I 1984 FACT SHEET
1410 people were killed in Georgia traffic accidents in 1984. 75,883 were injured in a total of 192,5 15 accidents. Of those killed 560 were under 25 years o f age. 195 fatalities were caused by collisions involving pedestrians. 681 or 48% of the fatalities involved a drinking driver. Travel in Georgia for 1984 was 44 billion, 599 million miles, a 5.4% increase over 1983. There were 4.9 million registeredvehicles i n the state at the end of 1984. One person was killed every 6 hours. An injury occured every 6 minutes. 66% of all motorcycle accidents resulted in injury, 3% resulted in death. DPS suspended or revoked 96,205 licenses, 39% of those were for DUI. 65% of all fatal accidents occured on dry surfaces, 15% on wet surfaces and .04% on icy or snowy surfaces. 75,883 people were injured in traffic accidents. Injuries resulted from 90% o f all pedestrian accidents, 9% were fatal. 26% o f all accidents resulted in at least one injury.
Commissioner's Letter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Governor's Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 1984 Highlights. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Board Members . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Organizational Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Statistical Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Georgia Traffic Death Trends . . . . . . . . . . .19 Fatality Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Alcohol Related Fatalities. . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 Child Restraint Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22 1984 Fatalities by Month . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 1 1984 Holiday Traffic Toll . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 2 GSP Activity Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43
GSP Special Operations
Activity Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44
Drivers License Information . . . . . . . . . . . .46
Budget. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53
Governor Joe Frank Harris Board o f Public S a f e t y Members o f t h e General Assembly Citizens of Georgia
Please accept f o r your review, t h e 1984 Annual Report of t h e Georgia Department of Public Safety, an overview of the a c t i v i t i e s of t h i s department during the last calendar year.
In 1984, t h e primary emphasis o f t h e Department o f P u b l i c S a f e t y was on enforcement and implementation o f t h e s t a t e ' s DUI law. In l a t e 1983, a m i l e s t o n e was reached i n c o o p e r a t i v e t r a f f i c s a f e t y e f f o r t s when t h e new DUI law went i n t o e f f e c t . Never before i n t h e h i s t o r y of t h e s t a t e had a l l t h e concerned environs come t o g e t h e r with such u n i t y of purpose t o do something c o n s t r u c t i v e about drunk driving.
The Georgia S t a t e P a t r o l was proud t o t a k e t h e l e a d i n t h i s e f f o r t . In 1984, s t a t e t r o o p e r s r a i s e d t h e i r t o t a l o f DUI a r r e s t s by 18%, from 17,958 i n 1983 t o 21,215 i n 1984. With t h e r i s e i n a r r e s t s , c o n v i c t i o n s and suspensions a l s o increased i n 1984.
Aiding t h e s t a t e p a t r o l i n i t s e f f o r t s were two g r a n t s from Governor J o e Frank H a r r i s . One g r a n t of over $300,000 bought 760 a l c o - s e n s o r s , a r o a d s i d e s c r e e n i n g device t o aid i n detecting alcohol use. Another grant of over $422,000 increased o u r DUI enforcement e f f o r t s by funding e x t r a d u t y pay f o r a d d i t i o n a l p a t r o l l i n g by t r o o p e r s . We a r e g r a t e f u l f o r t h i s kind o f s u p p o r t .
In 1984, t r a f f i c d e a t h s r o s e s l i g h t l y o v e r a l l due t o i n c r e a s e s i n t r a v e l . The number o f r e g i s t e r e d v e h i c l e s and l i c e n s e d d r i v e r s c o n t i n u e s t o i n c r e a s e a t r e c o r d rates as well.
The Department o f P u b l i c S a f e t y i s g r a t e f u l f o r t h e concern o f o u r Governor and l e g i s l a t i v e o f f i c i a l s i n p r o v i d i n g t h e money and s t a f f i n g n e c e s s a r y t o meet t h e c h a l l e n g e s of t h e 8 0 ' s . The support of t h e Governor, General Assembly and Board o f P u b l i c S a f e t y w i l l be matched, e f f o r t f o r e f f o r t , by every member of t h i s department a s we t r y t o s e r v e well t h e c i t i z e n s o f Georgia.
Hugh Hardison, Colonel Commissioner
STATE OF GEORGIA
OFFICEOF THEGOVERNOR ATLANTA 30334
Joe Frank Harris
GOVERNOR
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY:
The efforts by you and your fellow officers in 1984 to enforce Georgia's drunk driving laws are commendable. Last year, your arrest numbers for DUI totaled 21,215, an increase of 18 percent over 1983. This diligence, coupled with public awareness efforts, is to be credited with the great strides the state has made in recent years in combating the DUI problem.
Despite these efforts, DtJI still remains the number one highway safety problem, as attested by the reports almost daily of someone dying because of a drunk driver. We must continue our untiring enforcement efforts.
It is also heartening to know of the strides the Department of Public Safety made in 1984 in training, equipment and furthering your professionalism. The Harris Administration is proud to have been a part of providing the funds to help in these areas.
You are facing new challenges in your position as the travel, vehicles and population continue to increase to record levels in Georgia, but I pledge that we will work closely with you to help insure the highest degree of public safety for the citizens of Georgia. You should be proud of your record of service and accomplishments, and I salute you.
With kindest regards, I remain
be Frank Harris
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
The 59th trooper school had three graduates, Cody, Rearden, and Farley, whose fathers were also troopers.
Graduates display the line formation on guard position on the parade grounds.
L
1984 HIGHLIGHTS
Traffic deaths in Georgia in 1984 increased from 1296 in 1983 to 1410, a percentage increase of 8.8. A t the same time, annual miles of travel in the state were also increasing by 5.5 percent to 45 billion. The increased miles traveled are a direct result of continuing improvements in the economy of the country and particularly in the southeast. The numbers of vehicles on Georgia roads and numbers of licensed drivers are increasing a t a rate of approximately 100,000 per year.
Injuries increased in 1984 from 65,470 in 1983 to 75,883 in 1984. Accidents increased from 169,000 in 1983 to 192,500 reported in 1984, again reflecting the increase in travel and vehicles on the roadway.
The Georgia State Patrol's primary efforts in 1984 centered around improved enforcement of the State's DUI laws. In 1983 the state's new DUI law became effective providing substantially increased penalties for drunk driving. With a hightened public awareness about the problem of drunk driving, the State Patrol undertook a massive enforcement drive. Patrol arrests for DUI increased in 1984 from 17,000 to 21,000, an 18%increase.
As part of that increased enforcement effort, the Department was awarded a $250,000 grant from the emergency funds of the Governor for the purchase of 750 alco-sensors, a battery operated roadside screening device to test for potential alcohol use. The digital readout sensors made marginal cases a thing of the past and greatly increased the State Patrol's capabilities to detect and further test potential drunk drivers.
Also in 1984 the Patrol was awarded a $422,000 federal grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation to conduct a combined DUI and speed enforcement campaign. The effort was conducted a t selected sites throughout the state where statistics indicated a combination high incidence of drunk driving and speeding. The campaign, known as "Fast Lane Blues" was highly successful leaving Georgia with the distinction of having the fourth best record of 55 mph speed compliance in the nation. According to the U.S. Department of Transportation only 35% of the motoring public in Georgia consistently exceed the 55 mph speed limit when the state's 100 thousand mile road system is considered as a whole. "Fast Lane Blues" is being carried on as part of a regular patrol campaign in the metro Atlanta area in 1985.
The Department of Public Safety continued to implement a 1983 law which i s expected to have a considerably positive effect on attitudes of young people toward drinking and driving. The Alcohol and Drug Awareness Program is now being jointly taught by the State Patrol and Education Department to all young people in Georgia who expect to get their drivers licenses before age 18. In 1984, 120,000 15 year olds were certified as completing the four hour course. The State Patrol is making special classes available for those students who may have missed the classes in their regular school curriculum. The long range effect of the Alcohol and Drug Awareness classes won't be known for several years but it i s expected that a much more enlightened young driver is being prepared for the future; drivers who are better equipped to deal with alcohol and i t s detrimental effects on driving.
Highlights cont..
I The Department of Public Safety also began enforcing the new child restraint law in July of 1984. In the first year under the requirement to restrain children under age 4, deaths fell from 28 to 10 and it was estimated that 75% of the driving public was complying by purchasing the restraints. It is not believed, however, that actual use of the restraints is much more than 20%. It is felt that additional legislation may be considered to help better enforce the child restraint law. Public education has been very positive on the value of child restraints. In 1984 the State Patrol made some 100 cases and issued more than 10,000 written and verbal warnings regardingthe new child restraint law.
Overall enforcement activity by the Georgia State Patrol in 1984 reached record numbers. Total moving hazardous arrests were 296,000 up from 250,000 in 1983. Speeding arrests totaled 246,000 in 1984 up from 208,000 in 1983. Arrests and warnings to truckers totaled 17,000 in 1984 compared to 16,000 in 1983. DUI arrests were 21,500 in 1984 compared to 17,900 in 1983.Total patrol miles in 1984 topped 22 million compared to 20 million 800 thousand in 1983.
The overall aim of the Administration of the Department of Public Safety i s to create as much visibility as a deterrent to traffic violations as possible and to be as efficient as possible. Significant progress is being made in this area. In the future, the Department will continue this quest a t the same time realizing that travel, population, vehicle registration, and economic growth demands a continuing improvement in the traffic safety capabilities of the Department. A close working relationship is essential with the Governor, members of the General Assembly and the Board of Public Safety who have the ultimate responsibility for the funding and guidance necessary to insure a high degree of public safety for the citizens of Georgia.
Georgia Board of Public Safety M e m b e r s s
GOVERNOR JOE FRANK HARRIS Board Chairman
MR. J. L A N E JOHNSTON Board Vice-Chairman
District Attorney, Statesboro, Georgia
SHERIFF FRANKLIN THORNTON Board Secretary-Treasurer Sheriff, Walton County
MR. MICHAEL BOWERS Georgia Attorney General
MR. WAYNE ABERNATHY Member-at-large Lula, Georgia
MR. D A V I D C. E V A N S Commissioner
Department of Offender Rehabilitation
CHIEF BOBBY MOODY Chief, Covington Police Department
MRS. LUCK GAMBRELL Member-at-large Atlanta, Georgia
MR. COY WILLIAMSON Member-at-large Atlanta, Georgia
CHIEF TOMMY MORGAN Chief, Rockdale County Fire Department
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
f
I PUBLIC
I I
COMMISSIONER
1
ASST. TO EX. OFF.
ClPERMITS
AFFIRMA. ACTION
EXECUTIVE OFFICER
clISSUANCE
REV. & SUSP. IMP. CON.
I 3 REPORT.
NORTH FIELD
FIELD
TROOP B
DTROOP C
rl TROOP D
ASSISTANT
~q ADJUTANT FEl~71 OPERATION
SECURITY
-'GI
CONSENT
CONTROL
nTROOP K
CENTRAL
[q
CONTROL RECORDS
CHAIN OF COMMAND - PRIMARY
CHAIN OF COMMAND I N ABSENCE OF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
I I GRANTS MOT
COMMISSIONER'S
OFFICE
Colone
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
EXECUTIVE SECURITY
To provide necessary legal, admin-
Operating directly under the Com-
istrative and investigative assistance missioner, is Executive Security. The
t o the Department of Public Safety, troopers in Executive Security furnish
the Office of Professional Standards continual security for the Governor,
was created in August of 1981.
his family, the Lieutenant Governor,
During 1984, the Office of and the Speaker of the House.
Professional Standards conducted 95
pre-employment background investiga-
I tions and 16 out-of-state pre-employ-
ment background investigations. We
also conducted 56 internal investiga-
tions for the department in 1984.
Colonel Hugh Hardison
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
The Public Information Office of the Department of Public Safety acts as a coordinator between the department and the news media. News releases and regular liaison with the news media is the most active area in the office. This section also works with various public service campaigns. Included in this section is the Graphics Unit and the Department of Public Safety Photo Lab. Graphics is responsible for designs, layouts and any artwork needed for brochures, drivers manuals and other departmental campaigns. The Photo Lab processes all departmental photos and accident pictures.
North Field
Commander
Major Ray Pinyan
South Field Cornmander
Major Tom Braswell
Executive Officer
I
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
PLANNING
The Department of Public Safety's
Affirmative Action Program is being
carried out through the Trooper
Cadet and Radio Operator Trainee
recruitment programs. Recruitment
trips are being made by departmental
headquarters personnel with a tremen-
dous assist from local post troopers
t o all parts of the state.
Major K. D. Rearden
I In addition to the field recruiting, pamphlets and other written
materials are designed and sent out
PERSONNEL
t o assure proper goals o f equality.
The Personnel Office has the
responsibility of maintaining the per- PERMITS SECTION
sonnel records for all employees of the Department of Public Safety and its attached agencies. Personnel handles annual and sick leave records, enters payroll information and employment status changes. During this year, we
The duty of the Permits Section i s t o issue permits of licenses for operation of racetrack, wholesale/retail of firearms, emergency lights and radar speed-timing devices to qualified
had a total of 1262 personnel trans- applicants.
actions under employment status
Emergency light permits for 5
changes. All insurance, performance years are issued solely t o govern-
reports and salary advance records mental agencies. The 1 year permits
are handled here. Personnel posts are issued to private businesses and
job vacancies for this agency and all individuals. A permit for the operation
other state agencies and maintains of radar speed-timing device is valid
a current job description on each until revoked, suspended or can-
employee. All new troopers are celled. This unit processed 30 amend-
certified as peace officers by this ments to the present radar permits
office through Peace Officers Stan- on file, in addition t o issuing the
dards and Training. During this past 9 new permits.
year, we handled 200 initial claims
The Permits Unit distributed
through workers compensation. Dur- the following number of license/
ing this year we processed 11 re- permits:
tirees. We also began keeping compensatory time on uniform and civilian personnel this year.
The Personnel Office is responsible for the recruitment and hiring of qualified personnel and for explaining employment opportunities to perspective employees.
Racetrack License
19
Firearms License
1,540
Emergency Light Permits
Amber 8275
Red
3342
Blue 4004
Total
15,621
Radar Permits
39
In 1984 the Planning Unit once again administered the Georgia State Patrol Promotion System. In doing so, we coordinated the four component parts of the system by constructing t e s t questions, establishing the forcedchoice evaluation process, and determining the seniority and education values. Promotability and eligibility was performed on the following classes of personnel:
FIELD.
Troor)erlTFC -
Corpordls -
Scrgemts -
SFC
-
455 50 51 48
604 Field Personnel
SPECIALIST: FIELD:
TroopernFC - 455
Corporals - 50
Sergeants
- 51
SFC
48
604 F ~ e l dPersonnel
SPECIALISTS
TrooperITFC - 45
Corporals - 29
Seryearlts
- 47
121 Spectal~rtPersonnel
725 TOTAL
A numerical listing of each person, by rank, was developed and forwarded t o the Personnel Office for selection of promotion.
Total Permits
17,219
EXECUTIVE OFFICER
TRAINING SECTION
COMPUTER SERVICES
The Training Section partakes in the delivery and planning of various programs related t o law enforcement and military throughout the state. In addition the section assists in the investigation of major traffic accidents at the request of local authorities.
Another responsibility of the Training Section is t o provide information on courses offered through the State Merit System. Thirty-one civilian personnel took advantage of these courses.
I n 1984 there was one trooper school which consisted of thirty-two cadets. This was the 59th Trooper School. There were sixteen weeks of intensive training or approximately 887 hours of classroom instruction. Each cadet earned either eighteen hours of college credit towards an AA or BS Degree or ten hours toward a Master Degree, depending on his or her college level.
October of 1984 the Training Section along with the Fiscal Services Division conducted the Department's Annual Pursuit Vehicle Evaluation Program at Road Atlanta and Atlanta International Raceway. This program was to test all three major car manufacturers vehicles submitted for law enforcement purposes.
This Section is comprised o f two mairl groups; Data Central and Applications Support.
Data Central handles the microfilming and reduction of data into machine readable form, from nearly ten million documents annually. These include conviction tickets, accident reports, emission inspection reports, driver license forms, vehicle accounting reports and ~ r o b ~ earctivity reports. On-Line (Direct-Live) operations, such as on-line driver license reinstatements, are also performed by Data Central.
Applications Support provides departmental computer users with assistance with their systems. This includes the following areas.
Data Entry/Retrieval/Systems Design/Development/ Programming and Remote Job Entry of user data t o the main frame computer at DOAS.
Systems ment/Programming/Maintenance of In-House Programs on the Nixdorf Computer Systems. Systems DesignIDevelopment/Programming/and Maintenance of same for smaller deparmtental users utilizing personal computers.
Coordination of DPS/ DOAS and other agency efforts in the EDP area.
s Driver Support
Driver Services All information about a Georgia
drivers' record would come from Driver Services. There were 1.8 million such records requested in 1984. Driver transcripts are requested by police agencies, insurance companies and individuals. During 1984 Driver Services conducted a purge of the files. After the purge there were 4.4 million active records. Handicapped parking permits and license information are available through Driver Services. Testing drivers was done by 140 field examiners.
No Fault lnsurance
The Department o t Public Safety No Fault Unit is responsible for getting owners and operators of vehicles to comply with the No Fault law. Georgia's No Fault lnsurance law requires all vehicles t o be covered by a minimum 15-30-10-15 no fault policy and that proof of coverage must be carried in the vehicle at all times. Insurance companies are requ~redt o report cancellations t o the department when i t is evident that replacement coverage has not been obtained. The vehicle owner's license is suspended
ACCIDENT REPORTING DIVISION The Accident Reporting Division
processes and obtains statistical breakdowns of accident reports from the state. A report of each accident with over $250 damage i s kept on file and made available t o individuals, attorneys and police agencies. Copies of accident reports are sent t o the Department of Transportation for location purposes. The Fatal Accident Reporting System, within ARD, is part of a federal network reporting all information about fatalities to the federal headquarters in Washington for breakdown and analysis.
Revocation and Suspension
until coverage is proved and a rein-
I statement fee of $25.00 is paid.
The Revocation and Suspension
In 1984 this division 192,515 reports.
processed
Section operates under state law t o
suspend driving priviledges of violators
who have been convicted in court of a
DRIVER IMPROVEMENT
suspendable offense or who have ac-
Driver lmprovement oversees the
cumulated more than 15 points against
licensing of Driver lmprovement Clin-
their license in a two year period.
ics and Instructors as well as Com-
Revocation and Suspension holds
mercial Driver Training Schools and
the license until the end of the sus-
Instructors.
pension period or until the vio-
The Driver lmprovement Clinics
lator meets criteria for reinstate-
have increased from one hundred and
ment. Provisions in the law requiring
four (104) to one hundred and twenty
the revocation of habitual violators'
four (124) with fifty-one (51) applica-
licenses are also carried out by this
tions pending, and four hundred and
section.
I
twenty-six (426) certified instructors
( I ( TRANSPORTATlON
There are currently twenty-seven (27)
1 The Georgia State Patrol garage Commercial Driver Training Schools
consists of a staff of eight employees. with one (1) application pending and
During 1984, 263 vehicles were pur- one hundred and forty-six (146)
chased, equipped and issued. Addi- certified instructors.
tionally, repairs, both minor and
major, were completed on 725 ve-
hicles, the garage is also responsible
for the towing of disabled vehicles and
the purchase and issuance of all auto
parts used by the garage.
Adjutant
I
ADJUTANT'S OFFICE The Adjutant's Office carried on
routine duties in assisting the Commissioner and both Commanding Officers with the day t o day operation of the Department of Public Safety.
The Adjutant's Office is also responsible for the following: the Awards Program, the Employee's Suggestion Committee, maintaining the
DPS Policy Manual, assisting the Veterans Administration with their program, the training of cadets working at Headquarters, and providing assistance with instructing employees in trooper school.
SAFETY EDUCATION UNIT The Safety Education Unit conducts safety courses for schools, civic clubs and businesses on a
variety of traffic related safety topics. The Safety Education Unit also administers and teaches the Alcohol1 Drug Awareness Program in both the public and private high schools as well as other locations throughout the state.
In the 1984 Calendar Year the Safety Education Unit certified 73,899teenagers in the Alcohol1
Drug Awareness Programs.
Alcohol/Drug Awareness Program
Total students taught. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..78,716 Total certificates issued . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..73,899 Total teaching hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..9,611 Total school visitation hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..6,442
Other Safety Education Activity
School Programs Number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2,101 School Program Attendance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71,453
Bicycle Rodeo Number. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..I2 Bicycle Rodeo Attendance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..460
Defensive Driving Course Number. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Defensive Driving Course Attendance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1864
Civic Club Programs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .179 Civic Club Program Attendance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8380
Employee Group Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .606 Employee Group Attendance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16,645
Other Programs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..307 Other Programs Attendance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55,006
Total Hours on Duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..77,922
ADJUTANT'S OFFICE
EMISSION CONTROL
IMPLIED CONSENT TRAINING DIVISION
The Emission Inspection program
During 1984, the Implied Consent
in Fulton, DeKalb and Cobb Counties Unit conducted twenty-eight classes
has been in effect for three years. Dur- at the Georgia Police Acadmey on the
ing the year of 1984 there were theory and operation of breath testing
553,237 vehicles inspected with a 4% failure rate. This was an increase of 15,185 inspections over the previous year. Gasoline burning vehicles weighing under 6,000 pounds and not older than ten years are inspected. In 1985
instruments used in Georgia. A total of 575 new operators were trained in these classes. Also, there were 36 refresher classes conducted to train operators in the most recent changes in breath testing techniques. During
38 emission stations were suspended. these training classes 850 operators
Only 27 mechanic inspectors were were trained. In 1984, the Implied
suspended for various violations. How- Consent Unit trained a total of 1425
ever there were 150 stations and mech- operators in breath testing procedures.
anic inspectors placed on probation.
In 1984 the Department of Public
Safety purchased an alco sensor for
SPEARS
selectivePatrol E~~~~~~~~~ and
Accident Reduction Squad (SPEARS,, a specialized traffic enforcement unit is composed of seven members. ~h~ primary function of this squad is to reduce serious accidents within the four county metro.area. In doing so, the emphasis has been placed upon the problem areas identified by local
every trooper in the state. A training class was conducted in every troop in the state for the purpose of training troopers in the proper use of the alco sensor. During these classes, 620 uniformed personnel were trained. This training has proven t o be one of the
successful efforts in- combating the drinking drivers on the state's highways.
agencies in Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and
Clayton Counties. Operating as a .
small task force during the early
morning hours, this unit has assisted
local law enforcement agencies in
SCHOOL BUS SAFETY UNIT Six thousand school bus drivers
drove thru the roadeo course. Of these 6000 the winners went on t o compete in the 9 district roadeos.
District winners advanced to the state roadeo, which was held in Columbus, Ga. in June of 1984. From the 73 drivers who competed in the state roadeo, James Crowley from DeKalb County was the winner in the conventional class and Cecil Weaver from Appling County was second.
The transit class was won by Robert Black from Decatur County, with Theda Lee from Gwinnett Co. coming in second.
Georgia drivers participated in the national roadeo in Anchorage, Alaska, finishing 4th, 7th and 13th.
Comptroller
Fiscal Services
1
FISCAL MANAGEMENT DIVISION
This division, managed by the Comptroller, i s responsible for most of the department's administrative activities or services. These services are as follows:
Accounting Services
Accounting Payroll Central Cashier
Budget Services
Budgeting Grants Management Procurement Property Records Management Printing
Supply Services
supply Mail Room
Maintenance Services
Maintenance
Mr. Homer Brisendine
Since Public Safety has 7 agencies attached t o it for administrative purposes, this division also provides administrative support for the Georgia Police Academy, Georgia Peace Officers Standards and Training Council, Georgia Fire Academy, Georgia Firefighters Standards and Training Council, Organized Crime Prevention Council, Public Safety Training Center and the Office of Highway Safety.
Accounting Services Accounting, payroll and central
cashier are the three major units which make up this section.
Accounting The Accounting Unit has the
responsibility of accounting for the receipt and expenditure of appropriated funds. In Fiscal Year 1984, $56,547,264 were expended. Funds received were from state, federal, and other fund sources. The accounting' officer, with a staff of eight, must code, process, and enter into the computer system all financial transactions including revenue
receipts, expense invoices (over 100,000 yearly) and general accounting journal vouchers. All of the accounting work i s processed through the Fiscal Accounting and Control System (FACS) which produces all necessary checks and reports.
Payroll The Payroll Unit i s run by the
payroll supervisor. It is responsible for the preparation and statewide distribution of the department's payroll and related reporting requirements. There are 24 payrolls processed during the fiscal year and apfjroxitnately 1548 employees paid each pay period.
Central Cashier This unit receives and audits all
fees collected, through various sources, by the department and transfers them to the State Treasury. There are 56 drivers license examining stations statewide which accounted for greater than 50% of the fee revenue collected in fiscal year 1984. Approximately 2,800 reports were received from these stations which accounted for
1,128,776 drivers license sales totaling $4,822,371 in collected fee revenue. These fees are deposited in 56 separate bank accounts statewide and transferred t o the State Treasury on a weekly basis. Other fees collected in the Atlanta Headquarters totaled $3,655,765. The majority of these collections were for driver's motor vehicle records and amounted t o over $2,700,000. The total revenue collected and transferred t o the State Treasury for fiscal year 1984 was $8.478.1 36.
Budget Services Five units make up Budget
Services. They include Budget, Grants Management, Procurement, Property, and Records Management1 Printing Coordination. These units are supervised by the FiscalIBudget Administrator. There are nine staff me'mbers.
FISCAL MANAGEMENT DIVISION
Grants Management Grants Management coordinates
Federal and other funds coming into the department. In 1984 the Department of Public Safety received monies for five Grants Awards in amount of $685,078 from the Federal government to administer services relating to Fatality Data, Safety Education, Alcohol and Drug Enforcement, 55 mph Enforcement, and Emission Control. The department also processed fifteen other Grant Awards for our seven attached agencies, through which we provided administrative services.
Procurement Section The Procurement Office i s re-
sponsible for the purchasing of goods and services for the department. I t is also responsible for the auditing of the troop and detached agencies purchases. All contracts entered into by the department are handled by the Procurement Office. Insurance claims involving building and contents are processed here. In fiscal year 1984 they processed 11,000 transactions at a value of approximately 10 million dollars.
Property The Property Management Unit
maintains an inventory of over 45,000 items of non-expendable property and insures compliance with various Federal and State regulations governing the disposition of same.
During the year, the Property Unit has assisted GClC and the Crime Lab, at their request, with the disposition of various property items as generated by their move t o new facilities.
The Property Unit assisted the Governor's Office of Highway Safety in taking a physical inventory and in reconciling their records of same.
As requested, the Property Unit has provided assistance and information for the writing of new policy statements regarding property matters.
Records Management The purpose of the Records
Managment Unit is t o apply management techniques t o the creation, utilization maintenance, retention, preservation and disposal o f records undertaken t o reduce costs and improve efficiency of the record keeping process. Records Management includes management o f filing and microfilming equipment and supplies; filing and information retrieval systems; files, correspondence, reports and forms management; historical documentations; micrographics, retention programing and vital records protection. The Records Management Office also coordinates printing services for the Department.
Supply The Supply Unit formulates and
maintains inventory stock levels, utilization rates of all departmental supplies, forms, uniforms and weapons.
The Mail Room, also a part of the Supply Unit, is responsible for all incoming mail and the distribution of same. Also, the processing of all outgoing mail, keeping daily logs on dollar amount of postage spent by the department.
Maintenance The Maintenance Unit performs
the overall program of facilities and grounds maintenance at the departments headquarters complex. Also, when feasible, assists Patrol Posts and examining stations in the field.
The Department or
PubI ic S af e t y FAITHFUL YEARS OF SERVICE
Employees with 25 years service: Lt. Mountain A. Greene Cpl. Bobby J. Hawk Mr. Ben A Jordan Sgt. L. Morgan Key SFC June E. Downing TFC John R. Durrence Lt. Jackson A. Lively Sgt. Johnny C. bloss Lt. James C. Smith, Jr.
Employeeswith 30 years service Capt. Roy E. Womack SFC Freddie H. Brown Ms. Betty B. Blount SFC James L. Hawkins Lt. Eugene F. Bartlett
Employee with 40 years service Chief R/O Fred B. Cooley
Retirees Lt. Joel C. Noles TFC Charles F. Duncan TFC Donald E. Harwood Cpl. John P. Daniels, Jr. TFC C. R. Copeland Lt. J. Roscoe Stephens Chief R/O Fred B. Cooley Mrs. Ann P. Todd Mr. Eugene W. Rider Ms. Norma Pauline Grant Capt. John L. Frailey
Employeeswith 20 years service:
1-31-84 3-31-84 3-31-84 3-31-84
4-30-84 5-31-84 7-31-84
8-31-84 9-30-84 9-30-84 10-31-84
Sgt. James C. Bond Sgt. Julius E. Adams Cpl. James E. Allen Cpl. Jerry W. Coffman Sgt. Lenard A. Collins Lt. Gene Cody Sgt. Charles B. Cherry TFC John L. Conley Mr. Jimmy M. Crump SFC Paul R. Campbell Sgt. Edward G. Chapman SFC Robert T. Cook Cpl. Arthur M. Dampier, Jr. Lt. Richard E. Dunn Sgt. John R. Glen SFC James E. Gossett SFC John C. Hanson Ms. Mary R. Hall Sgt. Reuben C. Hoyal Lt. George Johnson Sgt. Harold R. Lloyd Sgt. Lamar Lord Sgt. William J. Lovell Sgt. Everett W. Lumpkin, Jr. Cpl. Meryl W. Marable SFC John P. McGriff Ms Marie 0. Moon Sgt. Cecil V\I. Mullis Capt. Paul W. Nugent Cpl. Franklin D. Payne SFC Kenneth A. Prather SFC Thomas Robinson, Jr. Sr. R/O Jimmy C. Taylor Sgt. Jerry H. Walker sgt. Wayne F. Woods
The Department
Public Safety
Employeeswith fifteen years of service in the following catagories:
Trooper First Class - 1 5 Captain - 1 Lieutenant - 1 Radio Operator - 3 Sergeant - 4 Sr. License Examiner - 3 Principal Secretary - I
Trooper - I
Senior Radio Operator - 1
Corporal - 2
Sergeant First Class - 2
Administrative Secretary - 3
Chief License Examiner - 1
Administrative Clerk - 1
Administrative Aide - 1 EDP Proc. Control Tech. - 1
Personnel Manager III - 1
Driver License Pro. Dir. - 1
There were sixty-nine Department of Public Safety employees with ten years of service in 1984. They fall into the following groups:
Trooper First Class - 37
License Examiner - 5 Senior License Examiner - 4
Secretary Typist Senior - 2 Chief License Examiner - 2 Radio Operator - 2
Sergeant - I
Corporal - 2
Senior Radio Operator - 1 Trooper Cadet - 1
Administrative Secretary - 1
Principal Clerk - 1 Administrative Clerk - 1 Trooper - I Property & Supply Supvr. II - 1 Procurement Officer I - 1 EDP Proc. Control Tech. - 1 FiscalIBudget Administrator - 1 Data Transcription Supvr. - 1
Gen. Trades Supvr. - 1
Gen. Trades Foreman - 1
... IN MEMORIAL
TFC Ronald E. O'Neal Mr. Billy L. Martin Ms. Norma H. Landus RIO Richard A. Conselyea Ms. Lois Reeves
PTATISTICAL SUMMARY STATISTICAL SUMMARY TATISTICAL SUMMARY STATISTICAL SUMMARY
GEORGIA TRAFFIC DEATH TRENDS
TRAFFIC DEATHS
I
DEATHS 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984
1900 1800
ANNUAL MILES TRAVELED IN BILLIONS
BILLION MILES 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984
46
44.5 '
44
4 2
40
38
3 6
3 4
3 2
DEATH RATE PER 100 MILLION MILES TRAVELED
r 1 A L C O H O L RELATED FATALITIES
TOTAL FATALS 1410
TOTAL FATALS 1296
TOTAL FATALS 1229
TOTAL FATALS 1418
Child Restraint 1
Statistics
Children under age four killed in automobile accidents.
CHlL D RESTRAINT
AGE
N 0
1 yr.
No
1 yr.
N 0
2 yrs.
N 0
3 y rs.
Yes
6 mos.
N 0
3 yrs.
N 0
3 yrs.
N 0
18 mos.
N 0
3 rnos.
N 0
2 yrs.
SEX
RACE
COUNTY OF RESIDENCE
COUNTY OF OCCURANCE VEHICLE TYPE
Houston Gwinnett Bibb Toombs Fulton Glynn Bibb Whitfield Stewart Gwinnett
Houston Gwinnett Bibb Toombs Fulton Glynn Dooly Whitfield Stewart Gwinnett
Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car
In 1983, 28 children up t o age 4 were killed. Eighteen were not buckled in a child restraint device, 3 were,
SUMMARY OF MOTOR VEHICLE TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
In
GEORGIA
(11.111
For
YEAR 1 9 8 4
IMonlb or ether 1rlt4l
SUMMARY OF
ACCIDENTS
December 31, 1984
REPORT PREPARED BY
ACCIDENT REPORTING UNIT
'c y:2 ZB. MILEAGE RATES
$~~~d
1 M0l.r ..hl.ll l R f f i C d n t h .
1410
-.
1296 8.6
2 Ellirn.l*d m*., r.n,r,.
4 4 5 9 9 4 2 3 2 7 r n ~ l r . n t r ~ v r i n , r n l l 1 8 0 n ~ l
5.4%
3 Death rate I r I W , W . W O ,~nrlrmllr,
3 ,2 3 .0 6.6
1 F.1.l 2 t C , d < " l rat. per
~ m . m . e wv.hs~e-m,~n .....
I
2 .a 2 .7
3 . 7 rn
%
6
%
3. LOCATION
~~tal
iara,
Yoniatal
n
prooe-cr Ddrral
Tolal
Y"TLI, 0, ic:rmtr
on ~ ~ a o ~ a ~
11
ills
POra'oneanq'e
Tld
oli X ~ ~ L W ~ ~
iara
Yon"l'au'" n
"Or'alxmrl'rl r
v,rrner 1, nrnon, ~~t~t
*mild
lnlurtd
h)
ul
COUNTY
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN H I L L
N
BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY , BROOKS BRYAN
871 670
29 763 1133 901
328 267
31 188 277 246
546 2876 1635
885 5922
919 434 680 750 326
454
10
2798
331
1271 1084 45
831 103 74
3952 2862 368
855
125
359
27
511 544 12
701 109 89
214
18
413 1087 1277
402 4022
572 310 615 453 226
856
7 60
3485 3364
774 717
1200 1153
7363 5995
1232 1139
512 467
233 170
623, 602
320 251
1511 1044 ,1669 773 1265
80 1169 660 542
/ 82 1345 744 487
9 58 16 277 110 57 797 2 3 76
2 54 16 100 80
9 1 77 681 63 2 39 204
1 2 4 11 408
1 8 2 8 324 1515
91 4 86 1094
53 6 409 279 413 23 4351 302
31 2 588 85
53 4
2 239
192
42 6 17 1
19 500 74 155
70
3 278 718
101
6 103 1454
8 724 766 6 216 249 7 372 426 92 1084 1931 62 1142 1247 57 564 745 343 4412 4996 83 648 756
241 241 1 192 193 95 448 621 8 222 237 63 1049 1119 29 1478 1586
50 41 4 6 225 7 8 31 300 19
6 1
72 3 8
119
50
816
45,423.25
41
290
11,990.30
46
472
18,534.00
225 2156 184,668.20
78 1325
73,008.00
31
776
98,691.50
300 5296 467,233.50
19
775
78,363.80
6
247
11.372.50
1
194
15,285.60
621
51,548.90
72
309
15,763.20
38 1157
84,070.50
119
_ 1705 106,726.75
I
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
I
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE
BY COUNTIES
COUNTY
BURKE BUTTS
2145 1734
143 1523 2650 2145 146 139 2 1 5 9 1 6 & 5 53 1772 1993
2700 1759 1960 92 2152 2022 1586 103
79
,1 210 1833
50 1743 2120
9 6 100 6
CA1,HOUN CAMDEN
365 296
12 212 1038 865
20
19 2 205 107
5 229 317
3 3
2564 l o b 5 1499 148 2042 1719 1141
66
51
7 I1 402 2070 52
2293 2410
43
CANDLER CARROLL
1799 1430 1445 64 1606 795 701
38
47 3 205 2088 17 2215 2310
20 3
3452 2556 1452 305 1668 4218 3181 817 655 12 1013 1398 90
/ 2501
371
CATOOSA
3333 2192 946 227 1214 3947 2691 664 397 4 713 385 133 1733 2199
465
CHAKLTON
507 306
25 362 338 224
8
16 1 1 1 59 289 9
287 357
18
CHATHAM
6806 5031 3451 774 4258 3718 3053
54
41
CHATTAHOOCHEE 307 269
13 160 683 568
27
18
CHATTOOGA
2267 2047
321 900 3942 3604 297 197
3569 138 254 3610 3961
7 20
I I
100 172
' 6 178 278
17
13 584 942 254 1202 1780
503
CHEROKEE
6295 6063 1781 339 3533 8882 8615 946 574 1 5 , , 4 9 2 8 1 9 243 4488 5197
926
CLARKE C IAY
1163 1104 305 213
60 687 1487 1427
63
17
540 233 1 5 628 788
2 6
I I
9 234 & 840 607
12
10
111 216 22
9 169 247 ' 41
96 2089
106 2226
33 350 149 2559
23 2333 371 2872
457 3160
18 375
720 4681
1 7 295
503 926
2283 6123
26 814
4 1 288
125,307.65 148,454.96
16.546.10 185.736.95 166,527.50 319,586.75 157,95?.40
18,138.00 351,758.58
15,549.00 172,454.47 437,504.35
59,757.95 17,766.00
I GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE
BY COUNTIES
POST
NO.-
COUNTY
ENFORCEMENT ARRESTS
GA INTER Rnidant STATE
DUI
'I
Speeding
WARNINGS
ALL
G A Raiden,
DISPOSITIONS -CONVICTIONS
PI..
CLAYTON CLINCH
11 1 1 3363 2710 20741
II
I
I
I I
II
I
I
1 1 1 84 2382 2589 2255
I
/I
I
8
8 8 111 97
I
II
I
COFFEE COLQUITT
11 1 1 2281 2086
I1
I
I
1382 1199
I
I
1 1 /I 1 279 1294 3385 3119
I
I
I1
I
I
DISP. NONCONVICT To
I
I AMOUNT FiNES.-NDS FORFEITED AND COSTS
CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE
1) 1 1 1 4046 2293) 2493) 257 3152 2327 1626
II
1
I
I
I
u
I
2051 606 1007 73 1176 2738 825
638 623 1476 1105
22 394 506
I
t
149 862 1590
495 1237
4402 3949 4024
1 1 1006 9271
1
79 3777 2612 2369
1 1 1 67 669 541 498
COUNTY
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
EARLY
716 449
53 484 940 628
5 9
5 5
7 83 566 12 566 661
148
ECHOLS
144
98
5 118 111
79
14
17
1
6 9
58 69
3 2
EFFINGHAM
817 745 185 64 513 762 698
36
37
9 189 550
5 523 744
4 3
ELBEKT
1041 967
108 506 2200 2148
83
68
7 504 506 80 770 1090
39
148 809 32 1 0 1 43 787 39 1129
74,672.80 5,232.25
70,361.50 115,246.50
EMANUEL
4464 3518 750 322 3343 2710 2430 146 128
6 796 3708 276 4276 4780
212
212 4992
397,383.00
EVANS
682 596
55 449 784 712
26
30
6 40 576
9 430 625
52
52 677
49,642.13
FANNIN FAY ETTE FLOYD FORSYTH
955 769 1170 1127 3292 2966 1591 1552
113 598 1239 1043 155
99
3 585
181 686 766
30
4 34 800
76,524.50
52 772 1274 1245 115 110
5 694 306 22 853 1022
5 9
59 1081
60,832.80
9 1 2427 5460 4917 105
48
1 571 1899 80 2244 2550
90
1
91 2641
138,470.50
80 1142 1802 1742 212 177
9 1533 18 78 1523 1629
117
117 1746
145,657.70
FRANKLIN
1795 1111 1049 73 1355 1258 913 1 0 1
68
6 259 1224 53 1421 1546
82
82 1628
93,071.00
FULTON
17237 15228 9331 1175 11430 111225 9987
69
36
9311 391 543 9299 10203
37
2
36 10259 811,138.13
I
COUNTY
I CLASCOCK I CLYNN
GORDON CRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM 1IAI.L HANCOCK IIARALSON
- HARRIS
HART tlEAnD HENRY
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
ALL
ENFORCEMENT ARRESTS
GA INTER Raad.nt STATE
DUI
Spm.dtnp
WARNINGS
ALL
G A Rnudenl
746 674
71 536 818 755
ACCIDENTS
DISPOSITIONS -CONVICTIONS
I
)NTH DISP. NONEONVlCl
~N0a1.n1. D victlonr
AMOUNT
~ FFOIRN~FEESI-TBEODN~ADNSD D COSTS
I
POST COUNTY
HOUSTON
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE
BY COUNTIES
NO.
II
u
ENFORCEMENT
I1
II
ACCIDENTS
DISPOSITIONS. CONVICTIONS
ARRESTS
ALL
GA INTER Rnadsnt STATE
DUI
I Spanding
18
L
I
WARNINGS I
ALL
GA Rnodsnt
I
NO, Accidents
Convoc-
NO,
NO.
tion
?.*?- lnjurin a.'.'
_OR..
"Yll,"
I
Plea
Bond Nolo
Forfn~t -COY.-.
5466 3124 3584 652 4119 3606 2898
5 1166 3055 289 4191 4510
IRWIN JACKSON
694
I1 2710
JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS
689
11 966
112206
n 825
JOHNSON JONES
388 2345
359 2195
34 277 366 341
48
39
4
4 197
5 216 206
108 1773 2216 2055
5 3
5 9
5 254 1562 54 1588 1870
LAMAR
1413 1269 186 105 1006 1739 1576 114
6 5
1018 48 168 1157 1234
LAN IER
433 378
33 313 217 201
33
31
2 128 145 40 282 313
LAURENS
M
I
1- ' DISP. NONCONVICT
Dlrrn~u
151
/ 48
151
134
1
. 25
LIBERTY LINCOLN
4275 315
2096 291
I
z::I AMOUNT FlNEs-NDS FORFEITED AND COSTS
I
POST
COUNTY
LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN McDUFFIE Mc INTOSH MACON MADISON MARION MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY
t
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
NO.
ALL
ENFORCEMENT ARRESTS
GA INTER Rmldent STATE
DUI
1136 937
74
13033 6993 8118 1005
487 481
25
3493 2408 2170 228
1625 452 1320 72
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
ACCIDENTS
DISPOSITIONS -CONVICTIONS
- M INTH-
r DISP. NONCONVICT ?NS
Spmding
WARNINGS
NO.
NO.
NO.
ALL
GA
Acsidenb lnjurin
Rmidwnt
Conviction
G?& PI.
Bond Forteat
Nolo Contondre
Moving Hazard-
ous
Total victiona
No
Dlr)k
TO
Total
Other Non-
- - Author' Conitisr vietiom
524 668 551
56
5 3
2 38 633
8 440 679
2 7
6
9886 5339 4200 529 320 15 699 13643 424 12500 14733 317
3 3
7
- 3 1 7
280 593 588
29
27
2 246 118 57 327 421
10
-1 0
2653 2642 2182 228 139
4 1197 1940 145 2921 2382
5 8
- 58
1368 533 301
71
92
6 267 1545 33 1494 1845
44 1 0
54
650 574 862 819
93 328 753 721
39
33
2 96 264 11 325 3 7 1
18
43 491 927 891 252 192
8
9 638 44 565 691
2 2
1260 1116
65 755 1213 1073
30
30
3 248 573 17 764 837
256
2915 2722
2 202 1673 2128 1950 199 152
4 1902 117 248 1728 2267
6 3
879 648
62 670 947 734
3 2
24
6 57 660 27 680 744
24
1068 900
57 840 556 513
54
62 11 99 1 1 9 1 22 1 2 0 3 1312
17
4655 3083 3861 184 3903 3468 2357 116
59
1 862 3577 212 4322 4651
258
465 433
18 328 280 263
39
34
3 230 63 29 292 322
45
4402 2972 3139 286 3319 2535 1878 141 119
5 3478 392 365 3493 4235
7 1
1827 1456
79 1222 12189 1754 221 128
1 3 7 1 207 35 800 1733
74
2
I AMOUNT
FINES - BONDS COSTS
I
POST
COUNTY
NO.
I,
ENFORCEMENT
ARRESTS
ALL
GA INTER Resident STATE
I D U I Speeding
GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
WARNINGS
ALL
G A Raiden(
ACCIDENTS
. : :F NO.
NO.
AaidenIa lniuria
II DISPOSITIONS -CONVICTIONS
Convic-
tz:;. GFI:,'Ion
Bond Forfeit
Plea
Moving
':id. viz:''
1
MONTH
I
1
DISP. NONCONVICTIONS
I
AMOUNT
Nol Pra
DIC$zED To
Total
NO Other Non-
FINES. BONDS FORFEITEDANO
D m m R r o r d Aui tthi aor. viCctoino.m
COSTS
OCONEE OGLETMORPE
11 1430 1 1346 1
I1
I
I
560 531
1 1 36 1140 111135 11089
I
I
I1
I
50 267 846 820
PAULDING PEACH
1239 1200
89 616 2923 2845
II I 1 I
I
1I I
1102 706 641 87 820 813 682
PICKENS
2094 1907
58 1594 2318 2178
PIERCE
579 482
35 401 494 429
PIKE POLK
1204 1819
1138 1652
50 774 923 885
-
---
158 992 3961 3656
PULASKI
485 459
78 233 518 490
PUTNAM
717 678
53 370 715 670
QUITMAN RABUN
349
II
397
175
I
I
301
1 3 178 882 481
I
I
n
I
32 277 415 342
RANMLPH
1133 747
34 717 A3230 2231
I GEORGIA STATE PATROL
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE
POST
NO.
BY
C-
O-
U-
N
T
I
E ~
S -
-
COUNTY
w RICHMOND
ROCKDALE
11 3926
II
SCHLEY
SCREVEN
MONTH
I
I AMOUNT
FINES BONDS COSTS
Sf'80TgTZ L8T ET
I . , fLT L9T ZT L9 56
T
TT
TT
LLZ 982 7 961 82
LLZ 50E
N013NIHSVM
Ef'f60'Lf
LEO1 9
9
IEOT 868 6 896 fS E 6t Lf SE5 OOL OSL 61 fLS 9
688
N3NNVN
05'88L 'L6 ZOLT 6LT
6LI EZST T8ET 98 SSET 28 Z TT 0Z E6ET L6LT STfT f8
Z
LL81
3NVN
58'585'OET L89T 16
Z 6
5651 ETET 56 SOZT 561 9 781 Z
EL91 6Z8T 9ZZT E f8Z fS9T SL8T
NOLlVN
6P'T9Os8ET 66LT 6EE
6tE 99tT 956 60T Ef8 9fS 8 EEf 6L9 6fLZ TS6E E09 622
2667 6182
NPXlVfl
SZ'8LfgTOE 06'666'8E
fEOE 89 S9f 91
89
1
9 T
9962 8'7x2 96 6ff LSE TZ
EPST LZET Z ZLT 952 5
f
OEZ OLLZ Ef6Z f9LT 9TZ
SOT 96 fL5 999 822 15
866Z SfZE ffE 66E
NOSdfl NOINfl
00'8ES'Sf
ZLL 15
E
8'7
TZL OZL 81 Z8f TZZ I
89 09 9fE 66E 669 Zf 995 E9L E98
S33INL
TE'OCL'ZIT ESZZ E91 Z
9
0602 8502 ZZK SE9T EEE Z Sf 58 899 00TT 9661 18 8E8T 1901 80EZ
83N8llI
00'8EO'E6T TBOE 911
911: 5262 E8SZ 88 9TSZSZE 6 f8Z I T fESZ 590E 8LSZ 69E TE8T 99ZE 9LTf
dflO8.I
09'fSL'IST OTLZ ZIT
9f 99
8651 905Z 55 0871 E9 Z ZZ 8Z EOS 685 6LOZ 9E 8091 TSLT ZSZZ
N31Lfl3NL
OI'TOZ'ET
LEI 8
8
6ZT TZT f 61 90T
Z5 E9 ZSE Sff LTT 82
T8T LTZ
SNMOL
00'TZf '08 EZ8 OS
0s
ELL L69 6E ZS9 28 6 6
VET fZ5T E6LT ZTZT 891
SftlT ?f8T
SBW0O.I
OO'Of0'8ES T6SL 80T
80T E8fL TLOL 56 VZOL f9E 9 LLT 6ZE L9SZ 6T6E 9L95 ETE ES8f ESEE Sf69
I dI L
00'8L8'SST 068T E6 T
Z 6
L6LT 8tST ZL
SZLI L 9ZT 9TZ SfET E9ST L8ET LET
SBLT
-
-
-
-
I
Iaig::a S l S 0 3
a~va3113j~oj
SONOB. S 3 N I j
,vlO1
1NnOWV
suo!&a!fi YII!
nl~usq
-U03 -uo~
-lOl(lnv p ~ o r n 4 e q l ~ ON
tl0 =ld
1*11
01
ION
SN01131AN03NON 'dSIO
neld
ruo~la!fi
sno .p,szaH Ilu!ro,
erpuai
.uo3 oloN
I~*W" AIllnD
puon
uo,l
.a1ruo3
- SN01131AN03 SNOIlISOdSlCl
L
-
-
Ult!
!
=!rn!u~ .ON
nu.op!w ON
luaP!uU VO
SDNINUVM
SlN30133V
1
-
~ u ! p a a d s ~ n a 3 l v l s ~u.p!-tr
U31NI VD
SIS~UUV lN3W33UOjN3
HlNOW
'ON
S311Nfl03 A 8 33N31t13dX3 lN3M133tJOJN3 aNV lN30133V
EZZZ
SWOHL
-
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I GEORGIA STATE P A T R O L
I
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE
BY COUNTIES
""Other" includes all activity not identified with a particular county. Some reporting stations delineated certain city activity (including City o f Atlanta, which was broken out o f t w o reporting stations) while others simply grouped all their activity which was generated outside their territory as "other".
ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES
COUNTY
HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY
ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE *
D e a t h s Injuries A c c i d e n t s
ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE **
TOTAL S p e e d i n g D r i v i n g
A r r e s t s BY
U I By
County County
8
219
319
2466
2019
5 7
9
133
253
2037
1331
111
15
160
339
774
421
83
1.
58
85
812
536
45
6
477
1102
1349
1069
3 5
11
948
2067
5466
4119
652
4
6 4
139
694
521
42
19
3 2 6
655
2710
2125
7 6
4
4 5
112
689 ,
556
3 4
5
113
244
966
472
121
12
100
152
2206
1719
131
4
7 4
137
825
617
67
4
41
48
388
2 7 7
3 4
5
59
5 3
2345
1773
108
0
7 1
113
1413
1006
105
3
4 4
63
433
313
3 3
7
410
1123
6077
5075
276
6
117
115
1684
I348
87
12
359
662
4275
2362
515
1
41
86
315
192
2 1
2
5 4
64
1136
524
7 4
2 1
876
2360
13033
9886 1005
4
168
307
487
280
2 5
2
66
188
650
328
9 3
8
202
337
862
491
4 3
3
3 3
3 3
1260
755
6 5
4
193
458-
3493
2653
228
6
121
179
1625
1368
7 2
6
196
357
2915
1673
202
6
28
3 3
879
670
6 2
15 7
119 101
288 293
1068 4655
840 3903
~57
184
4
3 3
39
465
328
18
7
150
313
4402
3 3 19
286
n
188
355
1877 1222
7 9
COUNTY
TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH
mR
. mrAL
-
ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE *
Deaths In-bries A c c i d e n t s
ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE **
TOTAL S p e e d i n g D r i v i n g
A r r e s t s BY
U I By
County County
2 1
693
1691
4176
2578
369
7
133
201
2308
1994
81
6
49
6 2
863
699
4 2
5
I 3
9
104
105
399
2 28
5 1
240
5 7 7
3245
1764
2 16
619
1107
2819
603
229
6
287
514
1875
1226
131
11
2 75
764
1877
1415
84
4
5 5
8 5
889
750
2 9
4
132
394
305
196
28
5
187
410
1198
898
7 3
1
18
18
783
683
17
6
38
6 3
860
599
4 4
1
120
169
5 5 5
3 29
3 7
15
940
2302
5615
1963
426
5
40
66
707
448
5 3
7
9 3
2 14
983
651
7 8
3
8 2
169
337
196
2-3
2
181
295
2188
1850
5 2
6309
3478
266
1410 75,883 192,515 341,165 . 234,869 21,215
* Accident experience - a l l reporting agencies * * Enforcement experience - GSP only
FATALITIES BY M O N T H FOR 1984 I
JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
TOTAL
RURAL
URBAN
TOTAL
I
1410
PEDESTRIAN AND MOTORCYCLE F A T A L I T I E S BY MONTH FOR 1 9 8 4
PEDESTRIANS
MOTORCYCLES
JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
TOTAL
194
8 0
HOLIDAY TRAFFIC TOLL
FOR 1984
HOLIDAY MEMORIAL DAY FOURTH OF JULY LABOR DAY
CHRISTMAS
I NEW YEARS
ACCIDENTS 1507 438 1174
1811 1438
INJURIES 570 172 480 573 629 540
TOTALS
8040
I
ONE (1) FATALITY EVERY 5.1 HOLIDAY HOURS.
FATALITIES 18 2 18 17 2 9 14
COUNTIES WITHOUT A TRAFFIC DEATH FOR ONE YEAR (1984) LAMAR MURRAY SCHLEY TAYLOR TOWNS
COUNTIES WITHOUT A TRAFFIC DEATH FOR TWO YEARS (1983 & 1984) SCHLEY
HOURS
GSP ACTIVITY REPORT
ACTIVITY
Enforcement Activity
A c c i d e n t Number Accident Hours F a t a l i t i e s Number I n j u r i e s Number Arrest M/H Total Speeding - 55 mph Speeding 56-70 mph Speeding 71-80 mph Speeding 80 mph A r r e s t DUI Alcohol/Drugs Arrest Mechanical Defec-ts Arrest M/H Truckers Arrest Other Total Arrest Littering A r r e s t MVI A r r e s t IGM Arrest Other Truckers Arrest Total Interstate Warning M/H Total Warning Speeding Warning Mechanical Defects Warning M/H Truckers Warning Other Total Warning L i t t e r i n g Warning MVI Warning IGM Warning Other Truckers Warning Total I n t e r s t a t e P e d e s t r i a n Enforcement No. C r i m i n a l I n v . No. Criminal Inv. Hrs. C r i m i n a l Apprehended No. S t o l e n Vehs. Recovered No. O t h e r S t o l e n P r o p e r t y No. Aid t o O t h e r Agency No. Aid t o Other Agency Hours M o t o r i s t A s s i s t s Number Road Check Hours P a r t n e r Number Partner Hours Enforcement Patrol Hours T o t a l Enforcement Number
Total Enforcement Hours
Non-Enforcement A c t i v i t y D i g n i t a r y S e c u r i t y Number Dignitary Security Hours S e c u r i t y D e t a i l Number S e c u r i t y Detail Hours E s c o r t Number Escort Hours Relay Medical Number Relay Medical Hours O t h e r Relay Number Aviation Detail Hours Safety Education Detail H r s . MVI D e t a i l Hours Radio Detail Hours Driver License Detail H r s . Training Hours-Instructor Training Hours-Student C i v i l Disorder Hours Disaster Hours Vehicle/Radio Repair Hours Court Hours Other Non-Enforcement Hrs. Special Detail Hours Recruitment Hours Drivers License Hearing Hours License Pickup Hours L i c e n s e Pickup Number
Total Non-Enforcement Hours
344739
Administrative Duty S t a f f Meeting Hours Report Hours Inspection Hours Complaint I n v e s t i g a t i o n No. Complaint Investigation H r s . Other Investigation Hrs. Other A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Hrs.
6740 44000
5294 1297 4678 3974 140874
T o t a l A d m i n i s t r a t i v e Hrs.
205560
Leave Hours Sick/Emergency Hours Annual Leave Hours Pass/Day Off Hours Compensatory Hours M i l i t a r y Leave Hours AWOL Hours Leave W/O Pay Hours Suspension Hours
Total Leave Hours
891562
Total Other Miles
Total Patrol Miles
Total Miles Traveled
1 Total Hours on Duty
531756 22054919 22586675
2780864
CSP SPECIAL OPERATIONS ACTIVITY REPORT
Emission Control Activity
IGM S t a t i o n V i s i t s No. IGM S t a t i o n V i s i t Hours I G M S t a t i o n I n s p e c t i o n No. IGM S t a t i o n I n s p e c t i o n Hours School Bus I n s p e c t i o n No. School Bus Compaint No. School Bus Insp/comp Hours IGM I n v e s t i g a t i o n No. IGM I n v e s t i g a t i o n Hours IGM T r a i n i n g No. IGM Training Hours IGM T r a i n i n g A t t e n d a n c e
T o t a l IEM D e t a i l Hours
Safety Education Activity Number S c h o o l s V i s i t e d School Program Number School Program Attendance School Program Hours Films Shown Number S l i d e Program Number Pamplets Distributed B i c y c l e Rodeo Number Bicycle Rodeo Attendance B i c y c l e Rodeo Hours D . D . C . Number D.D.C. Attendance D.D.C. Hours C i v i c Club Number Civic Club Attendance Civic Club Hours Employee Group Number Employee Group Attendance Employee Group Hours O t h e r Program Number Other Program Attendance Other Program Hours Radio Spots Taped Radio Spots Aired Radio/TV Programs
I Study Preparation Hours
Safety Education Contacts P u b l i c R e l a t i o n s V i s i t Numbers Pub1 i c R e l a t i o n V i s i t Hours S a f e t y Education Admins. Hours
3444
6 1 78 3411 3681
0
Total Safety Education Hours
11739
Aviation Activity A i r c r a f t Maintenance Hours F l i g h t Number Flight Hours T r a f f i c Enforcement Hours S e a r c h e s Number Searches Hours Aviation Admins. Hours
Total Aviation Hours
11209
Drug/Alcohol Awareness Program
School I n s t r u c t i o n Hours
961 1
School V i s i t a t i o n Hours
6442
School Program Number
7220
School Program Attendance
1 9754
# of Public School Students Pass
69027
# o f Public School Students In-comp. 1506
# o f Public School Students F a i l e d 3224
# of Private School Students Pass
4740
# o f P r i v a t e Students In-comp.
4 3
# o f P r i v a t e S c h o o l s S t u d e n t s F a i l e d 44
# of Others Students
132
In-Service Training Hours
2469
Total Alcohol/Drug Awareness Hours 18522
sFATALITIES BY POST
POST
FATALITIES
1. . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
POST
FATALITIES
25. . . . . . . . . . . . .52
26. . . . . . . . . . . . .14
27 . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
28. . . . . . . . . . . . .23
29. . . . . . . . . . . . .18
30. . . . . . . . . . . . .24
31. . . . . . . . . . . . .28
32. . . . . . . . . . . . .39
33 . . . . . . . . . . . .22
34. . . . . . . . . . . . .15
35 . . . . . . . . . . . . 0
36. . . . . . . . . . . . .16
37. . . . . . . . . . . . .68
38. . . . . . . . . . . . .14
39. . . . . . . . . . . . .12
40. . . . . . . . . . . . .21
41. . . . . . . . . . . . .17
42. . . . . . . . . . . . .50
43. . . . . . . . . . . . .18
44 ............ 7
45. . . . . . . . . . . . .14
46. . . . . . . . . . . . .23
47 . . . . . . . . . . . .132
. . . . . . . . .18
FATALITIES BY TROOP
TROOP
FATALITIES
G H K TOTAL
116 125 132 1410
License Examiners Yearly Report
I
EXAMINATIONS APPROVED
ROAD
WRITTEN SIGNS TESTS
EYE
Class 1-L Class-1 Class 2-L Class 2 Class 3-L Class 3 Class 4-L Class 4 Class 5-L Class 5
21246 5,699 10,036
1151 2 4,259 8,064
Class 1-L Class 1 Class 2-L Class 2 Class 3-L Class 3 Class 4-L Class 4 Class 5-L Class 5
FA1LURES
ROAD
SIGNS TESTS
EYE
3,136 3,199
42 47 39 16
43 34 57 5 1
35,102 1,907
Code A Code B Code C Code E Code F Code G Code H Code l Code J
RESTRICTED LICENSE
Code K Code M Code N Code 0 Code Q Code S Code T Code V
Total DPS-23 Issued for Year ..........378,003
Total Renewals
Issued for Year ...... ....815,850
Total Out-of-State License ... 100,249
2,969 2.696
1,746,
TOTAL $25.00 License
TOTAL $20.00 License TOTAL $ 8.50 License TOTAL $ 4.50 License TOTAL $ 2.00 License TOTAL Class 1-L ($1.50) TOTAL All Other $1.50 Lic. TOTAL Inmate License TOTAL Vet. Lic. (include Vet., Limited Permit & Cls. 1-L) TOTAL Vets w / o Photo (Update vet. 2, 3.4, and 5-L) TOTAL National Guard License TOTAL Temporary Permits GRAND TOTAL Lic. Fee's TOTAL $3,00 Public ID Cards TOTAL Vets ID TOTAL Voids (exclude Public ID) TOTAL Voids (Public ID Cards) TOTAL Retakes (Film) TOTAL Retakes (Error) TOTAL Retakes (All) TOTAL News Media ID Cards TOTAL Department ID Cards TOTAL 120 Day Limited Permits TEMP Handicap Parking Permits PERM Handicap Parking Permits Consul General Oral Test
REVOCATION AND
SUSPENSION SECTION 0
SUSPENSIONS REVOCATIONS CANCELLATIONS
YEAR
YEAR
YEAR
Ma1 e Female
Court Department
BREAKDOWN
F a i l ure t o Appear License Surrendered i n L i e u o f Bond
19,389 5,119
P h y s i c a l I F l e n t a l D i sa b i 1 it y
Racing Homicide by Vehicle
Points Suspension - 1 year
- P o i n t s S u s p e n s i o n 3 y e a r s
Driving w i t h 1icense suspendedlrevoked
32 64 5,799 588
9,053
L i m i t e d Permit Revoked
Limited Permit Cancel1ed
- C a n c e l l a t i o n s O t h e r
Habitual Violator
HV P r o b a t i o n a r y L i c e n s e Revoked
tiV Probationary License Cancel 1ed
DUI Suspension - 1 year
22,752
- DUI Suspension - 3 y e a r s
Leaving Scene o f A c c i d e n t 1 year
14,331 1,256
- L e a v i n g Scene o f A c c i d e n t - 3 y e a r s
3 5
Conditional License Suspended Speeding 1,483
- C o n d i t i o n a l L i c e n s e Revoked S p e e d i n g
Conditional License Suspended - DUI
2 7
- C o n d i t i o n a l L i c e n s e Revoked DUI
Conditional License Suspended - Other
247
Conditional License Revoked - Other
A1 1 O t h e r S u s p e n s i o n s
4,368
TOTALS
84,543
REINSTATED
2 2 7
114 13 4 8
11,662
Court Department
CORRECTED REPORTS
Year
3,375
OTHER ACTIONS
HEARINGS Schedul ed Decisions
1,785 1,192
NOLO CONTENDERES
Year
774
INSURANCE REINSTATEMENTS
DU I
728
A l l Others
187
REVOCATION AND SUSPENSION SECTION
(continued )
DRIVER IPIPROVEMENT CLINIC REINSTATEi4ENTS
DU I
18,130
A1 1 O t h e r s
5,658
HABITUAL VIOLATORS Exam Passed
2,861
PHYSICAL/MENTAL DISABILITY
Exam Passed
5 1
RESCINDED DU I H V A l l Others
1,437 313
2,399
MISCELLANEOUS
Number Paying Fee ($20.00)
279
Amount Paid
$5,580
Number P a y i n g Fee ($25.00)
29,358
Amount F ? i d
Pending DUI Nolo Contendere Orders
P e n d i n g DUI No1o C o n t e n d e r e D e l e t e d
- D I C e r t i f i c a t e E n t e r e d f o r N o l o C r e d i t T i c k e t N o t On
Pickups Issued f o r Driver ' s L icenses
$7 33,950 26,645 15,862 2,388 4,468
Pickups Served
1,860
Bai 1 Recei p t s Received From Courts
4,871
Failure t o Appear Reinstatements
14,357
Warning Letters Issued Limited Permits Issued
51,927 1,931
Suspensions Expired
10,271
SR-25 F a i l u r e t o Appear Forms Forwarded Out o f S t a t e f o r Suspension F a i l u r e t o Appear Forms Forwarded Out of S t a t e f o r Reinstatement HV P r o b a t i o n a r y D r i v e r ' s L i c e n s e s Approved HV P r o b a t i o n a r y D r i v e r ' s L i c e n s e s D e n i e d
1 11,152 5,707 4,414
185
HV Probationary Driver's Licenses Issued
2,585
C e r t i f i e d Records Driver Improvement C l i n i c Point Reductions
8,143 2 35
Appeals Filed
4 6
A p p e a l s Won b y D e p a r t m e n t
7
Appeals Lost by Department
7
D.O.T. W a r n i n g L e t t e r s
1,497
D.O.T. S u s p e n s i o n s
4 37
D.O.T. R e i n s t a t e m e n t Fees ( $ 1 0 . 0 0 )
6 2
Amount Paid
$620
SAFETY RESPONSIBILITY
Accident Reports Received A c c i d e n t Cases Processed A c c i d e n t Cases Closed Suspension Orders Issued Rei n s t a t e m e n t s Pickup Orders Issued Second N o t i c e s Hearings Status Reports Reinstatement Fees S e c u r i t y Deposit as o f 12-31-83 Security Posted Security Disbursed Security Returned P r o p e r t y Bonds Posted P r o p e r t y Bonds Re1eased T o t a l Now On D e p o s i t W i t h D.O.A.S.
MEDICAL ADVISORY BOARD
Cases recommended f o r r e v o c a t i o n b y t h e Department Cases recommended f o r r e t u r n o f l i c e n s e by way o f
renewal , reinstatement, etc., by Department
Medical reports received from physicians Reports received from individuals, other than
physicians, regarding subjects with physicall mental disabil i t i e s Licenses revoked due t o r e p o r t s from physicians Licenses revoked due t o r e p o r t s from i n d i v i d u a l s other than physicians Cases r e f e r r e d t o t h e D r i v e r s L i c e n s e A d v i s o r y Board Cases recommended f o r r e v o c a t i o n by Board
Cases recommended f o r r e t u r n e d l i c e n s e s b y renewal, reinstatement, r e - t e s t i n g by Board
* includes cases t o remain revoked
302 *
190 424
6 8 2 5 4
2 6 15 11
SELF- INSURANCE
On December 31, 1983, a1 1 c u r r e n t c e r t i f i c a t e s o f s e l f - i n s u r a n c e e x p i r e d based o n new r u l e s and r e g u l a t i o n s approved b y t h i s Department e f f e c t i v e on November 4, 1982.
F o r t h e y e a r 1984, t h e r e were 25 new c e r t i f i c a t e s o f s e l f - i n s u r a n c e i s s u e d t o be e f f e c t i v e t h r o u g h Decenber 31, 1984.
NO-FAULT
NOTICES OF CANCELLATIONS
Mailed to Insured ........................................................................................ Completed & Returned by Insured ................................................................... Suspension Orders Issued ............................................................................. Suspension Orders Withdrawn ....................................................................... Reinstatements ........................................................................................... NumberPaying$10.00Fee ............................................................................
0 0 0 3. 302 609 621
CONVICTION TICKETS
Suspension Orders Issued ............................................................................. 10.068 Court Corrections ........................................................................................ 233 Reinstatements ........................................................................................... 5.954 Number Paying $25.00 Fee ............................................................................ 6.266
HEARINGS
Number Scheduled ...................................................................................... 66
Number Re-Scheduled ..................................................................................
1
Number Cancelled .......................................................................................
6
Suspension Withdrawn .................................................................................
1
Suspension Upheld ...................................................................................... 39
OTHER
Second Suspension Notices .........................................................................
0
DPS 22-A ................................................................................................. 2. 944
DPS 832 .................................................................................................. 1.016
DPS 1101 ................................................................................................ 3.315
DPS 1102 ................................................................................................ 1.198
DPS 1107 .................................................................................................. 105
MOTOR VEHICLE RECORDS
Request for 3 year records ....................................................................... 1.705. 958
Request for 7 year records .......................................................................
83.447
Revenue Collected: For three year requests ......................................................................... For seven year requests ........................................................................
3.581.763.00 228.812.00
TOTAL
$3.810.575.00
Total photo enlargements for Police Agencies ...............................................
8. 680
IMPLIED CONSENT
AFFIDAVITS ..............................................................................................................
HEARINGS SET ................................ ..........................................................................
HEARINGS . SUSPENSION UPHELD ..............................................................................
HEARINGS . SUSPENSION WITHDRAW .........................................................................
HEARINGS -- FAILED TO APPUR .................................................................................. HEARINGS -- RESCHEDULES .......................................................................................
6.045 2.450
489 1. 142
185 366
CASES ON APPEAL ....................................................................................................
50
APPEALS WON BY LICENSEE ........................................................................................
.2
SUSPENSIONS UPHELD BY COURT ...............................................................................
7
, AGENCY APPEAL ........................................................................................................
65
TRANSCRIPTS REQUESTED BY ATTORNEY (40.00) ..............................................................
17
REINSTATEMENTS ..................................................................................................... SECOND NOTICES ......................................................................................................
IMPLIED CONSENT CLASS INSTRUCTOR HOURS ..............................................................
.1 176
2. 191 104
TICKET CODING
Conviction reports receivedfrom Georgia Courts .......................................................
900.677
Processed ........................................................................
804. 521
. Total Amount Paid ............................................................................................ $201 130.25
Conviction reports receivedfrom out of State ........................................................... Processed ........................................................................
Non Resident Compact on out of state driver's license Suspensions ................................................................................................. Reinstatements .............................................................................................
Number of people moved to Georgia .................................................................... Number of people movedfrom Georgia .................................................................
COMPUTER SERVICES
I
CALENDAR YEAR 1984
Affidavit ................................................... 2.9 17
Bail Bond ................................................. 5. 120
Cancellations ............................................ 492
Corrections ............................................... 6.095
FTA Deletes .............................................. 5.943
FTA Green Cards ....................................... 10.106
Hearing Decisions ...................................... 1.570
HVAppeal ................................................
48
Envelope Served ........................................ 274
Envelope Surr'd & Served ............................ 1.867
HVClinic ................................................. 2.842
HV Duplicate ............................................ 573
HV Green Cards ........................................ 4.609
HV Orders ................................................ 125
HV Personal Service ................................... 4.455
HV Prob. Lic. Application .............................. 2.545
HV Prob. Lic. Revoked ................................. 612 HV Prob. Lic. Cancelled ................................ 1.079
Juvenile Court Susp....................................
17
1C Hearing Request ..................................... 2.1 01
1C Hearing Decision .................................... 2.070
IC Green Cards .......................................... 4.437
IC Appeal .................................................
41
License Attached ....................................... 21$156
LP Application & Served .............................. 2.503
LP Cancellation .........................................
86
LP Revoked ..............................................
8
NF FR-4 ...................................................
0
. NF Delete ................................................. 3.562
NF Fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 192
NF Decision ..............................................
53
NF Microfilm .............................................
0
NF Service ............................................... 732
NF Hearing Request ....................................
80
NF Certificate of Insurance ...........................
0
Combined Records ..................................... 658
Deceased Purges ....................................... 185
Second Notice ...........................................
0
DUI Nolo Delete ......................................... 15.598
Refusal to Weigh Suspension ........................
1
SR Suspension .....................................
0
SR Delete ...........................................
234
Nolo ..................................................
3.1 39
National Driver Register ..........................
154
Physical Disability .................................
228
Racing ...............................................
0
Surrendered License .............................. 17.317
Point Credit .........................................
261
SR-22 & SR-26 Insurance ....................... 10.499
Retirements ......................................... 51.595
Nolo Credits .........................................
2.1 37
Edit Errors - New Applications ................ 10.045
. Correction to Citations ............................ 69. 127
Scanner Tapes ..................................... 1 183.304
Forms & Green Cards ............................ 243.754
MVR's ................................................ 170.996
No Fault .............................................
0
Edit Errors -Scanners .......................... 92.643
Permit Errors .......................................
603
Permit Tape .........................................
2. 0 3 8
Refusal to Respond ................................
7
Court Suspension .................................
2
No Insurance Bond Forfeiture ...................
463
IC Appeal Hearing Decisions ....................
6
NF Hearing Cancellations ........................
4
Mandatory Appeal .................................
1
No Fault SR-22A Cancellations .................
19
180 Day Permit Extension .......................
264
DPS-23's ............................................ 370.559
Accidents & Corrections ................... .... 172.006
Tickets ............................................... 6 12.865
License Attached .................................. 23. 123
MVI ................................................... 607.815
Trooper Activity ....................................
1.852
Vehicle Accounting ............................... 36. 147
Supply ...............................................
0
Drug Alcohol ....................................... 143.427
Arrest .............................................. 59.230
I
GRANT TOTAL ............................ 3.991. 616
BUDGET
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY SCHEDULE OF APPROVED BUDGET ALLOTMENTS
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1984
ORIGINAL LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL
SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATION
PERSONAL SERVICES
$ 38,475.1 60.00 $
19,900.00
REGULAR OPERATING EXPENSES
6,902,998.00 (-) 114,855.00
TRAVEL
201,000.00
4,800.00
MOTOR VEHICLE EQUIPMENT PURCHASES
4,486,549.00 (-) 1,520,402.00
PUBLICATIONSAND PRINTING
478,000.00
28,000.00
EQUIPMENT PURCHASES
374.1 02.00
2,000.00
COMPUTER CHARGES
2,906,513.00
78.1 00.00
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
111,574.00 - ) 3.182.00
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
610,623.00
31,000.00
PER DIEM, FEES AND CONTRACTS
CAPITAL OUTLAY
75,000.00
POSTAGE
660,500.00 (-1 98.318.00
CONVICTION REPORTS
180,000.00
5,000.00
PEACE OFFICERS TRAINING GRANT
1,591,659.00
18,200.00
DRIVER LICENSE PROCESSING
714,000.00
$ 58,109.309.00 $(-)1,526,617.00
GOVERNOR'S EMERGENCY
FUND
$ 15,000.00
$ 35,000.00
BUDGET ADJUSTMENTS
TOTAL
$
97,845.00 $ 38,592,905.00
77,035.00
282,835.00
41,718.00 391,506.00
(-1 71,865.00
2,200.00 2,020.00
547.71 8.00 782,608.00 2,912,748.00 1 10,592.00 643,643.00
2,879.00 15,000.00
565,061.00 200,000.00
714,000.00 $ 1,074,965.00 $ 57,692,657.00
FUNDING PROVIDED
Appropriation Allotments State Farms
Federal Funds Other Revenue Retained
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY STATE REVENUE COLLECTIONS FUND STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1984
I
STATE REVENUE COLLECTIONS
CASH RECEIPTS
Drivers' License Fees Class 1 Learners' Licenses One (1)Year - 108,004 at $1.50 Class 1 and 2 Licenses Four (4)Years -898,863 at $4.50 Class 3,4, and 5 Licenses Six (6) Months - 23,451 at $1.50 Four (4)Years -44,870 at $8.50
Class 1 Learners, 1, 2, 3,4, 5, and Veterans, Inmate and National Guard Licenses - 45,294 at No Charge
Department of News Media ldentification Cards 1,017 at No Charge
Duplicate Licenses -All Classes 6,212 at $1.50 Habitual Violators Reinstatement Licenses
1 at $10.00 3,046 at $25.00
Limited Permits 2.1 22 at $2.00
Probationary Licenses 2,451 at $20.00
Public ldentification Cards 20,056 at $3.00
Other Fees Accident Reports Accident Restoration Commercial Drivers' Training Driver Improvement Drivers' License Reports Emergency Light Applications Implied Consent Transcript Copies Motor Vehicle Inspection Stickers and Certificates News Media ldentification Cards Application Fees No Fault Restoration and Conviction Race Track Licenses Revocation and Suspense Restoration Fees Small Firearms Licenses Unclassified Revenue
Total Cash Receipts
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY BUDGET FUND
STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1984
I
PERSONAL SERVICES Salaries and Wages Employer's Contributions for: F.I.C.A. Retirement Health lnsurance Personal Liability lnsurance Unemployment Compensation lnsurance
EXPENDITURES
REGULAR OPERATING EXPENSES Motor Vehicle Expenses Supplies and Materials Repairs and Maintenance Power, Water and Natural Gas Rents (Other Than Real Estate) lnsurance and Bonding Workers' Compensation and Indemnities (See Schedule) Tuition and Scholarships Assessments by Merit System Other Operating Expenses (See Schedule)
TRAVEL MOTOR VEHICLE EQUIPMENT PURCHASES (See Schedule) PUBLICATIONS AND PRINTING EQUIPMENT PURCHASES COMPUTER CHARGES REAL ESTATE RENTALS (See Schedule) TELECOMMUNICATIONS PER DIEM, FEES AND CONTRACTS
Per Diem and Fees Contracts (See Schedule)
CAPITAL OUTLAY Per Diem, Fees and Contracts Contracts (See Schedule)
OTHER POSTAGE Supplies and Materials CONVICTION REPORTS Other Expenditures PEACE OFFICERS TRAINING GRANT Grants to Counties, Cities and Civil Divisions (See Schedule) DRIVER LICENSE PROCESSING Other Expenditures
Excess of Funds Available over Expenditures
188,085.08
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY BUDGET FUND
STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1984
REVENUES
APPROPRIATION ALLOTMENTS General Appropriation Supplemental Appropriation Governor's Emergency Fund
Less: Lapsed Funds
FEDERAL FUNDS (See Schedule) Direct Grants Sub-Grants
OTHER REVENUES RETAINED (See Schedule) Total Revenues
FUNDS AVAILABLE
CARRY-OVER FROM PRIOR YEAR
Transfer from Reserved Fund Balances Federal Funds Highway Safety, Office of Transportation, Department of Planning and Administration Public Safety, Department of Rural Fire Prevention and Control, PL 92-419 Rural Community Fire Protection Grant No. 41-82-13-11
Total Funds Available