Five tips to ensure your safety during holiday travel, sticking your hand out on snowy road isn’t one of them

Five tips to ensure your safety during holiday travel, sticking your hand out on snowy road isn't one of them

TheNational Safety Council(NSC), America’s leading nonprofit safety advocate, is calling on everyone planning to travel to celebrate Thanksgiving with loved ones to practice safe, responsible driving. Roadways are becoming more dangerous; NSC estimates more than 21,400 people may have died on the roads through thefirst six months of 2021, a 16% increase from the previous year. Over this year’s Thanksgiving holiday period, which begins Wednesday evening at 6 p.m. and concludes Sunday, Nov. 28 at 11:59 p.m., estimates showmore than 500 people may die on U.S. roads. This is the highest projection of roadway deaths during the Thanksgiving holiday since 2007.

“Traffic fatalities continue to increase at devastating rates,” said Mark Chung, NSC vice president, roadway practice. “It’s absolutely vital that anyone driving during the Thanksgiving holiday period practice safe, responsible driving behaviors because the good news is that losing lives on our roadways is preventable. Please do your part: prepare before traveling, buckle up, slow down, put phones away and drive unimpaired; it can make all the difference.”

Related News: Philadelphia Man Spent 22 Years in Prison For Armed Robbery He Didn't Do

NSC calls on all drivers to prevent crashes and save lives this Thanksgiving by practicing the following:

  1. Prepare before you go:Before hitting the road, make sure your car is safe for driving. Vehicle owners should check the oil, put air in the tires, and check for and repair open recalls. VisitChecktoProtect.orgto see if your vehicle has an open recall, and get it repaired for free. As the weather gets colder, also prepare forwinter driving.
  2. Buckle up:Seat beltsare estimated to have saved 374,276 lives since 1975. Buckle up, while also making sure you have appropriate car seats installed correctly.
  3. Drive distraction-free:Thousands have died in crashes involving cell phone use. Put your phones away and #JustDrive.
  4. Slow down:Speeding is a factor inmore than a quarter of all traffic fatalities. Drive the speed limit and do not exceed it. Be sure to pay attention to those walking and biking in order to keep all road users safe.
Related News: Maryland Man Charged for Deadly Weapon After Attacking Cops with Trump Campaign Sign on Jan 6.

Designate a sober driver or arrange alternate transportation:Alcohol is only one cause of impaired driving. Drugs, including opioids, marijuana and some over-the-counter medicines, can cause drowsiness, alter visual functions and affect mental judgement and motor skills.

For more tips, visitnsc.org/saferoads. Review supplemental information about the Thanksgiving Day holiday fatality estimates, and additional motor vehicle data and research atinjuryfacts.nsc.org.

About the National Safety Council

Scroll to Top