California Highway Patrol Lieutenant Tel Preszler is the Arrowhead Area
Commander since September 2015.
Lieutenant Preszler transferred to the Arrowhead Area after serving as
the Inland Division ISU Lieutenant.
CHP GOAL… >Impact Distracted TEEN DRIVING
For the past four years, the California Highway Patrol (CHP) has
partnered with Impact Teen Drivers
(ITD) in a combined effort to decrease the number of teen distracted driver
fatalities across the state. Through engaging presentations in schools, the ITD
program reaches thousands of teens and parents each year to show how using a
cellular telephone, texting, and other distractions while driving can have
fatal consequences. Teenagers are considered at most risk for distracted
driving, and the CHP and ITD are dedicated to reversing what is a completely
preventable crisis.
“Every year in California, more than 800,000 licensed teenage drivers are involved
in a collision. Unfortunately, hundreds of those collisions result in death,” CHP Commissioner Joe
Farrow said. “Working with Impact Teen Drivers, our goal is to protect these
inexperienced drivers through education. The more a driver knows, the more they
can do to prevent these collisions.”
The fatality rate for drivers ages 16 to 19,
based on miles driven, is three times higher than for drivers ages 20 to 69
(Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, 2013). In an effort to lower this
statistic, the ITD program’s message is simple: focus on the road ahead and get
to where you are going safely.
“Distracted driving is the traffic safety
challenge of our generation,” said Dr. Kelly Browning, Executive Director of
ITD. “Just
as reducing driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs and increasing seat
belt use required a strong combination of education and enforcement to effect
culture change, so too will stopping the current epidemic of distracted
driving. We focus on beginning drivers both because they are at the greatest
risk, and because they are just beginning to develop their driving habits.”
The
grant-funded Teen Distracted Drivers
Education and Enforcement V campaign consists of an education component, as
well as teen distracted driver enforcement operations to be conducted
throughout the state until September 30, 2016. Funding for this program was
provided by a grant from the California
Office of Traffic Safety through the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration.