015 serves as the State’s assessment of the 2015 Highway Safety Plan (HSP). It is required by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) pursuant to 23 CFR § 1200.33 and provides an update of highway safety projects administered by the Arizona Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS). The projects and funding administered by GOHS were approved by NHTSA Region IX in the FFY 2015 HSP and subsequent revisions throughout the year. Each year, GOHS develops the HSP which identifies current highway safety problems, defines performance targets and measures, and describes safety programs and projects that will be implemented to address highway safety concerns and achieve safety performance targets. The AR reviews the yearly progress on implementing Arizona’s HSP and documents the use of grant funding administered by NHTSA for federal funds available under the Section 402 State and Community Highway Safety grant program and the Section 405 National Priority Safety Program of the Federal transportation bill Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century (MAP-21). The Federal Government recently passed a new highway funding bill named Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act on December 4, 2015 and GOHS will review and implement the FAST Act in FFY 2016 in Arizona. GOHS administers Federal funds to state, local and nonprofit organizations who agree to work toward the shared goal of reducing deaths and major injuries due to motor vehicle crashes through implementation of programs and projects that address driver behavior and improvements in the traffic records systems. Total traffic fatalities in Arizona decreased from 849 in 2013 to 770 in 2014. This success can be attributed to the combined efforts of the many traffic safety partners throughout the State. We thank our local, state, and federal partners for their commitment to our mission and are grateful for their support. Any life lost due to a motor vehicle crash is tragic. GOHS and our safety partners continue to work toward the shared goal of reducing fatalities and injuries through joint implementation of the HSP and our Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP). GOHS will continue to provide funding and support for the national mobilizations and effective highway safety programs aimed at reducing fatalities and injuries on Arizona’s roadways. 1 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 1.2 ACCOMPLISHMENTS  Total fatalities fell from 849 in 2013 to 770 in 2014 and serious injuries decreased from 4,305 to 3,910. Serious injuries have fallen every year since 2007 when Arizona started tracking the data.  Alcohol impaired, speeding-related and unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities saw significant decreases in 2014.  The percentage of Arizonan motorists wearing a seat belt has increased to 87.2%. Seat belts are an important part of highway safety; over a quarter of fatalities in Arizona in 2014 were individuals who were not wearing a seat belt.  As part of the grant review process, the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) required some grantees to make in-person presentations to GOHS staff on their agency’s grant proposal.  GOHS supported the “Buckle Up Arizona…It’s the Law!” campaign as part of the national “Click it or Ticket” campaign in May 2015 by providing overtime funding for traffic enforcement during the two-week period.  GOHS participated in the national Labor Day DUI crackdown.  GOHS continued to emphasize the message of sober designated drivers with the “Designate a Driver!” tagline in paid and earned media campaigns, in addition to GOHS’s “Drive Hammered…Get Nailed!”  Arizona Statewide Impaired Driving Task Force was established for the singular purpose of increasing safety to the motoring public by combating impaired driving.  GOHS and our partner agencies promoted, funded and tracked citations and arrest data on regular mandated enforcement details for St. Patrick’s Day, Cinco de Mayo, Memorial Day, Halloween and during the Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday deployments.  The GOHS was a stakeholder in the Arizona Strategic Highway Safety Plan (SHSP), a statewide comprehensive framework for reducing fatalities and serious injuries on all public roads. The goal is to identify key safety needs using a data-driven process, engage the State’s safety stakeholders in plan development and leverage resources to collectively address the State’s safety challenges.  GOHS Director Alberto Gutier conducted dozens of television and radio interviews on topics and GOHS was mentioned in hundreds of news articles across the State. 2 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 1.3 LOOKING FORWARD The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) and Arizona law enforcement continue to work hard to decrease fatalities through enforcement and education. Law enforcement agencies continue to arrest impaired drivers and cite speeding and seat belt violations aggressively. As the leading agency in the State of Arizona dedicated to promoting traffic safety, GOHS looks forward to meeting the challenges ahead in 2016. Next year GOHS will:  Continue to promote GOHS as the leading agency in promoting highway and traffic safety throughout the State.  Promote traffic safety through extensive enforcement, education and public awareness activities.  Maintain and enhance existing DUI operations, including task forces, saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoint deployments.  Continue to fund programs and identify strategies to reduce speed-related fatalities and injury collisions.  Continue to promote Arizona as the preeminent state for DRE and Phlebotomy through the enhancement of these programs.  Complete statewide training for grantees on the FFY 2017 proposal guide.  Host a conference for law enforcement, prosecutors and judges.  Continue to actively participate in national enforcement campaigns, such as the Labor Day DUI enforcement campaign.  Enhance and expand the Children are Priceless Passengers program.  Maintain or increase the seatbelt usage percentage rate. GOHS is confident that it will continue to meet and surpass the goals and objectives delineated in the FFY 2016 Highway Safety Plan and those enumerated above to reduce traffic fatalities and injuries in Arizona in the next year and beyond. GOHS is well prepared to meet these, and other challenges that lie ahead, to keep the public safe on Arizona’s streets and highways. 3 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 1.4 INTRODUCTION The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) supports activities having the greatest potential to save lives, reduce injuries and improve highway safety in Arizona. GOHS staff analyzed a broad-range of data, reviewed relevant highway safety research and applied in-house expertise to identify the most significant safety problems in the State. Relative magnitudes of various contributing crash factors were reviewed and tracked over time, as were the demographic characteristics of drivers and crash victims and whether they used, or did not use, appropriate safety equipment. Table 1.1 summarizes this analysis and displays the relative importance of various contributing crash factors, vehicle types and demographics to crash fatalities in Arizona in 2014. Table 1.1 Arizona Crash Factors as Percent of Total Fatalities 2014 Speeding Related Unrestrained Vehicle Occupant Alcohol Impaired Driving Pedestrians 33% 27% 26% 18% Motorcyclists Drivers Age 20 and Younger Bicyclists 17% 11% 4% Source: FARS These data show that speeding, unrestrained occupants and alcohol impairment are the factors having the greatest impact on fatalities in Arizona. Therefore, GOHS has focused its resources to address these factors through the following Tier 1 program areas:  Alcohol and Other Drugs (AL) – To reduce the number and severity of crashes in which alcohol and/or drugs are contributing factors.  Police Traffic Services (PT) – To achieve and maintain compliance with traffic laws such as aggressive driving, speeding and red light running. Enforcement must be consistent, impartial and uniformly applied to all street and highway users.  Occupant Protection (OP) – To increase the statewide seat belt/child safety seat (CSS) usage rate of motor vehicle occupants and to increase public information and education of the benefits of seat belt/CSS usage for adults and children. GOHS addresses other conditions and contributing crash factors through the following Tier 2 program areas:  Accident Investigation (AI) – To provide training and resources for vehicular crimes units to more effectively aide in the investigation and prosecution of fatal traffic collisions. 4 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015  Emergency Medical Services (EM) – To support rural first responders with emergency medical services (EMS) equipment.  Motorcycle Safety (MC) – To increase the public’s awareness and understanding of and participation in motorcycle safety.  Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety (PS) – To increase the public’s awareness and understanding of and participation in pedestrian and bicycle safety. This includes pedestrians from all walks of life, from school children to the elderly.  Traffic Records (TR) – To develop a comprehensive data processing system that brings together the engineering, enforcement, educational, medical, behavioral health, prosecution, judicial, correctional and emergency response disciplines. 1.5 ARIZONA GOHS MISSION The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS), as the focal point for highway safety issues in Arizona, provides leadership by developing, promoting, and coordinating programs; influencing public and private policy; and increasing public awareness of highway safety. 1.6 ARIZONA GOHS ORGANIZATION The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) is led by the Director, Alberto C. Gutier, who is appointed by and reports to the Governor of Arizona, Douglas A. Ducey. Mr. Gutier is supported by an administrative staff headed by Assistant Director, Mari Hembeck; grant-funded programs for a variety of agencies and other institutions headed by Grant Manager, Renee Bracamonte; financial staff headed by the Comptroller, Megan Darian; and project management staff. The dotted lines in the organizational chart (Figure 1.1) depict the Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor. This position is supported by GOHS and housed in an office outside of the GOHS office. 5 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 1.1 Organizational Chart Douglas A. Ducey Governor Alberto Gutier Director Vacant ASO I - Federally Funded Renee Bracamonte Grant Manager ASO III - Federally Funded Joshua Worley Terri Fornefeld Senior Grant Coordinator and Statistical Data ASO I - Federally Funded Grant Project and IT Coordinator ASO I - Federally Funded Shane Radford Gabriela Gallegos Grant Project and DUI AC Coordinator ASO I - Federally Funded Grant Project and Occupant Protection Coordinator ASO I – Federally Funded GR, PIO and Legislative Liaison State Funded Mari Hembeck, CPM Assistant Director Administration and Operations E2 - Federally Funded Megan Darian Comptroller ASO III - Federally Funded Kristi Noneman Jenise Moreno Pam Cobb Administrative Assistant II Federally Funded Special Projects ASO II - Federally Funded Fiscal Specialist PPS I - Federally Funded Beth Barnes Phoenix Prosecutor’s Office – GOHS TSRP Federally Funded 6 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 1.7 STRATEGIC PARTNERS The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) appreciates the cooperation and support of many stakeholders at the federal and state level, including:  Arizona Department of Transportation;  Arizona Department of Public Safety;  Arizona Department of Health Services;  Arizona Department of Liquor Licenses and Control;  Arizona Motorcycle Safety Council;  Arizona DUI Abatement Council;  Arizona Association of Chiefs of Police;  Arizona Sheriffs Association;  Arizona Prosecuting Attorneys Advisory Council;  Arizona Restaurant Association;  National Safety Council;  Red Means Stop Coalition;  Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD);  Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD);  Beverage Alcohol Community Information Council (BACIC);  Federal Highway Administration;  Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration; and  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. 1.8 LEGISLATIVE UPDATE In Federal Fiscal Year 2015, there was no legislation introduced or passed that would affect highway safety. 7 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 2.0 Highway Safety Performance 2.1 PROGRESS ASSESSMENT Core Performance Measures The primary highway safety goal for Arizona is to reduce fatalities across all program areas. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) tracks performance measures based on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) data in combination with several other data sources to understand trends and set safety performance targets. Table 2.1 identifies the performance measures which the GOHS tracked in FFY 2015. These performance measures mirror the outcome, behavior and activity performance measures developed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in collaboration with the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA). 8 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 2.1 Arizona Highway Safety Performance Report Performance Measures 2014 Target 2014 Actual Target Met % Difference (Actual versus Target) 820 770 Yes -6% 828 4,236 3,910 Yes -8% 4,159 Fatalities/100 MVMT 1.37 N/A NA NA 1.35 Unrestrained fatalities 265 209 Yes -21% 259 Alcohol-impaired fatalities (>=0.08 BAC) 270 199 Yes -26% 238 Speedingrelated fatalities 279 254 Yes -9% 259 Motorcyclist fatalities 136 130 Yes -4% 138 Unhelmeted motorcyclist fatalities 65 69 No +6% 71 Young driver involvement in fatal crashes (<=20) 96 86 Yes -10% 110 Pedestrian fatalities 131 141 No +8% 148 Bicyclist Fatalities 28 29 No +4% 26 83.1% 87.2% Yes +4% 85.0% Seat belt citations NA 24,848 NA NA NA Impaired driving arrests NA 29,250 NA NA NA Speeding citations NA 565,827 NA NA NA Performance Measure Core Outcome Traffic fatalities Measures Serious Traffic Injuries Core Behavior Observed seat Measures belt use Activity Measures 2015 Target Sources: 2014 Targets - Serious Traffic Injuries and Bicyclist FFY 2015 HSP, all others FFY 2014 HSP 2015 Targets - FFY 2015 HSP. Traffic Injuries and Serious Traffic Injuries - ADOT Remaining Core Outcome Measures - FARS Core Behavior Measures – Behavior Research Center Activity Measures – GOHS DUI Reporting System 9 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 2.2 HIGHWAY SAFETY TRENDS Table 2.2 below shows the data points associated with the performance measures identified in the previous section. Figures illustrating each performance measure’s trend follow on the next six pages. Table 2.2 Arizona Highway Safety Trends 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 5-Year Average 759 826 821 849 770 805 Serious Traffic Injuries 4,600 4,570 4,471 4,305 3,910 4371 Fatalities/100M VMT 1.27 1.39 1.37 1.39 N/A 1.36 235 222 254 227 209 229 206 212 230 219 199 213 Speeding-Related Fatalities 262 299 302 290 254 281 Total Motorcycle Fatalities 91 136 141 151 130 130 Unhelmeted Motorcycle Fatalities 50 73 70 83 69 69 Drivers Age 20 or Younger in Fatal Crashes 79 116 99 119 86 100 Pedestrian Fatalities 145 147 122 151 141 141 Bicyclist Fatalities 19 23 18 31 29 24 Percent Observed Belt Use for Passenger Vehicles 81.8% 82.9% 82.2% 84.7% 87.2% 83.8% Number of Seat Belt Citations Issued 5,439 21,828 29,710 27,805 24,848 21,926 19,482 31,561 32,174 31,635 29,250 28,820 101,848 331,269 377,992 472,777 565,827 369,943 Fatalities Passenger Unrestrained Vehicle Occupant Fatalities Alcohol Impaired Driving Fatalities (BAC = 0.08%+) Number of Impaired Driving Arrests Made Number of Other Citations (including speed) Issueda Sources: Serious Traffic Injuries – ADOT Observed Belt Use – Behavior Research Center Seat Belt Citations, Impaired Driving Arrests, Other Citations – GOHS DUI Reporting System All Other Data – FARS a In 2014, there were 565,827 citations issued for speed and aggressive driving which includes, speed not Notes: reasonable or prudent, excessive speed, speed not right for conditions and reckless driving while speeding or other citations issued for other moving violations like red light running. 10 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.1 Fatalities Figure 2.2 Serious Traffic Injuries 11 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.3 Fatality Rate Figure 2.4 Unrestrained Passenger Vehicle Occupant Fatalities 12 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.5 Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities Figure 2.6 Speeding-Related Fatalities 13 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.7 Motorcycle Fatalities Figure 2.8 Unhelmeted Motorcycle Fatalities 14 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.9 Drivers Age 20 or Younger in Fatal Crashes Figure 2.10 Pedestrian Fatalities 15 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Figure 2.11 Bicyclist Fatalities Figure 2.12 Percent Observed Seat Belt Use for Passenger Vehicles 16 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.0 Program Areas The performance targets, accomplishments and performance measures of the ten program areas addressed in Arizona’s FFY 2015 Highway Safety Plan are described in this section. 17 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.1 ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION (AI) Accident investigations are conducted to determine the causes, contributing factors and consequences of crashes. Key activities include verifying the parameters of the crash as well as its demarcations and location. Statements from witnesses, victims and other drivers are collected and reviewed as part of the investigation to determine the “at fault” driver and whether and to whom citations should be issued. An accident investigation culminates in a report that summarizes the findings, determines where the vehicles were positioned before and after the crash and identifies the cause(s) of the crash. Accident investigations are critical for felony prosecution of vehicular crimes and provide accurate crash data for the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS), the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) and others. Many jurisdictions have a Vehicular Crimes Unit (VCU) that is trained to conduct accident investigations. The Arizona Department of Public Safety (DPS) provides accident investigation services for those smaller jurisdictions unable to afford the sophisticated equipment needed to conduct them. Performance Targets Table 3.1 Performance Targets and Measures (Accident Investigation) Performance Target Performance Measure To decrease traffic fatalities by 1.9 percent, from the 2013 level of 844 to 828 in 2015. Number of traffic-related fatalities. To decrease the number of serious injuries by 3.4 percent from the 2013 level of 4,305 to 4,159 in 2015. Number of traffic-related serious injuries. Projects and Funding Table 3.2 contains a list of the 16 Accident Investigation projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following four task areas:  Accident Investigation Overtime;  Accident Investigation Equipment;  Accident Investigation Training; and  GOHS Program Administration. 18 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.2 FFY 2015 Accident Investigation Projects Task Area Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Accident Investigation Overtime 2015-AI-001 Maricopa County SO Accident Investigation tasks supported progress toward all performance targets Sec. 402 $52,188.94 Complete Accident Investigation Equipment 2015-AI-002 Chino Valley PD Sec. 402 $6,013.64 Complete 2015-AI-003 Globe PD Accident Investigation tasks supported progress toward all performance targets Sec. 402 $9,670.00 Complete 2015-AI-004 Peoria PD Sec. 402 $32,968.00 Complete 2015-AI-005 Prescott Valley PD Sec. 402 $21,944.90 Complete 2015-AI-006 Yuma CSO Sec. 402 $23,714.32 Complete 2015-AI-007 NONE $0.00 Cancelled 2015-AI-013 Flagstaff PD Sec. 402 $4,898.00 Complete 2015A-AI-014 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $44,536.95 Complete 2015B-AI-015 Gilbert PD Sec. 402 $30,915.77 Complete 2015-AI-008 Globe PD Sec. 402 $5,962.00 Complete 2015-AI-009 Pinal CSO Sec. 402 $8,995.76 Complete 2015-AI-010 Surprise PD Sec. 402 $8,725.00 Complete 2015-AI-011 Tempe PD Sec. 402 $15,810.00 Complete 2015-AI-012 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $5,681.86 Complete 2015-AI-300 GOHS Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Accident Investigation Training GOHS Program Administration Total Funds Spent (Accident Investigation) -- Accident Investigation tasks supported progress toward all performance targets Accident Investigation tasks supported progress toward all performance targets $272,025.14 19 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Accident Investigation In FFY 2015 the equipment, overtime and training awarded through Arizona’s Accident Investigation grants allowed agencies to conduct accident investigations for themselves and for other agencies lacking the equipment and/or expertise required to conduct investigations on their own. Equipment procured through these grants is the most current and technologically advanced available for conducting on-scene investigations. The increased ability of agencies in Arizona to conduct exemplary Accident Investigations is resulting in more effective prosecution of fatal traffic collisions and removal of dangerous drivers from Arizona’s roads. Project Descriptions The following are descriptions of the four accident investigation tasks, including the outcomes of the tasks over the 2015 Federal Fiscal Year. Task Area – Accident Investigation Overtime Project Description – The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office was awarded a grant for overtime to properly respond to collisions involving the potential for criminal charges. Task Area – Accident Investigation Equipment Project Description – Eight agencies were awarded funding to purchase equipment to aid in the investigation and reconstruction of traffic accidents. If the equipment package did not include training, the grants included funding for training to allow officers to become proficient in the use of the equipment. The Chino Valley Police Department purchased the ARAS 360 HD Software and training package. It will increase and improve the ability to document, evaluate and diagram in accident investigations collisions. The Globe Police Department purchased a Nikon Total Station and ARAS HS software package. The Nikon Total Station is used to record crash scene data and properly capture evidence required in accident investigations. The Peoria Police Department purchased three ARAS Software licenses. This software will provide Globe Police Department advanced analytical diagrams and reports for both Nikon Total Station traffic collision and crime scenes accident investigations. Funding for training on the software was also awarded to the Peoria Police Department. 20 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 The Prescott Valley Police Department purchased a LEICA TS-12 Remote Mapper Reflector-less On Demand System to support and enhance data in accident investigation collisions and crime scenes. Prescott Valley Police Dept. LEICA TS-12 Remote Mapper System The Yuma CSO purchased an Accident Investigation Mapping System (AIMS) and related equipment. The AIMS system is used to produce diagrams to improve the level of data retrieved from accident investigation collisions and crime scenes. The Flagstaff Police Department purchased Two SRN 1000 Portable Privacy Barrier Systems. These systems will provide necessary privacy to victims and families of major accident investigation crash and crime scenes. The Tucson Police Department purchased a TOPCON GR-5 GPS Collision Scene Measuring System and software. This system collects measurements from a collision scene for officers to use in accident investigation. The Gilbert Police Department purchased a new Trimble GPS system. The Trimble System is a collision scene diagramming system that will increase the accuracy and clarity of diagrams used by the Gilbert Police Department in collision investigations and court presentations. Gilbert Police Department Trimble GPS System 21 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – Accident Investigation Training Project Description – Funding was awarded to five law enforcement agencies for officers to participate in accident investigation training. In addition, funds were used to send officers from agencies to attend training through the Institute of Police Technology and Management. Task Area – GOHS Program Administration Project Description – GOHS personnel administered and managed section 402 Accident Investigation programs which included writing, managing and monitoring grants and contracts. GOHS personnel coordinated the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provided status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation and evaluated task accomplishments for their grant portfolio. Funding supported personnel services, employee related expenses and other operating expenses for the GOHS grant manager and grant project coordinators. 22 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.2 ALCOHOL AND OTHER DRUGS (AL) Alcohol and drug-related crashes are a leading cause of death on Arizona roads and highways. Stopping impaired driving and reducing the number of alcohol and drug impaired fatalities continues to be the number one priority of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS). In 2014, 199 fatalities involving at least one driver with a BAC of 0.08 percent or greater occurred, a decrease from 219 in 2013. These fatalities accounted for 26 percent of all traffic-related fatalities in 2014. Despite the alarming statistics, it is clear that Arizona’s sustained, long-term, highly visible enforcement coupled with effective education programs has reduced impaired driving crashes and fatalities over the course of the past several years. Arizona has some of the toughest impaired driving laws in the country and it continues to address impaired driving crashes from a variety of angles. Training law enforcement officers in combating impaired driving is a strong focus of Arizona’s efforts to decrease impaired driving fatalities. The State has a cadre of superbly trained officers in alcohol- and drug-impaired driver detection, but the challenges continue. Performance Targets Table 3.3 Performance Targets and Measures (Alcohol and Other Drugs) Performance Target Performance Measure To decrease alcohol-impaired driving fatalities (those involving a legally intoxicated driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or higher) by 9.2 percent from the 2013 level of 262 to 238 in 2015. Number of fatalities involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 percent or higher. Projects and Funding Table 3.4 contains a list of the many Alcohol and Other Drugs projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project, and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following task areas:  DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime;  DUI/Impaired Driving Equipment;  DUI/Impaired Driving Training;  DUI/Impaired Driving Awareness;  Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor;  Ignition Interlock; and  GOHS Program Administration. 23 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.4 FFY 2015 Alcohol and Other Drugs Projects Task Area DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $32,499.91 Complete Sec. 402 $6,198.00 Complete Sec. 402 $34,804.56 Complete Department of Public Safety Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-AL-005 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402 $46,399.12 Complete 2015-AL-006 Flagstaff PD Sec. 402 $22,914.41 Complete 2015-AL-007 Maricopa CSO Sec. 402 $64,136.00 Complete 2015-AL-008 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $84,540.80 Complete 2015-AL-009 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $58,707.66 Complete 2015-AL-010 San Luis PD Sec. 402 $5,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-011 Santa Cruz CSO Sec. 402 $8,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-012 Scottsdale PD Sec. 402 $100,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-013 Sierra Vista PD Sec. 402 $28,250.00 Complete 2015-AL-014 Snowflake-Taylor PD Sec. 402 $3,999.98 Complete 2015-AL-015 Springerville PD Sec. 402 $9,009.58 Complete 2015-AL-016 St. Johns PD Sec. 402 $9,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-017 Surprise PD Sec. 402 $29,144.39 Complete 2015-AL-018 Tempe PD Sec. 402 $99,902.08 Complete 2015-AL-019 Tempe PD Sec. 402 $68,394.51 Complete 2015-AL-020 Thatcher PD Sec. 402 $13,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-001 ASU PD 2015-AL-002 Clifton PD 2015-AL-003 Cochise CSO 2015-AL-004 Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 24 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $9,092.63 Complete Sec. 402 $89,028.00 Complete Sec. 402 $26,009.86 Complete Williams PD Sec. 402 $3,500.00 Complete 2015-AL-025 Yavapai CSO Sec. 402 $29,304.14 Complete 2015-AL-026 Yuma CSO Sec. 402 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-AL-033 Avondale PD Sec. 402 $43,153.12 Complete 2015-HV-001 Apache Junction PD Sec. 410 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-HV-002 Chandler PD Sec. 410 $20,000.00 Complete 2015-HV-003 Chandler PD Sec. 410 $21,200.00 Complete 2015-HV-004 Chino Valley PD Sec. 410 $9,381.33 Complete 2015-HV-005 Cottonwood PD Sec. 410 $14,084.96 Complete 2015-HV-006 Douglas PD Sec. 410 $18,310.98 Complete 2015-HV-007 Florence PD Sec. 410 $13,922.41 Complete 2015-HV-008 Glendale PD Sec. 410 $70,000.00 Complete 2015-HV-009 Goodyear PD Sec. 410 $55,577.26 Complete 2015-HV-010 Graham County SO Sec. 410 $7,206.90 Complete 2015-HV-011 Kingman PD Sec. 410 $4,942.57 Complete 2015-HV-012 La Paz CSO Sec. 410 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-HV-013 Lake Havasu City PD Sec. 410 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-HV-014 Marana PD Sec. 410 $40,000.00 Complete 2015B-HV-015 Wickenburg PD Sec. 410 $2,557.41 Complete 2015-AL-021 Tolleson PD 2015-AL-022 Tucson PD 2015-AL-023 University of Arizona PD 2015-AL-024 Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 25 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 410 $34,959.20 Complete Sec. 405 $22,988.92 Complete Sec. 405 $111,799.52 Complete Globe PD Sec. 405 $14,327.03 Complete 2015-405d-004 Maricopa PD Sec. 405 $24,500.00 Complete 2015-405d-005 Maricopa CSO Sec. 405 $30,800.00 Complete 2015-405d-006 Mesa PD Sec. 405 $60,000.00 Complete 2015-405d-007 Northern Arizona University PD Sec. 405 $10,717.00 Complete 2015-405d-008 Navajo CSO Sec. 405 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-405d-009 Nogales PD Sec. 405 $7,602.52 Complete 2015-405d-010 Oro Valley PD Sec. 405 $31,435.14 Complete 2015-405d-011 Parker PD Sec. 405 $6,970.20 Complete 2015-405d-012 Peoria PD Sec. 405 $24,558.81 Complete 2015-405d-013 Phoenix PD Sec. 405 $54,540.80 Complete 2015-405d-014 Pima County Sheriff’s Dept Sec. 405 $68,791.25 Complete 2015-405d-015 Pinal CSO Sec. 405 $109,994.00 Complete 2015-405d-016 Pinetop-Lakeside PD Sec. 405 $8,000.00 Complete 2015-405d-017 Prescott PD Sec. 405 $23,087.10 Complete 2015-405d-018 Prescott Valley PD Sec. 405 $25,263.00 Complete 2015-405d-019 Safford PD Sec. 405 $7,995.53 Complete 2015-405d-020 Sahuarita PD Sec. 405 $9,847.76 Complete 2015-405d-021 Salt River PD Sec. 405 $48,146.05 Complete 2015B-HV-016 DLLC 2015-405d-001 El Mirage PD 2015-405d-002 Gilbert PD 2015-405d-003 Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 26 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime DUI/Impaired Driving Equipment Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Sec. 164 $32,931.17 Complete Sec. 164 $3,500.00 Complete Sec. 164 $14,726.20 Complete Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Sec. 402 $4,535.00 Complete Sec. 402 $13,631.71 Complete Sec. 402 $83,578.61 Complete Apache Junction PD Sec. 164 $2,000.00 Complete 2015-164-005 Chandler PD Sec. 164 $19,291.16 Complete 2015-164-006 DLLC Sec. 164 $3,938.00 Complete 2015-164-007 Apache Junction PD Sec.164, 402, 405 $33,532.61 Complete 2015-164-008 Cottonwood PD Sec.164, 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-164-009 Florence PD Sec.164, 402, 405 $33,750.00 Complete 2015-164-010 Chandler PD Sec.164, 402, 405 $106,875.00 Complete 2015-164-011 Phoenix PD Sec. 164 $139,043.45 Complete 2015-164-012 Mesa PD Sec. 164 $7,408.07 Complete 2015-405d-022 Chandler PD Sec. 405 $1,635.90 Complete 2015-405d-023 Patagonia MO Sec. 405 $1,000.00 Complete 2015-405d-024 Arizona Department of Transportation Sec. 405 $13,979.85 Complete 2015-405d-025 Glendale PD Sec. 405 $48,750.00 Complete 2015-405d-026 Kearny PD Sec. 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-027 Salt River PD Sec. 402, 405 $35,011.22 Complete 2015-164-001 Buckeye PD 2015-164-002 Clarkdale PD 2015-164-003 Coolidge PD 2015-AL-027 Apache CSO 2015-AL-028 Camp Verde MO 2015B-AL-034 Chandler PD 2015-164-004 27 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Project Number DUI/Impaired Driving Equipment 2015-405d-031 Buckeye PD 2015-405d-032 Thatcher PD 2015-405d-033 Avondale PD 2015-405d-034 DUI/Impaired Driving Training Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 405 $1,097.00 Complete Sec. 405 $31,083.13 Complete Sec. 402, 405 $32,877.04 Complete Navajo County SO Sec. 405 $7,109.00 Complete 2015-405d-035 Wellton PD Sec. 405 $884.93 Complete 2015-405d-036 Peoria PD Sec. 405 $4,336.36 Complete 2015-405d-037 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402, 405 $178,125.00 Complete 2015-405d-038 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-039 Tucson PD Sec. 402, 405 $105,000.00 Complete 2015-405d-040 Department of Public Safety Sec. 405 $38,325.03 Complete 2015-405d-041 Pima County SD Sec. 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-042 Tempe PD Sec. 402, 405 $109,575.00 Complete 2015-405d-043 Buckeye PD Sec. 402, 405 $35,245.46 Complete 2015-405d-044 Kearny PD Sec. 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-045 Mesa PD Sec. 402, 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-046 Yuma PD Sec. 402, 405 $42,749.99 Complete Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 2015-HV-500 GOHS Sec.410 $65,146.89 Complete 2015-405d-502 GOHS Sec. 405 $224,168.96 Complete Sec. 402 $21,140.21 Complete Sec. 402 $13,194.08 Complete Sec. 402 $2,385.04 Complete 2015-AL-032 Arizona Supreme Court 2015-AL-511 GOHS – Lifesavers Conference 2015-AL-516 GOHS – Judges Conference Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 28 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area DUI/Impaired Driving Training DUI/Impaired Driving Awareness Project Number 2015-AL-518 Grantee GOHS – Law Enforcement Conference Related Performance Measure(s) Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Sec. 405 $106,719.81 Complete 2015-405d-500 GOHS – DRE/SFST Support 2015-405d-501 GOHS – Phlebotomy Sec. 405 $64,895.68 Complete 2015-405d-525 GOHS – DRE Conference Sec. 405 $29,900.07 Complete Sec. 402 $51,398.23 Complete Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Complete Sec. 402 $51,785.28 Complete 2015-AL-029 MADD Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. 2015-AL-030 Phoenix Fire Dept. 2015-AL-031 Arizona SADD 2015-AL-500 GOHS – Public Safety Days Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-AL-504 GOHS – PI&E Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-AL-506 GOHS – Alcohol Survey Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-AL-514 GOHS – Storage Unit Sec. 402 $4,480.59 Complete 2015-AL-517 GOHS – Cardinals Sec. 402 $40,000.00 Complete 2015-164-500 GOHS – Paid Media Sec. 164 $79,500.00 Complete 2015-405d-506 GOHS – Alcohol Survey Sec. 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-523 GOHS – Mock Crash Sec. 405 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-405d-524 GOHS – Paid Media Sec. 405 $268,956.30 Complete Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor 2015-405d-028 City of Phoenix Prosecutor’s Office Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Sec. 405 $104,862.10 Complete Ignition Interlock 2015-405d-029 Arizona Department of Transportation Sec. 405 $2,100.00 Complete 2015-405d-030 Arizona Department of Transportation Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Sec. 405 $0.00 Cancelled 29 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area GOHS Program Administration Project Number Grantee 2015-AL-300 GOHS 2015-405d-300 GOHS Total Funds Spent (Alcohol and Other Drugs) Related Performance Measure(s) Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a BAC of 0.08 or above. Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $49,315.44 Complete Sec. 405 $156,968.12 Complete $4,551,314.12 30 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Alcohol and Other Drugs Arizona continued to be a national leader in DUI enforcement campaigns and strategies. In FFY 2015, over 110 projects were completed to reduce impaired driving fatalities and meet the CY 2014 performance target. Alcohol impaired driving fatalities in 2014 fell to 199 from 219 in 2013. Over 29,000 impaired driving arrests were made in 2014. Over 21,000 impaired driving arrests were made in CY 2015 as of early December. This strict enforcement keeps Arizona’s roadways much safer. To combat the prevalence of impaired driving, the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) awarded funding for overtime enforcement, equipment and training for law enforcement officers statewide. Arizona’s DUI enforcement program is comprised of two parallel enforcement activities: (1) year-long sustained enforcement efforts, and (2) periodic enhanced enforcement campaigns such as holiday DUI task force enforcement efforts. The goals of Arizona’s DUI enforcement efforts are to identify areas that have a high frequency of fatal and/or serious injury collisions and devote resources to those locations to reduce alcoholrelated fatalities. Earned and paid media efforts focused on increasing the public’s awareness of ongoing statewide DUI enforcement activities. GOHS Director Alberto Gutier conducted press conferences and media interviews, in English and Spanish throughout the year and during holiday enforcement campaigns. Earned media was supplemented with targeted paid media efforts emphasizing Arizona’s “Designate a Driver!” and “Drive Hammered…Get Nailed!” slogans. Individual law enforcement agencies and the DUI Task Forces conducted saturation patrols and checkpoints throughout the year with the most intense efforts during holiday periods. The following tables summarize the statewide DUI enforcement results. GOHS also devoted resources to enforce underage drinking laws through partnerships with MADD and SADD as well as awarding funding for agencies to conduct underage drinking enforcement efforts. Table 3.5 DUI Task Force Statistics (DUI Arrests – Select Holidays) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Memorial Day 715 462 556 662 495 437 Independence Day 434 523 677 514 552 464 Labor Day 949 617 625 482 549 460 3,830 3,153 6,242 5,065 4,271 NA Thanksgiving-New Year Source: GOHS 2015 statistics for Thanksgiving-New Year unavailable at time of publication. 31 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.6 DUI Task Force Statistics (by Calendar Year) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 34,300 47,927 51,654 46,142 53,867 228,146 702,921 877,617 838,999 1,130,222 9,692 6,790 6,641 6,759 14,487 Total DUI Arrests 19,482 31,561 32,174 31,891 29,250 Aggravated DUI 2,007 3,473 3,698 3,644 3,525 17,475 28,088 28,476 28,247 25,725 5,943 9,466 9,002 8,212 8,414 Under 21 DUI 910 1,337 1,532 1,464 1,461 Average BAC 0.152 0.152 0.151 0.151 0.152 Seat Belt Citations 5,439 21,828 29,710 27,833 24,848 988 3,435 3,671 4,476 4,755 Minor Consumption 3,169 7,708 7,988 8,578 7,493 DUI Drug 1,679 3,579 4,511 4,519 4,190 101,848 331,269 378,010 481,656 565,827 # Officers Cumulative # Contacts Sober Designated Drivers Contacted Misdemeanor DUI Extreme DUI Child Restraint Citations Other Citations Source: GOHS. Project Descriptions Task Area – DUI/Impaired Driving Enforcement and Overtime Project Description – This task awarded funding to 61 law enforcement agencies to conduct enforcement targeted towards DUI and impaired drivers. A substantial portion of the DUI Task Force Statistics shown above can be attributed to enforcement funded by this task. Some overtime funding was also made available to combat underage drinking, particularly around college campuses. 32 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – DUI/Impaired Driving Equipment Project Description – This task awarded funding to 24 law enforcement agencies along with the Arizona Department of Transportation. The necessity to process blood and breath evidence in DUI and impaired driving cases necessitates the purchase of specialized equipment. This equipment includes portable breath testing devices for officers to use in the field as well as lab equipment such as gas chromatograph systems, drug screening devices and other processing equipment. Coolidge Police Department Portable Breath Testing Devices The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) provides funds to purchase DUI processing vans to assist agencies in drawing blood for future testing. These vans are deployed throughout enforcement areas to cut down on officer travel times and speed DUI processing. Additionally, GOHS awarded funding for twelve motorcycles, two sedans, fourteen SUVs and two pickup trucks for dedicated DUI and impaired driving enforcement. Different types of vehicles are necessary due to the various environments Arizona law enforcement must handle. For example, pickup trucks prove to be very valuable in certain rural communities where dirt roads are prevalent. Task Area – DUI/Impaired Driving Training Project Description – This task awarded funding for training required to combat DUI and impaired drivers. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) emphasized training of law enforcement officers in standardized field sobriety test (SFST) and horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) training, law enforcement phlebotomy training, drug recognition expert (DRE) courses, advanced roadside impaired driving enforcement (ARIDE) and drug impaired training for educational professionals (DITEP) courses. Additionally, conferences were held for law enforcement, prosecutors and judges to educate them on DUI laws and how DUI cases progress through the court system. These conferences allowed law enforcement and prosecutors to collaborate to ensure DUI cases are handled fairly and correctly. 33 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – DUI/Impaired Driving Awareness Project Description – Funding was awarded to increase public awareness of the dangers and consequences of driving impaired. Media efforts concentrated around holidays and other times when impaired driving was most likely to be a problem. GOHS supported law enforcement efforts to increase public awareness as well. One effective tool used by the Arizona law enforcement and educational community is the “Mock Crash.” A “Mock Crash” is a staged event, typically as a presentation at a high Traffic Message Board in Sierra Vista school, where a fake accident scene is laid out. The audience is shown what happens from when first responders arrive at the scene all the way to when a law enforcement officer has to inform the accident victim’s parents that their child died from an accident with an impaired driver. Task Area – Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor Project Description – During FFY 2015, GOHS continued to fund the very successful GOHS Traffic Safety Resource Prosecutor (TSRP) program. Beth Barnes, from the City of Phoenix Prosecutor’s Office, has been Arizona’s TSRP since 2007. With support from GOHS, our TSRP program has become one of the most respected and productive TSRP programs in the nation. It has assisted to Arizona GOHS TSRP Beth Barnes improve the enforcement and prosecution of traffic cases as well as the communication among law enforcement, crime labs and prosecutors across Arizona. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) will continue providing funding to the City of Phoenix for the TSRP. Arizona’s GOHS TSRP program has maintained its four primary objectives: 1. Provide training to prosecutors, law enforcement and crime lab personnel; 2. Be a resource for prosecutors and the traffic safety community statewide; 3. Improve communication; and 4. Be a liaison. To achieve these objectives, the Arizona GOHS TSRP continued to focus on two continuing goals: 1) increase the visibility of traffic safety cases with prosecutors and prosecutors’ visibility with the traffic safety community and 2) increase the confidence of prosecutors to go into the courtroom. 34 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 During the 2015 Federal Fiscal Year, Beth provided training to audiences consisting of approximately 7,110 prosecutors, law enforcement officers, crime lab personnel, interns, and community members during the 224 presentations and training sessions she gave. Beth is a nationally recognized resource and speaker. This past year she presented at national conferences such as the Lifesavers Conference. She was also a featured presenter at the GOHS Annual Traffic Safety Conference, the National Highway Traffic Administration (NHTSA) Region 9 Annual meeting, the Colorado River Law Enforcement Association Annual Conference and the Hawaii DRE Training Conference and Vehicular Homicide Training. She also coordinated speakers for several additional programs that occurred when she had previously scheduled another presentation. Beth responded to more than 1,500 requests for assistance from prosecutors, law enforcement officers, and crime lab personnel. Marijuana DUI issues, admin per se challenges, medical blood draw objections, APC cases and prescription drug DUIs were each very common topics for which assistance was requested. Numerous type of materials including but not limited to: legal tip sheets, predicate questions for cross-examining expert witnesses and for the direct examination of state witnesses, DUI trial PowerPoint materials, transcripts of defense expert witnesses, phlebotomy forms, materials for giving presentations, the Phoenix Crime lab Intoxilyzer 8000 validation study, numerous scientific studies, case law summaries, copies of the DPS regulations, model trial court and appellate pleadings, voir dire questions and jury instructions were provided. Beth added to the Arizona GOHS TSRP DUI Defense Expert Bank during the past fiscal year. This collection of materials allows her to provide resources to prosecutors to assist with preparing to cross-examine DUI defense experts. The majority of requests for materials and strategies for cross-examination were to prepare for local DUI experts, however, materials were also gathered and provided for numerous national defense experts. Beth continued to maintain and add to e-mail lists of Arizona prosecutors, officers, crime lab employees and traffic safety professionals who desire to be kept abreast of DUI and traffic issues. By the end of the fiscal year, the lists contained in excess of 500 members. When new case law, new legislation, training opportunities and other issues of significance arose, a notice was sent to the members of the groups. Beth also worked at the Arizona State Fair GOHS Public Safety Days, attended numerous law enforcement DUI details and conferences, attended the NHTSA Region 9 Meeting, served on more than 8 traffic safety committees, consulted with numerous states regarding starting an officer phlebotomy program and worked with GOHS, ADOT, MVD, law enforcement and prosecutors to modify the MVD admonition form. She also worked to maintain her skills by prosecuting and serving as a second chair training attorney in a few DUI jury trials. 35 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – Ignition Interlock Project Description – The Arizona Department of Transportation developed a DUI and Ignition Interlock training video for judges in the State of Arizona. This video will increase knowledge of how ignition interlocks work, when they should be required in DUI cases and how Arizona laws are handled in respect to ignition interlock systems. Task Area – GOHS Program Administration Project Description – GOHS activities included writing, managing and monitoring grants and contracts. GOHS personnel coordinated the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provided status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation and evaluated task accomplishments for their grant portfolio. Funding supported personnel services, employee-related expenses and other operating expenses for the GOHS grant manager and grant project coordinators. 36 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.3 EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES (EM) Emergency Medical Services (EMS) are a vital component of a safe transportation system. The difference between a serious injury and a fatality is often attributable to the timeliness and effectiveness of emergency response. Emergency responders need access to quality equipment and training in order to respond to traffic crashes in the most effective way possible. These issues are most pressing in rural areas, where response times tend to be higher, and resources are lacking. In FFY 2015, the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) awarded funding for first responder equipment in areas with a high number of fatalities and high response times. This funding awarded several fire departments and fire districts with equipment aimed at decreasing response times and fatalities from rural collisions. Performance Targets Table 3.7 Performance Targets and Measures (Emergency Medical Services) Performance Target Performance Measure To decrease traffic fatalities by 1.9 percent, from the 2013 level of 844 to 828 in 2015. Number of traffic-related fatalities. To decrease the number of serious injuries by 3.4 percent from the 2013 level of 4,305 to 4,159 in 2015. Number of traffic-related serious injuries. Projects and Funding Table 3.8 contains a list of the 16 Emergency Medical Services projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following two task areas:  First Responder Equipment; and  GOHS Program Administration. 37 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.8 FFY 2015 Emergency Medical Services Projects Task Area First Responder Equipment GOHS Program Administration Project Number Grantee 2015-EM-001 Congress Fire District 2015-EM-002 Globe Fire District 2015-EM-003 Related Performance Measure(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $4,450.77 Complete Sec. 402 $29,099.77 Complete Goodyear Fire District Sec. 402 $6,238.00 Complete 2015-EM-004 Harquahala Valley Fire District Sec. 402 $30,321.00 Complete 2015-EM-005 Heber-Overgaard Fire District Sec. 402 $972.00 Complete 2015-EM-006 Northwest Fire District Sec. 402 $20,686.00 Complete 2015-EM-007 Pinewood Fire District Sec. 402 $10,780.00 Complete 2015-EM-008 Ponderosa Fire District Sec. 402 $14,239.00 Complete 2015-EM-009 Queen Valley Fire District Sec. 402 $29,392.00 Complete 2015-EM-010 Rincon Valley Fire District Sec. 402 $29,326.89 Complete 2015-EM-011 Sedona Fire District Sec. 402 $25,882.42 Complete 2015-EM-012 Timber Mesa Fire & Medical District Sec. 402 $33,249.00 Complete 2015-EM-013 Sun Lakes Fire District Sec. 402 $21,500.00 Complete 2015-EM-014 Surprise Fire District Sec. 402 $9,775.83 Complete 2015B-EM-015 Whetstone Fire District Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-EM-300 GOHS Sec. 402 $18,065.50 Complete Total Funds Spent (Emergency Medical Services) Number of traffic-related fatalities. Number of traffic-related serious injuries. Funding Source(s) Number of traffic-related fatalities. Number of traffic-related serious injuries. $283,978.18 38 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Emergency Medical Services In FFY 2015, fourteen fire agencies were awarded funding to purchase equipment to assist first responders at the scene of traffic crashes. These purchases enable rural emergency responders to decrease response time for the arrival of appropriate equipment and are intended to reduce fatalities by expediting medical care to crash victims. Project Descriptions Task Area – First Responder Equipment Project Description – Fourteen fire agencies were awarded funding to purchase equipment to assist first responders at traffic accidents. The main purpose of these purchases is to decrease the time it takes for medical personnel to properly care for victims in these accidents. The majority of the equipment fulfills this purpose, either by allowing first responders to get to patients by cutting away the vehicle (extrication equipment) or by stabilizing the vehicle so that first responders can safely work in and remove patients from the vehicle. Six fire agencies were awarded funding for extrication equipment. This equipment comes in many forms depending on the intended application. This stronger cutter is needed to account for the increasingly safer, but harder to cut, metals used in modern automobiles. Northwest Fire District Hydraulic Rescue Cutter The Heber-Overgaard Fire District was awarded a grant for Three Pediatric Trauma Splints. This Splint is used to provide mechanical traction to relive pain and reduce the possibility of vascular and nerve damage in patients. Heber-Overgaard Fire District FernoTrac Traction Splint 39 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – GOHS Safety Program Administration Project Description – The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) personnel administered and managed the 402 Emergency Medical Services program which included writing, managing and monitoring grants and contracts. GOHS personnel coordinated the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provided status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation and evaluated task accomplishments for their grant portfolio. 40 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.4 MOTORCYCLE SAFETY (MC) The combination of speed and exposure make motorcycle crashes more severe than other types of crashes. Motorcyclist fatalities accounted for 17 percent of Arizona’s fatalities in 2014. Although, these crashes have increased each year from 2010 to 2013, they decreased in 2014. To address the risks associated with motorcycle riding, the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) implemented a paid media campaign in FFY 2015. The purposes of the campaign was to educate motorcycle riders on safe riding practices, such as helmet use and distracted riding, as well as provide general information about Arizona’s motorcycle laws. In addition, GOHS’s partnership with the Arizona Motorcycle Safety and Awareness Foundation as well as local law enforcement helps ensure motorcycle operators have riding education readily available. Performance Targets Table 3.9 Performance Targets and Measures (Motorcycle Safety) Performance Targets Performance Measures To decrease the number of motorcycle fatalities by 7.4 percent from the 2013 level of 149 to 138 in 2015. Number of motorcycle fatalities. To decrease the number of unhelmeted motorcycle fatalities by 1.4 percent from a 2013 level of 72 to 71 in 2015. Number of unhelmeted motorcycle fatalities. Projects and Funding Table 3.10 contains a list of the seven Motorcycle Safety projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project, and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following three task areas:  Motorcycle Enforcement Overtime;  Motorcycle Safety Training and Awareness; and  GOHS Annual Survey – Motorcycle Helmet Use. 41 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.10 FFY 2015 Motorcycle Safety Projects Task Area Motorcycle Enforcement Overtime Motorcycle Safety Training and Awareness GOHS Annual Survey – Motorcycle Helmet Use Total Funds Spent (Motorcycle Safety) Project Number Grantee 2015-MC-001 Phoenix PD 2015A-MC-002 Phoenix PD 2015-MC-003 Arizona Department of Transportation 2015-2010-001 Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Number of motorcycle fatalities. Number of unhelmeted motorcycle fatalities. Sec. 402 $22,000.00 Completed Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Completed Number of motorcycle fatalities. Number of unhelmeted motorcycle fatalities. Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Peoria PD Sec. 2010 $12,129.87 Completed 2015-405f-001 Arizona Motorcycle Safety and Awareness Foundation Sec. 405 $49,761.83 Completed 2015-405f-521 GOHS – Paid Media Sec. 405 $58,877.00 Completed 2015-MC-520 GOHS – Motorcycle Helmet Use Survey Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Number of motorcycle fatalities. Number of unhelmeted motorcycle fatalities. $162,768.70 42 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Motorcycle Safety Motorcycle fatalities, including those of unhelmeted drivers, continue to be a concern. However, fatalities decreased from 151 in 2013 to 130 in 2014. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) paid media campaign promoting public awareness of and compliance with Arizona’s motorcycle laws is helping increase awareness and is expected to result in fewer fatalities in the years ahead. Project Descriptions Task Area – Motorcycle Enforcement Overtime Project Description – This task awarded funding to the Phoenix Police Department to conduct traffic enforcement geared towards motorcycle safety. Officers focused on areas most frequented by motorcyclists and helped ensure the motorcycle operators respected traffic laws and were given proper respect by other motorists. Task Area – Motorcycle Safety Training Project Description – This task awarded funding to the Peoria Police Department and Arizona Motorcycle Safety and Awareness Foundation (AMSAF) to increase motorcycle safety through training motorcycle operators. It also used funding for a GOHS radio campaign that emphasized watching for motorcycles on the road and always looking before changing lanes. The Peoria Police Department hosted two motorcycle Peoria Police Department safety classes for the public. Motorcycle Safety Class Flyer AMSAF used funds to provide scholarships for motorcycle safety classes. Class participants paid $50 and AMSAF provided a scholarship for the remaining cost of the class. The goal of these classes was to ensure motorcycle operators could receive a motorcycle endorsement on their driver license (as required by law to operate a motorcycle). Task Area – GOHS Annual Survey – Motorcycle Helmet Use Project Description – This task awarded funding for GOHS’s annual survey measuring the use of motorcycle helmets which will be conducted as part of GOHS’s annual seat belt survey. Funding provided under the occupant protection program area proved to be sufficient for the project and so no funds were used from the motorcycle safety program area. 43 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.5 OCCUPANT PROTECTION (OP) Unrestrained fatalities accounted for 27 percent of Arizona’s 770 traffic deaths in 2014. The 209 fatalities in 2013 is a significant decrease from the 227 fatalities in 2013. Although unrestrained fatalities have been fairly consistent for the past few years, seat belt use has continued to rise. In the six years from 2008 to 2014, seat belt use has risen seven percent from 79.9 percent to 87.2 percent. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) works to increase safety belt and child safety seat use through statewide enforcement and education campaigns under the banner of “Buckle Up Arizona…It’s the Law!” Arizona’s law enforcement agencies implement a zero-tolerance policy when they encounter nonuse of safety belts coincidental to a stop for another traffic infraction. GOHS is proud to fund the Children are Priceless Passengers (CAPP) program designed to improve the child seat usage rate in partnership with law enforcement, hospitals and nonprofit organizations throughout the State. GOHS continues to support the national “Click it or Ticket” campaign through the “Buckle Up Arizona…It’s the Law!” campaign by providing overtime funding for traffic enforcement during the two-week period. GOHS awarded funding to 19 law enforcement agencies for this campaign. Occupant Protection enforcement is supported by education and public awareness activities conducted by GOHS together with public and private sector partners. The activities include safety belt and child safety seat classes and inspections, media awareness campaigns and other events. Performance Targets Table 3.11 Performance Targets and Measures (Occupant Protection) Performance Targets Performance Measures To reduce the number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions by 13.4 percent from the 2013 level of 299 to 259 in 2015. Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. To increase the statewide safety belt use rate for front seat occupants in passenger vehicles by 0.4 percent from the 2013 level of 84.7 percent to 85 percent in 2015. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. 44 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Projects and Funding Table 3.12 contains a list of the 56 Occupant Protection projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following seven task areas:  Occupant Protection Enforcement and Education;  Occupant Protection Equipment and Child Safety Seats;  Occupant Protection Materials and Supplies;  Occupant Protection Training;  Occupant Protection Awareness;  GOHS Program Administration; and  GOHS Annual Seatbelt Survey. 45 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.12 FFY 2015 Occupant Protection Projects Task Area Project Number Occupant Protection Enforcement and Education 1 Grantee 2015-OP-001 Chandler PD 2015-OP-002 DPS 2015-OP-003 Glendale PD 2015-OP-004 Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Complete Sec. 402 $39,232.23 Complete Sec. 402 $40,000.00 Complete Maricopa PD Sec. 402 $13,569.00 Complete 2015-OP-005 Peoria PD Sec. 402 $8,165.25 Complete 2015-OP-006 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $45,000.00 Complete 2015-OP-007 Pima County SD Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Complete 2015-OP-008 Tempe PD Sec. 402 $36,496.60 Complete 2015-OP-009 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $51,627.92 Complete 2015-OP-010 Yuma PD Sec. 402 $931.70 Complete 2015-CIOT-001 DPS1 Sec. 402 $12,931.31 Complete 2015-CIOT-002 Buckeye PD Sec. 402 $5,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-003 Casa Grande PD Sec. 402 $6.598.42 Complete 2015-CIOT-004 Chandler PD Sec. 402 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-005 Coolidge PD Sec. 402 $3,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-006 Gilbert PD Sec. 402 $9,994.45 Complete 2015-CIOT-007 Goodyear PD Sec. 402 $5,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-008 Kingman PD Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. In the 2015 Highway Safety Plan Project 2015-OP-509 was included for the Click It or Ticket (CIOT) Enforcement Wave. The CIOT Projects shown here are the individual grants given to agencies from the money originally set aside by Project 2015-OP-509. 46 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Project Number Occupant Protection Enforcement and Education 2015-CIOT-009 Maricopa County SO 2015-CIOT-010 Mesa PD 2015-CIOT-011 Peoria PD 2015-CIOT-012 Occupant Protection Equipment and Child Safety Seats Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $8,627.43 Complete Sec. 402 $10,000.00 Complete Sec. 402 $7,500.00 Complete Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $15,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-013 Prescott PD Sec. 402 $3,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-014 Prescott Valley PD Sec. 402 $2,286.79 Complete 2015-CIOT-015 Salt River PD Sec. 402 $3,940.12 Complete 2015-CIOT-016 Scottsdale PD Sec. 402 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-017 Tempe PD Sec. 402 $9,221.16 Complete 2015-CIOT-018 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $15,000.00 Complete 2015-CIOT-019 Yavapai County SO Sec. 402 $2,638.11 Complete 2015-OP-026 Santa Cruz CSO Sec. 402 $1,923.71 Complete 2015-OP-011 Apache County PHSD Sec. 402 $3,500.00 Complete 2015-OP-012 Chandler Fire Department Sec. 402 $36,242.00 Complete 2015-OP-013 Child and Family Resources - Pinal Sec. 402 $3,449.53 Complete 2015-OP-015 Colorado City Fire Department Sec. 402 $12,736.00 Complete 2015-OP-016 Fry Fire District Sec. 402 $15,108.71 Complete 2015-OP-017 Maricopa IHS Sec. 402 $14,961.70 Complete 2015-OP-018 Nogales PD Sec. 402 $2,993.05 Complete 2015-OP-019 Phoenix Fire Department Sec. 402 $180,103.33 Complete 2015-OP-020 Rio Rico Fire District Sec. 402 $2,988.42 Complete Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. 47 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Occupant Protection Equipment and Child Safety Seats Occupant Protection Materials and Supplies Project Number Grantee Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status 2015-OP-021 San Luis PD Sec. 402 $3,195.17 Complete 2015-OP-022 Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Surprise Fire Department Sec. 402 $6,830.00 Complete 2015-OP-023 Tucson Medical Center Health Care Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. Sec. 402 $11,929.09 Complete 2015-OP-024 Verde Valley Fire District Sec. 402 $7,905.97 Complete 2015-OP-025 Yavapai Regional Medical Center Sec. 402 $5,450.00 Complete 2015-OP-014 Coconino County PHSD Sec. 402 $17,655.84 Complete Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Sec. 402 $17,301.46 Complete Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. Occupant Protection Training Occupant Protection Awareness GOHS Program Administration 2015-OP-501 GOHS – Public Safety Days 2015-OP-503 Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. GOHS – CAPP Support 2014-OP-505 GOHS – PI&E Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. 2015-OP-507 GOHS – Storage Unit Sec. 402 $5,735.34 Complete 2015-OP-510 Lifesavers Conference Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015B-OP-027 Safe Kids Maricopa Sec. 402 $3,486.45 Complete 2015-OP-508 Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. GOHS – CIOT Paid Media Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-OP-517 GOHS - Media Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-2011-501 GOHS - Media Sec. 2011 $0.00 Cancelled Sec. 402 $52,846.93 Complete Sec. 402 $62,490.00 Complete 2015-OP-300 GOHS Number of unrestrained vehicle occupant fatalities in all seating positions. Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. GOHS Annual Seatbelt Survey Total Funds Spent (Occupant Protection) 2015-OP-515 GOHS Percent of front seat vehicle occupants who are observed using safety belts. $876,994.77 48 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Occupant Protection Unrestrained passenger vehicle occupant fatalities fell from 227 in 2013 to 209 in 2014. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) completed 49 Occupant Protection projects in 2014 to help meet the performance targets. Project Descriptions Task Area – Occupant Protection Enforcement and Education Project Description – This task awarded funding to 30 law enforcement agencies for overtime and associated employee-related expenses for enforcement and education of Arizona seat belt and child safety seat laws. This task included a concentrated enforcement effort in conjunction with the national 2015 “Click It or Ticket” campaign. Table 3.13 “Buckle Up Arizona…It’s the Law!” Campaign 2012 2013 2014 2015 19 16 21 22 3132 139 2796 232 2788 178 3284 311 DUI 225 123 162 966 Felony Arrests 168 84 180 527 21 23 10 15 12 231 274 998 Suspended Licenses 413 374 307 1430 Uninsured Motorists 1182 851 955 2882 Speed Citations 4984 3825 4120 13,311 32 135 23 90 12 119 56 275 56 410 697 2474 Number of Agencies Participating Seatbelt Citations Child Restraint Citations Stolen Vehicles Fugitives Apprehended Reckless Driving Citations Drugs Other Arrests Source: Data reported by participating agencies. 49 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – Occupant Protection Equipment and Child Safety Seats Project Description – This task awarded funding for agencies to distribute child safety seats throughout their individual communities and provide education to parents and guardians on the proper installation and use of the safety seats. Grant awards were distributed among fourteen police, fire and social services agencies across the State. Tempe Police Department Car Seat Inspection Flyer Task Area – Occupant Protection Material and Supplies Project Description – This task awarded funding for agencies to develop, print and distribute occupant protection public information materials and supplies. Coconino County Public Health Services District was awarded funding to purchase car seats, promotional items and host car seat events to encourage residents to wear seat belts properly. Task Area – Occupant Protection Training Project Description – This task awarded funding for child safety seat inspection events, paid media and the GOHS Safety Days to receive and provide training centered on occupant protection. In addition, this task provides support to occupant protection training efforts through supporting the Children Are Precious Passengers (CAPP) Program. This program educates motorists of the effectiveness of continuous and proper use of child safety seats. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) hosts an annual event at the Arizona State Fair called “Safety Days at the State Fair.” This task helped provide funding in support of the Safety Days event, at which guests at the State Fair were able to meet law enforcement and fire personnel and learn about every aspect of highway safety, including proper seat belt and car seat use. GOHS Safety Days Promotional Items 50 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – Occupant Protection Awareness Project Description – Funding was awarded to Safe Kids in Maricopa to purchase a van wrap and pop-up canopy decals to encourage vehicle safety among the general public, parents and child care providers. This task also provides funding for media encouraging proper child seat and seat belt use. Safe Kids - Maricopa Awareness Van Wrap Task Area – GOHS Program Administration Project Description – This task provided funding to GOHS to administer and manage 402 occupant protection programs. These funds enabled GOHS to write, manage and monitor grants and contracts. They also funded GOHS personnel to coordinate the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provide status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation, and evaluated task accomplishments for the grant portfolio. Task Area – GOHS Annual Seat Belt Survey Project Description – This task provided funding for the GOHS’s annual seat belt survey. This survey calculates the seat belt usage percentage used as a performance measure by Arizona in the Highway Safety Plan and Annual Report. Other important data, motorcycle helmet usage, is gathered in the survey. 51 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.6 PEDESTRIAN AND BICYCLE SAFETY (PS) The safety of pedestrians and bicyclists is a high priority in Arizona. In 2014, pedestrian fatalities accounted for 18 percent of Arizona’s fatalities, while bicyclist fatalities accounted for four percent. Arizona addresses pedestrian and bicycle safety through targeted enforcement, providing safety equipment and materials, and conducting outreach and education activities. Performance Targets Table 3.14 Performance Targets and Measures (Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety) Performance Target Performance Measures To decrease the number of crash fatalities among pedestrians by 6.3 percent from the 2013 level of 158 to 148 in 2015. Number of pedestrian fatalities. To decrease the number of crash fatalities among bicyclists by 13.3 percent from the 2013 level of 30 to 26 in 2015. Number of bicyclist fatalities. Projects and Funding Table 3.15 contains a list of the 15 completed Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project, and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following five task areas:  Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Enforcement;  Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Awareness;  Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Roadway Signs and Materials;  School Bus Safety; and  GOHS Program Administration. 52 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.15 FFY 2015 Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Projects Task Area Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Overtime Project Number Grantee Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $50,000.00 Complete Sec. 402 $31,388.55 Complete 2015-PS-003 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $65,000.00 Complete 2015-PS-004 South Tucson PD Sec. 402 $9,727.93 Complete 2015-PS-005 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $30,000.00 Complete 2015-PS-006 University of Arizona PD Sec. 402 $9,980.56 Complete 2015A-PS-010 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $35,000.00 Complete 2015A-PS-011 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $15,000.00 Complete Sec. 402 $4,914.00 Complete Sec. 402 $16,409.31 Complete 2015-PS-009 Phoenix Street Transportation Sec. 402 $81,000.00 Complete 2015-PS-012 Tolleson PD Sec. 402 $2,000.00 Complete 2015-PS-518 GOHS Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Sec. 402 $38,724.70 Complete 2015-RS-002 Phoenix Street Transportation Sec. 402 $14,000.00 Complete School Bus Safety 2015-SB-001 Pima CSD Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Complete GOHS Program Administration 2015-PS-300 GOHS Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Awareness Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Roadway Signs and Materials 2015-PS-001 Gilbert PD Related Performance Measure(s) 2015-PS-002 Peoria PD 2015-PS-007 Maricopa HIS 2015-PS-008 Phoenix Fire Dept. 2015-RS-001 Arizona Transportation Education Foundation Total Funds Spent (Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety) Number of pedestrian fatalities. Number of bicyclist fatalities. Number of pedestrian fatalities. Number of bicyclist fatalities. Number of pedestrian fatalities. Number of bicyclist fatalities. $423,145.05 53 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety The number of pedestrian fatalities decreased from 151 in 2013 to 130 in 2014. GOHS completed 15 bicycle and pedestrian safety projects in 2014 to help meet the performance target. Project Descriptions Task Area – Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Overtime Peoria Police Department’s School Bus Safety Message Project Description – This task awarded funding for pedestrian and bicycle safety overtime. Enforcement efforts covered every aspect of pedestrian and bicycle safety. Often agencies include pedestrian safety media campaigns as part of their pedestrian safety overtime activities. Here is an example of Peoria’s school bus safety message used during their enforcement activities. Task Area – Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Awareness Project Description – This task awarded funding to five agencies for pedestrian and bicycle safety awareness. Many agencies participated in Bicycle Safety Rodeos, events focused on engaging residents and making bicycle safety fun for youth cyclists. These Bicycle Safety Rodeos often also include other highway safety messages involving pedestrian safety and proper car seat and seat belt use. Funds supporting these events were used for overtime and to purchase supplies, including bicycle helmets and pamphlets advertising the events. Other pedestrian and bicycle safety presentations were held at schools throughout the year. Task Area – Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety Roadway Signs and Materials Phoenix Street Transportation Pedestrian Crossing Signage Project Description – This task provided funding to the Arizona Transportation Education Foundation and Phoenix Street Transportation. The Arizona Transportation Education Foundation created roadway safety related messages on commercial trucks. These messages covered a vast array of traffic safety, including pedestrian safety messages. Phoenix Street Transportation used funds to provide and improve pedestrian crossings and signage near these crossings. 54 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area – School Bus Safety Project Description – This task provided funding to the Pima County Sheriff’s Department for school bus enforcement overtime. This enforcement focuses on ensuring motorists follow laws regarding school buses especially that all motorists must stop when the school bus stop sign is extended. Task Area – GOHS Program Administration Project Description – This task provided funding to GOHS to administer and manage 402 pedestrian and bicycle safety programs which enabled GOHS to write, manage and monitor grants and contracts. They also funded GOHS personnel to coordinate the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provide status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation, and evaluated task accomplishments for the grant portfolio. 55 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.7 POLICE TRAFFIC SERVICES (PT) Speeding is the number one contributor in fatal traffic crashes in Arizona. In 2014, speed was a factor in 254 fatalities, one-third of all fatalities in Arizona. Speedrelated fatalities have remained relatively constant for the past few years, but are significantly lower than levels seen in the mid-2000s. Addressing speeding and other aggressive driving behaviors requires strong enforcement laws. Fortunately, Arizona has a “Double Fine” program, which gives law enforcement officers the ability to suspend an individual’s driver’s license when eight or more points are accumulated within a 12-month period. The “Double Fine” program is extended to speeding in excess of the posted speed limit in construction zones when workers are present. Arizona aggressively prosecutes and adjudicates red light violators. In addition to providing overtime for Selective Traffic Enforcement Program (STEP), the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) funds laser and radar guns, speed trailers and aggressive driving vehicles for a number of law enforcement agencies. Performance Targets Table 3.16 Performance Targets and Measures (Police Traffic Services) Performance Target Performance Measure To decrease the number of speeding related fatalities by 2.6 percent from the 2013 level of 266 to 259 in 2015. Number of speeding-related fatalities. Projects and Funding Table 3.17 contains a list of the 77 Police Traffic Services projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following six task areas:  Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Overtime;  Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Equipment;  Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Awareness;  GOHS Training;  GOHS Speed Survey; and  GOHS Program Administration. 56 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.17 FFY 2015 Police Traffic Services Projects Task Area Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Overtime Project Number Grantee 2015-PT-001 Apache CSO 2015-PT-002 Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $42,768.22 Complete Apache Junction PD Sec. 402 $9,990.59 Complete 2015-PT-003 ASU PD Sec. 402 $3,382.83 Complete 2015-PT-004 Benson PD Sec. 402 $2,791.37 Complete 2015-PT-005 Buckeye PD Sec. 402 $9,159.72 Complete 2015-PT-006 Camp Verde PD Sec. 402 $3,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-007 Clifton PD Sec. 402 $4,319.92 Complete 2015-PT-008 Cochise PD Sec. 402 $8,410.12 Complete 2015-PT-009 Coolidge PD Sec. 402 $6,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-010 Cottonwood PD Sec. 402 $6,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-011 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402 $39,369.78 Complete 2015-PT-012 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402 $38,323.01 Complete 2015-PT-013 Department of Public Safety Sec. 402 $49,423.08 Complete 2015-PT-014 Gila River PD Sec. 402 $19,422.69 Complete 2015-PT-015 Glendale PD Sec. 402 $19,874.89 Complete 2015-PT-016 Globe PD Sec. 402 $8,864.38 Complete 2015-PT-017 Greenlee CSO Sec. 402 $24,822.47 Complete 2015-PT-018 Jerome PD Sec. 402 $2,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-019 Kingman PD Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-PT-020 Marana PD Sec. 402 $38,604.00 Complete Number of speeding-related fatalities. 57 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Overtime Project Number Grantee 2015-PT-021 Maricopa PD 2015-PT-022 Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $12596.45 Complete Maricopa CSO Sec. 402 $45,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-023 Mesa PD Sec. 402 $70,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-024 Navajo CSO Sec. 402 $5,721.29 Complete 2015-PT-025 Nogales PD Sec. 402 $10,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-026 Payson PD Sec. 402 $9,336.00 Complete 2015-PT-027 Peoria PD Sec. 402 $33,968.59 Complete 2015-PT-028 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $83,699.87 Complete 2015-PT-029 Pima County Sheriff’s Dept. Sec. 402 $44,754.00 Complete 2015-PT-030 Pinal CSO Sec. 402 $74,836.35 Complete 2015-PT-031 Pinetop-Lakeside PD Sec. 402 $6,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-032 Prescott PD Sec. 402 $9,316.22 Complete 2015-PT-033 Prescott Valley PD Sec. 402 $15,115.89 Complete 2015-PT-034 Quartzsite PD Sec. 402 $5,776.17 Complete 2015-PT-035 Safford PD Sec. 402 $9,932.93 Complete 2015-PT-036 Sahuarita PD Sec. 402 $3,765.11 Complete 2015-PT-037 Salt River PD Sec. 402 $10,795.68 Complete 2015-PT-038 San Luis PD Sec. 402 $5,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-039 Santa Cruz CSO Sec. 402 $4,995.89 Complete 2015-PT-040 Snowflake-Taylor PD Sec. 402 $3,477.85 Complete 2015-PT-041 Springerville PD Sec. 402 $9,983.84 Complete 2015-PT-042 St. Johns PD Sec. 402 $4,000.00 Complete Number of speeding-related fatalities. 58 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Overtime Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Equipment Project Number Grantee 2015-PT-043 Tempe PD 2015-PT-044 Related Performance Measure(s) Number of speeding-related fatalities. Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $105,634.34 Complete Thatcher PD Sec. 402 $4,463.38 Complete 2015-PT-045 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $84,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-046 Williams PD Sec. 402 $1,750.00 Complete 2015-PT-047 Yavapai CSO Sec. 402 $7,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-048 Yuma CSO Sec. 402 $24,999.61 Complete 2015-PT-049 Yuma PD Sec. 402 $20,000.00 Complete 2015A-PT-068 Phoenix PD Sec. 402 $40,000.00 Complete 2015A-PT-069 Tucson PD Sec. 402 $28,549.26 Complete 2015A-PT-072 Wickenburg PD Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-PT-050 Buckeye PD Sec. 402 $10,590.00 Complete 2015-PT-051 Bullhead City PD Sec. 402 $7,226.84 Complete 2015-PT-052 Casa Grande PD Sec. 402 $16,951.22 Complete 2015-PT-053 Flagstaff PD Sec. 402 $11,235.10 Complete 2015-PT-054 Gila CSO Sec. 402 $21,899.00 Complete 2015-PT-055 Glendale PD Sec. 402 $28,151.00 Complete 2015-PT-056 Pima County DOT Sec. 402 $39,666.90 Complete 2015-PT-057 Pinetop-Lakeside PD Sec. 402 $15,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-058 Sahuarita PD Sec. 402 $6,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-059 Santa Cruz CSO Sec. 402 $8,750.00 Complete 2015-PT-060 Show Low PD Sec. 402 $15,700.00 Complete 2015-PT-061 Snowflake-Taylor PD Sec. 402 $26,120.93 Complete Number of speeding-related fatalities. 59 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Task Area Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Equipment Project Number Grantee 2015-PT-062 Surprise PD 2015-PT-063 Related Performance Measure(s) Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $8,000.00 Complete Maricopa CSO Sec. 402 $47,000.00 Complete 2015-PT-064 Maricopa CSO Sec. 402 $6,127.63 Complete 2015-PT-065 Cottonwood PD Sec. 402 $46,390.00 Complete 2015-PT-066 University of Arizona PD Sec. 402 $20,869.34 Complete 2015-PT-067 Wellton PD Sec. 402 $15,839.79 Complete 2015-PT-070 Yavapai CSO Sec. 402 $9,590.52 Complete 2015A-PT-071 Mesa PD Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015A-PT-073 Graham CSO Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Awareness 2015-PT-519 GOHS – Paid Media Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled 2015-PT-500 GOHS – Public Safety Days Sec. 402 $26,146.22 Complete GOHS Speed Survey 2015-PT-502 GOHS Annual Survey Number of speeding-related fatalities. Sec. 402 $0.00 Cancelled GOHS Program Administration 2015-PT-300 GOHS – Program Administration Number of speeding-related fatalities. Sec. 402 $105,069.85 Complete Total Funds Spent (Police Traffic Services) Number of speeding-related fatalities. Number of speeding-related fatalities. $1,623,320.13 60 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Police Traffic Services Speeding-related fatalities decreased from 290 in 2013 to 254 in 2014. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) completed 77 police traffic services projects in 2015 to help meet the performance target. Project Descriptions Task Area – Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Overtime Project Description – Funding was awarded to 53 law enforcement agencies to conduct selective traffic enforcement programs (STEP) to enforce speed, aggressive driving, red light running and other traffic laws. Law enforcement agencies also focused on decreasing the danger of distracted driving through targeted enforcement. Task Area – Selective Traffic Enforcement Program Equipment Project Description – This task awarded funding to 21 law enforcement agencies to purchase equipment to aid in the enforcement of traffic laws. Equipment purchased included speed detection devices (radar and lidar), speed displays and signs, cameras, vehicles and other equipment that will enhance selective traffic enforcement efforts. Tempe Police Department Speed Lidar packages The backbone instrument of speed enforcement is the speed detection device, which comes in two common types: radar and lidar. Both types accurately measure a target vehicle’s speed. Roughly 200 of the speed detection devices were purchased with funding to enhance speed enforcement throughout the State of Arizona and funds were awarded to Tempe Police Department for this. Law enforcement agencies try to prevent speeding related collisions through equipment such as speed displays and signs. One example of this is the speed trailer the Sahuarita Police Department purchased, shown on the right. Speed trailers such as this will display a vehicles speed to compare with the speed limit. The portability of the speed Sahuarita Police Department Speed Trailer 61 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 trailer lets the police department adapt and respond to citizen input regarding roadways troubled with speeders. A small portion of funds were spent on purchasing vehicles for traffic enforcement. The Cottonwood Police Department was able to purchase One (1) fully equipped vehicle with “ghost” markings (right, above). These markings are difficult to see far away at an angle during the day, but are clear up close. The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office was able to purchase one SUV to dedicate towards traffic enforcement (right, below). Cottonwood Police Department Fully equipped Truck Task Area – Selective Traffic Enforcement Awareness Project Description – This task awarded funding for the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) Safety Days. The GOHS hosts an annual event at the Arizona State Fair called “Safety Days at the State Fair.” This task helped provide funding in support of the Safety Days event, at which guests at the State Fair were able to meet law enforcement and fire personnel and learn about every aspect of highway safety. Task Area – GOHS Speed Survey Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office SUV Project Description – GOHS conducts an annual survey to track public attitudes and behaviors associated with red light running and speeding. A survey did not occur in FFY 2015. Task Area – GOHS Program Administration Project Description – This task provided funding to GOHS to administer and manage 402 police traffic services program which enabled GOHS to write, manage and monitor grants and contracts. They also funded GOHS personnel to coordinate the activities and tasks outlined in the Highway Safety Plan and provide status reports and updates on project activity to the GOHS Director and other parties as required. GOHS personnel monitored project activity, prepared and maintained project documentation, and evaluated task accomplishments for the grant portfolio. 62 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.8 TRAFFIC RECORDS (TR) Traffic records data are critical for identifying problem areas in need of attention by the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) and its partners. The goal of Arizona’s Traffic Records program is to ensure GOHS, the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) and the law enforcement community are able to access accurate and complete data. The Arizona Traffic Records Coordinating Committee (TRCC) met three times during FFY 2015:  February 26, 2015;  June 25, 2015; and  September 9, 2015. GOHS funds projects that support improved collection, evaluation and analysis of traffic safety data. Expenses under this program area generally relate to equipment and materials, and program management. GOHS continued to work with ADOT and the TRCC to coordinate the collection and storage of traffic safety data. In FFY 2015, ADOT used grant funds to renew the license for the Arizona Traffic and Criminal Software (AZTraCS) which allows local law enforcement agencies to electronically collect and submit crash data to the state traffic records system and electronically collect and submit citation data to the Administrative Office of the Courts. Performance Targets Performance targets for traffic records data systems are not crash-based. However, these traffic records tasks address the six nationally recognized data quality performance measures of timeliness, accuracy, completeness, uniformity, integration, and accessibility. Projects and Funding Table 3.18 contains a list of five Traffic Records projects, the relevant performance measures, the funds spent on each project and the project status. Projects with no expenditures during the fiscal year are classified as cancelled. These projects are grouped into the following the areas:  Data Collection Equipment; and  Data Collection, Evaluation and Analysis. 63 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.18 FFY 2015 Traffic Records Projects Task Area Data Collection Equipment Project Number 2015-TR-001 Grantee Buckeye PD Related Performance Measure(s) Traffic data accuracy, completeness, and accessibility 2015-405c-002 Phoenix PD Data Collection, Evaluation and Analysis 2015-405c-001 ADOT 2015-TR-002 El Mirage PD 2015-405c-003 Pima CSO Total Funds Spent (Traffic Records) Traffic data accuracy, completeness, and accessibility Funding Source(s) Funds Spent (FFY 2015) Task Status Sec. 402 $4,212.54 Complete Sec. 405c $0.00 Cancelled Sec. 405c $450,634.45 Complete Sec. 402 $15,002.00 Complete Sec. 405c $140,001.25 Complete $609,850.24 64 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Traffic Records The Arizona traffic records system enables the timely collection and reporting of data elements necessary for problem identification, problem analysis and countermeasure evaluation in all areas of traffic safety. The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) funded projects in 2015 that awarded data collection equipment for the Buckeye Police Department and improved the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT), Pima County Sheriff’s Department and El Mirage Police Department data systems. Project Descriptions Task Area – Equipment Project Description – This task awarded funding to the Buckeye Police Department purchase and install a toughpad and related software and accessories. This toughpad will expedite the citation process and allow much faster processing and transmission of citations between the police department and the courts, saving time and money. Electronic ticketing also speeds up traffic stops by lowering the amount of time officers need to spend filling out paperwork. Task Area – Data Collection, Evaluation and Analysis Project Description – A grant was awarded to the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) to continue the improvement of the collection, management and linkage of the six traffic safety data systems through the implementation of Arizona’s Strategic Plan for Traffic Safety Data, updated yearly by the Traffic Records Coordinating Committee (TRCC). The grant awarded to ADOT provided the resources necessary to fund the electronic DUI affidavit system and form which allows all law enforcement agencies to submit their DUI affidavit forms electronically to the ADOT Motor Vehicle Division. This has resulted in improved timeliness, accuracy, completeness, uniformity, integration, and accessibility of motor vehicle customer records relating to the mandatory driver’s sanctions. These funds also helped ADOT reduce its crash data backlog. Finally, these funds have enabled the TRCC to assist agencies that want to use TraCS software to send electronic crash data to ADOT Traffic Records. The grant awarded to the Pima County Sheriff’s Department is to purchase, install and implement a Traffic Record Information System. This system will integrate the current Pima County Sheriff’s Department traffic records systems with ADOT’s TraCS software to allow the Pima County Sheriff’s Department to seamlessly report traffic records information without negatively impacting the department’s own record Pima County Sherriff’s Department Traffic Record Information System 65 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 keeping practices. The El Mirage Police Department’s grant is for a dashboard system which will allow El Mirage personnel to quickly and efficiently identify and address changing traffic patterns related to upcoming road construction projects with the ultimate goal of citizen safety. 66 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 3.9 PLANNING AND ADMINISTRATION (PA) The Planning and Administration program area includes the activities necessary for the overall management and operations of the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS). Performance Targets Table 3.19 Performance Targets and Measures (Planning and Administration) Performance Targets Performance Measures Process all subgrantee grants by October 1. Percentage of grants processed by October 1. Develop a coordinated Highway Safety Plan (HSP) by July. Date the HSP was submitted. Prepare the Annual Report by December 31. Date the Annual Report was submitted. Monitor all grants according to GOHS monitoring policy. Percentage of grants monitored according to policy. Develop, coordinate, monitor, and evaluate traffic safety projects identified in the HSP. None. Promote highway safety awareness through educational programs and public awareness campaigns. None. Projects and Funding The 2015 Highway Safety Plan included one Planning and Administration project. Table 3.20 lists this project along with its associated performance measures, funding sources and status. 67 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 3.20 FFY 2015 Planning and Administration Projects Task Area Planning and Administration Project Number 2015-PA-200 Total Funds Spent (Planning and Administration) Grantee GOHS Related Performance Measure(s) Planning and administration activities supported progress toward all performance measures Funding Source(s) Sec. 402 Funds Spent (FFY 2015) $296,826.22 Task Status Complete $296,826.22 68 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Performance Results – Planning and Administration The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) met its measurable planning and administration performance targets for FFY 2015 including delivering the FFY 2015 Annual Report and the FFY 2016 Highway Safety Plan in a timely manner. Project Descriptions Task Area – Planning and Administration Project Description – This project provided funding to GOHS to coordinate and monitor activities and projects relating to the planning and administration of the FFY 2015 Arizona Highway Safety Plan. 69 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 4.0 Cost Summary A summary of 2015 Highway Safety Program approved costs is shown in Table 4.1 on the next page. 70 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Table 4.1 Highway Safety Program Cost Summary Program Area Project Obligation Limitation Carry Forward Obligated Funds Expended Funds Carried Forward into Next FY Unobligated Balance Unexpended Balance NHTSA NHTSA 402 Planning and Administration PA-2015-00-00-00 – – $702,585.86 $515,319.92 $187,265.94 – $0.00 Planning and Administration Total – – $702,585.86 $515,319.92 $187,265.94 – $0.00 – – $1,389,552.04 $1,362,207.78 $27,344.26 – $0.00 – – $1,389,552.04 $1,362,207.78 $27,344.26 – $0.00 – – $297,659.75 $297,659.75 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $297,659.75 $297,659.75 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $33,973.05 $33,973.05 $36.97 – $0.00 – – $33,973.05 $33,973.05 $36.97 – $0.00 – – $906,850.67 $906,765.67 $85.00 – $0.00 – – $906,850.67 $906,765.67 $85.00 – $0.00 – – $350,420.35 $350,420.35 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $350,420.35 $350,420.35 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $1,872,604.14 $1,852,365.66 $20,238.48 – $0.00 – – $1,872,604.14 $1,852,365.66 $20,238.48 – $0.00 Alcohol AL-2015-00-00-00 Alcohol Total Emergency Medical Services EM-2015-00-00-00 Emergency Medical Services Total Motorcycle Safety MC-2015-00-00-00 Motorcycle Safety Total Occupant Protection OP-2015-00-00-00 Occupant Protection Total Pedestrian/Bicycle Safety PS-2015-00-00-00 Pedestrian/Bicycle Safety Total Police Traffic Services PT-2015-00-00-00 Police Traffic Services Total 71 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 Traffic Records TR-2015-00-00-00 Traffic Records Total – – $19,214.54 $19,214.54 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $19,214.54 $19,214.54 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $272,075.14 $272,075.14 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $272,075.14 $272,075.14 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $52,724.70 $52,724.67 $0.03 – $0.00 – – $52,724.70 $52,724.67 $0.03 – $0.00 – – $20,000.00 $20,000.00 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $20,000.00 $20,000.00 $0.00 – $0.00 $4,452,485.82 $1,473,201.28 $5,925,687.10 $5,690,753.39 $234,933.71 $0.00 $0.00 – – $394,015.10 $394,015.10 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $394,015.10 $394,015.10 $0.00 – $0.00 $0.00 $394,015.10 $394,015.10 $394,015.10 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 – – $422.53 $422.53 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $422.53 $422.53 $0.00 – $0.00 $0.00 $422.53 $422.53 $422.53 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 – – $349,849.43 $349,849.43 $0.00 – $0.00 – – $349,849.43 $349,849.43 $0.00 – $0.00 $0.00 $349,849.43 $349,849.43 $349,849.43 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 Accident Investigation AI-2015-00-00-00 Accident Investigation Total Roadway Safety RS-2015-00-00-00 Roadway Safety Total Pupil Transportation Safety SB-2015-00-00-00 Pupil Transportation Total NHTSA 402 Total 410 High Visibility 410 High Visibility K8HV-2015-00-00-00 410 High Visibility Total 2011 Child Seats 2011 Child Seat Incentive K3-2015-00-00-00 2011 Child Seats Total 164 Transfer Funds 164 Alcohol 164AL-2015-00-00-00 164 Alcohol Total 164 Transfer Funds Total 72 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 MAP-21 405c Data Program 405c Data Program M3DA-2015-00-00-00 – – $1,780,635.61 $590,635.70 $1,189,999.91 – $0.00 – – $1,780,635.61 $590,635.70 $1,189,999.91 – $0.00 $643,178.40 $1,137,457.21 $1,780,635.61 $590,635.70 $1,189,999.91 $0.00 $0.00 – – $1,164,575.55 $461,846.67 $702,728.88 – $0.00 – – $1,164,575.55 $461,846.67 $702,728.88 – $0.00 – – $2,312,797.16 $1,925,845.17 $386,951.99 – $0.00 405d Mid Other Based on Problem ID Total – – $2,312,797.16 $1,925,845.17 $386,951.99 – $0.00 MAP-21 405d Impaired Driving Mid Total $2,307,797.16 $1,169,575.55 $3,477,372.71 $2,387,691.84 $1,089,680.87 $0.00 $0.00 – – $125,843.16 $0.00 $125,843.16 – $0.00 – – $125,843.16 $0.00 $125,843.16 – $0.00 – – $468,649.97 $138,376.41 $330,273.56 – $0.00 – – $468,649.97 $138,376.41 $330,273.56 – $0.00 $345,425.37 $249,067.76 $594,493.13 $138,376.41 $456,116.72 $0.00 $0.00 405c Data Program Total MAP-21 405c Data Program Total MAP-21 405d Impaired Driving Mid 405d Mid Other Based on Problem ID M5OT-2015-00-00-00 405d Mid Other Based on Problem ID Total 405d Impaired Driving Mid M5X-2015-00-00-00 MAP-21 405d Impaired Driving Int 405d Int Court Support M7CS-2015-00-00-00 405d Int Court Support Total 405d Int Ignition Interlock M7II-2015-00-00-00 405d Int Ignition Interlock Total MAP-21 405d Impaired Driving Int Total 73 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 MAP-21 405f Motorcycle Programs 405f Motorcyclist Training M9MT-2015-00-00-00 – – $92,919.86 $67,132.20 $25,787.66 – $0.00 – – $92,919.86 $67,132.20 $25,787.66 – $0.00 – – $36,251.00 $10,236.36 $26,014.64 – $0.00 – – $36,251.00 $10,236.36 $26,014.64 – $0.00 – – $72,719.03 $43,400.14 $29,318.89 – $0.00 – – $72,719.03 $43,400.14 $29,318.89 – $0.00 $72,719.03 $129,170.86 $201,889.89 $120,768.70 $81,121.19 $0.00 $0.00 NHTSA Total $7,821,605.78 $4,902,759.72 $12,724,365.50 $9,672,513.10 $3,051,852.40 $0.00 $0.00 Total $7,821,605.78 $4,902,759.72 $12,724,365.50 $9,672,513.10 $3,051,852.40 $0.00 $0.00 405f Motorcyclist Training Total 405f Motorcyclist Awareness M9MA-2015-00-00-00 405f Motorcyclist Awareness Total 405f Motorcycle Programs M9X-2015-00-00-00 405f Motorcycle Programs Total MAP-21 405f Motorcycle Programs Total 74 State of Arizona Highway Safety Annual Report FFY 2015 5.0 Addendum – Seat Belt Survey The Governor’s Office of Highway Safety commissioned a study to determine the 2015 statewide seat belt use rate and estimate the motorcycle helmet use rate. Data was also gathered on drivers’ use of hand-held cell phones. This study was conducted by the Behavior Research Center and Preusser Research Group. The study involved the same research design utilized in the 2014 Seat Belt Survey. The procedures used were developed for data collection, validation and quality control that are consistent with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration requirements and similar to past practices in the State. In the table below the statewide results are shown. The 2015 seat belt use rate of 86.6 percent represented a minor decrease of 0.6 percentage points from 2014. Motorcycle helmet use was 59.6 percent, while close to 2014 it is a major drop from 2013. Hand-held cell phone use, by 8.0 percent of drivers, was about the same as seen since 2008, all down from the highest level recorded in 2007. Table 5.1 Seat Belt Survey Summary Data Seat Belt Use Study Year Child Safety Restraint Use Motorcycle Helmet Use Cell Phone Use Total Drivers Passengers 2015 86.6% 87.1% 84.8% NA 59.6% 8.0% 2014 87.2% 87.1% 87.7% NA 61.5% 6.7% 2013 84.7% 84.7% 84.0% NA 73.9% 7.4% 2012 82.2% 82.6% 80.2% 75.0% 58.4% 6.2% 2011 82.9% 83.5% 80.6% 79.1% 58.0% 8.3% 2010 81.8% 82.3% 79.9% 78.0% 56.4% 6.6% 2009 80.8% 82.0% 75.4% 87.2% 69.3% 8.3% 2008 79.9% 81.4% 73.3% 80.1% 67.3% 8.1% 2007 80.9% 82.5% 72.7% 86.2% 74.6% 14.6% 2006 78.9% 79.4% 76.4% 88.4% 59.0% NA Source: Behavior Research Center and Preusser Research Group. 75