Anoka Final Video
Monday, May 11, 2009
Final Video
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Community Support
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
U of M Athletes
Ford MyKey
Here is a clip when Joey drove the Ford Focus without his seat belt on:
Then on May 5th, the Ford Spokesperson came to Crossroads North Campus which recently lost a student due to not wearing his seat belt in a car crash.
The students really enjoyed learning about the car and getting to drive it.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Bagging Groceries
Anoka Union Article
How to Save a Life Video
New Texting PSA
Article written by Judge Stephen Halsey issued to 40 newspapers
It’s In Your Court: One Hundred Deadliest Days for Teens and NOT from Swine Flu
We Minnesotans are in the midst of the 100 deadliest days for teens and its NOT from swine flu. Springtime is the time when teens begin to drive more and are involved in activities like PROM which often involve illegal alcohol use. Year around nearly every 7 days in Minnesota a teen driver dies in an auto wreck. Recently a star basketball player in Northern Minnesota died when ejected from his vehicle in a single-car wreck because he was not wearing a seatbelt. Use of seatbelts by rural teen male drivers in pickup trucks is extremely low.
I have never seen such overwhelming anguish and sorrow as that expressed at a sentencing hearing by families of a victim killed in a motor vehicle collision involving a young drunk driver. The driver’s family is also devastated by the consequences to the driver. Teen driving offenses have a significant impact on the criminal j
Teens in
In 2008 Minnesota adopted limits on nighttime driving hours and numbers of passengers for teen drivers during the first 6 months of being licensed. Graduated licensing in Wisconsin has significantly reduced the number of accidents involving 16 and 17 year old drivers. The 2008 Minnesota legislation includes the following:
- For the first 6 months of licensure, no driving midnight to 5 a.m.
- For the first 6 months, only one passenger under age 20 unless adult present
- For the second 6 monthss, no more than 3 passengers under 20 unless adult present
- No driver under age 18 may use a cell phone while driving
- ALL drivers are prohibited for text-messaging or accessing internet while driving
- For more information, see www.teendriver411.com maintained by Anoka High School SADD.
Here are some frightening statistics:
- One in ten Minnesota teens will be involved in a crash this year
- Most teen crashes are 3-7 p.m., to and from school, and with passengers
- Moter vehicle crashes are the leading cause of teen deaths (39%)
- Risk of driver death increases greatly with 2 or more passengers (triples with 3 passengers)
- 2001-05: 369 Minnesota teens died in crashes; only 39% were wearing seat belts
- 73% of teen driving deaths involved a teen driver
The consequences of a non-DWI traffic violation for a teen driver can be from a small fine or community work service to a brief loss of license. The consequences of an “underage drinking and driving offense” (under age 21 and less than .08 blood alcohol) are loss of license, a greater fine, jail time if over 18, and probation for one year. For a DWI conviction (over.08) there may be a loss of license for 90-180 days.
A very serio
Many teen drivers, and some parents, seem to believe it can never happen to them. But your child could simply exercise poor judgment by riding as a passenger in a vehicle driven by an intoxicated driver. In
The tragedy is that about every 5 days a teenager dies on a Minnesota road. If one teen a week died of the SWINE FLU it would be all over the news and state leaders would probably call for a summit to address the danger.
Please: take a few minutes to talk to your teen driver. Make a contract with them to follow the rules listed above. Consider telling them that no matter where they are, no matter what time of day or night, they m
We don’t want to see you or your child in court as someone touched by the poor driving of a teen.
Submitted by Judge Steve Halsey, Wright County District Court, chambered in Buffalo. Judge Halsey is the host of “The District Court Show” on local cable TV public access channels throughout the Tenth Judicial District. Excerpts can be viewed at WWW.QCTV.org. Go to Community and click “The District Court Show.”