1985 annual report [1985]

DEPARTMEN OF PUBLIC SAFE

1985 FACT SHEET
1362 people were killed in Georgia traffic accidents in 1985.81,054were injured in a total of 212,393accidents. Of those killed 532 were under 25 years of age. 424 of the fataliti Travel in Georgia for There were 5.4mil At the end of 198 67%of all motorc DSP suspended 92,4 83% of all fatal accide surfaces. 25% of all accidents resulted in at least o
Pedestrian fatalities - 136 male; 63 female; 199 total killed; 133 night; 66 day (6:00a.m. - 6:00p.m.)
On front cover: Photo top right (left to right) LIE Rosa Warrenand R/O Eric Smith: Photo bottom (left to right) TFCLynwood Volley, TFCDanny Spruiell, TFCRhonda Page and Cadet Mark C b k

Table of Contents
1985 Highlights. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Board Members. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3. Organizational Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Statistical Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
Georgia Traffic Death Trends . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Fatality Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 DUI Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2.2 Child RestraintStatistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-23 1985 Fatalities by Month . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42 1985 Holiday Traffic Toll ................43 GSP Activity Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44
GSP Special Operations
Activity Report. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45 Drivers License Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Budget. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY

II'NU5lt<, IHI, MATION O F t ICEH

COMMISSIONER

OFFICER
I I.-- - ..- -..-- ---..- -- - - - .

COMMAND OFFICER
1-1

( A D J U T A N T

TRWPG TRWP K

q=-] SERVICES
TROOP H
AVIATION

SAFETY DUCAT ION
I
EMISSION

1 1

COMPTROLLER DIVISION
I

61 h-1 SERVICES

PROCUR PROPERTY

VEHITLE SERVICES
OPERA1 PLANN

--------- CHAIN OF COMMAND -PRIMARY C H A I N OF COMMAND I N ABSENCE OF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE
Colonel

North Field Commander

South Field Commander

Major C. R. Pinyan

Colonel Hugh Hardison

Major T. H. Braswell

Commissioner's Office

EXECUTIVE SECURITY
Twenty troopers and two radio operators are assigned to Executive Security. These twenty troopers furnish continual security for the Governor and his family, the Lieuten ant Governor and the Speaker of the House. Executive Security operates directly under the Commissioner.

PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
The Professional Standards was created to provide legal, administrative, and investigative assistancefor the Department of Public Safety.
During 1985,93pre-employment background investigations and 3 4 internal investigations were performed.
In May 1985, the Georgia State Patrol Counter-Terrorist Unit, consisting of 24sworn personnel trained in hostage rescuetechniques, scouting and patrolling in both urban and rural environments, riot control and related skills, was assigned to the Professional Standards Section.

Fast Lane Blues Campaign

PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
A major function of the Public lnformation Office was the coordinating of information throughout the department and between the department and the news media. During 1985 several public service campaigns were handled by the Public lnformation Office.
Several of those projects were done inconjunction with other state agencies and attached agencies. Many man hours were used in the promotion of the emission control campaign. The campaign involved informing the driving public of the new laws and how those laws affected them.
Day-to-day activities of the department were reported through the Daily Bulletin. DPS employees were encouragedto report any news from their area to the Public Information Office. By doing this, all employees of the department were aware of the activities from north Georgia to south Georgia.
The Department of Public Safety Photo Lab and the Graphics Unit were also included i n the Public lnformation section. All departmental photos and accident reports pictures were processed by the Photo Lab. In-houseart work was handled bythe Graphics Unit. Most brochure and cover designs, layoutfor departmental manualsand billboards were alsodone in-house by the Graphics Unit.

Executive C

The Personnel Office announces all position vacancies, screens all applicants for employment and, by working with the State Merit System, insuresthat each new employee is qualified for appointment and/or promotion.

In 1985 there was one trooper school which consisted of twentytwo cadets. This was the 60th Trooper School. There were sixteen weeksof intensivetraining 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.

Major K. D. Rearden
PERSONNEL
The Personnel Office is responsiblefor maintaining personnel records for all employeesof the Department of Public Safety and its attached agencies. All sick, annual, compensatory, and forfeited leave records are maintained by the Personnel Office along with all employment status changes. All insurance, deferred compensation, performance reports, faithful service awards, and workers' compensation claims and problems are handled by the Personnel Off ice.
During the past year, the Personnel Office was responsible for the implementation of the Fair Labor Standards Act within the Department and for monitoring Departmental implementation of the Statewide Class Reassignmentwhich was effective on July 1, 1985.

In addition to the aforementioned responsibilities, POST certification for new troopers is initiated by the Personnel Office and all warrants and commissions for Department officers are completed by the Personnel Office.
TRAINING UNIT
The Training Section partakes i n the delivery and planning of various programs related to law enforcement and military throughout the state. In additionthe section assists i n the investigation of major traffic accidents at the request of local authorities.
Another responsibility of theTraining Section isto provide information on courses offered through the State Merit System. Thirty civilian personnel took advantage of these courses.

Affirmative Action
The Department of Public Safety's Affirmative Action Program has the responsibility of recruiting minorities through the Trooper Cadet, Radio Operator Trainee and License Examiner recruitment programs. Also provides technical assistance to departmental supervisors regardinggoalsetting and workforce analysis.
This office conducts minority recruiting by visiting colleges, vocational schoolsand employment agencies with assistance from local post troopers to all parts of the state. Pamphlets and other written material, in addition to field recruitment is distributed to local employment agencies.
The Affirmative Action office is responsible for the interviewing of qualified personnel and for explaining employment opportunities to perspective employees.

Executive Officer

COMPUTER SERVICES DIVISION
1985 brought the long awaited implementation of the 'new' driver license records system. Considering the enormity of running new and old systems parallel to test, then converting i n excess of 25 million records, a remarkably smooth transition was made. The Department is already reaping the rewards of faster more efficient and economical computer operations.
1985 also spotlighted the kick-off of the new system for the issuing of driver licenses. This is known as CAI or Computer Assisted Issuance. This conceptallowsthe computer to assist
the examiner by reducing the required amount of typing, reducing VOIDS (required retyping the entire application when an error was made) and substantially decreasingthetime necessary to complete the paper work for each applicant.
The new CAI system was pilotrun at the Capitol Area Issuing Station until proven operational. In the next year this system will be installed throughout the state.
The Data Central Unit, which handles all data entry, performed the arduous task of entering data in both the old and new systems to make parallel check-out of the new system possible, and assisted in the resolution of problems relating to data entered i n the new system. This was no small task with four million plus documents coming in, not including the 2,057,109 MVR's requested on magnetic tape.

The Personal Computer (PC)group developed end-user programs for permits, radar inventory, fata accident statistical reporting and started work on the Personnel System. These programs utilize the powerful R Base 5000 data base management system with a state-of-the-art
query system called 'Clout' which allows the non-programmer user personnelto ask "English Language" questions and retrieve data and simple reports without learning how to program.

The Permits Section issued the following number of license/permits:

Racetrack License

16

Emergency Light Permits
Amber - 1 year
Amber - 5 years

8,431 201

Red - 1 year Red - 5 years

2,372 788

Blue - 1 year Blue - 5 years

95 2,4243

Group Permits (Govt. Agencies)
TOTAL:

14,135

Radar Permits

13

Amended Radar Permits

23

Tinted Window Permits

12

TOTAL PERMITS ISSUED: 16,258

Permits Section
The Permits Section of Department of Public Safety issues permits of licenses for operation of wholesale/retail of small firearms, emergency lights, racetrack, radar speed-timing devices and tinted windows to qualified applicants.
Emergency light permits for governmental agencies are issued for 5 years. Private businesses and individuals are issued a permit for 1year. Permits for the operation of radar speed-timing device is valid until suspended, revoked or cancelled. The Permit Section processed 23 amendments to the present radar permits o n file, i n addition to issuing 13 new permits.

Driver Support

DRIVER SERVICES
1985 recorded two million requests for driver transcripts. Throughout Georgia, there were 5 6 permanentexamining stations with 1 4 0 field examiners. Of the 159 counties that did not have permanent examining stations, a traveling detail was utilized.An examiner was available i n each of those particular counties for at least once a month to give tests for drivers' licenses and other related duties.

DRIVER IMPROVEMENT
The Driver lmprovement Unit oversees the licensing of Driver Improvement Clinics and Instructors as well as Commercial Driver Training Schools and Instructors.
The Driver lmprovement Clinics have increased from one hundred andtwenty-four (124)toone hundred and forty-two (142) with twentyseven (27)clinic applications pending. The Driver lmprovement Clinic instructors have increasedfrom four hundred and twenty-six (426) to four hundred and fifty-five (455) with fifty-six (56)instructor applications pending. There are currently twenty-four (24) Commercial Driver Training Schools with one ( 1 ) school applications pendingand eighty-two (82)Commercial Driver Training instructorswith five (5)instructor applications pending.

ACCIDENT REPORTING
Accident Reporting obtains and processes statistical breakdowns of accident reports throughout Georgia. Reports are kept of accidents which have damages of $250 or more. Copies of these files were available to attorneys, individuals and police agencies upon request. The state's Department of Transportation was routinely sent copies of accident reports to plot locations of accidents. FARS(FatalAccident Reporting System, w i t h i n ARD, part of the federal network) reports all information about fatalities to Washingtonfor the federal headquarters, for analysis and breakdown.

REVOCATION AND SUSPENSION
Under Georgia law driving privileges are suspended for several reasons. Revocation and Suspension handled the records of those drivers who had been convicted i n court of a suspendable offense or had accumulated more than 15 pointsagainst their license in a two year period.

Adjutant

ADJUTANT'S OFFICE
The duties of the Adjutant's Office included being responsible for the Awards Program, 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.
Manyof the responsibilities under the Adjutant's Office are in assisting the Commissioner and both Commanding Officers in the dayto-day duties of the Department of Public Safety.
Implied Consent Training Unit
The ImpliedConsent Training Unit is detached to GBI, and consists of nine (9)state patrolmen.There were twenty-one (21) basic intoximeter classes on the operation of the IR3000and ten (10)refresher schools on the IR-3000 and other breath testing instruments. The classes were conducted at the Georgia Police Academy. lmplied Consent Unit also installed 175 new IR-3000 intoximeters throughout Georgia. Also, all uniform personnel i n the Georgia State Patrol were trained by this Unit on the proper use of the alcosensor.

AVIATION UNIT
During 1985, the Georgia State Patrol Aviation Unit was enhanced by the upgrading of aircraft as well as support equipment.
The Georgia State Patrol Helicopters were upgraded to an all Turbine Engine Fleet which provides greater reliability and safety. We are currently operating (8) helicopters, (2) Twin Engine, and (4) Single Engine Airplanes.
Night vision equipment was also acquired in 1985, along with two powerful1search lights that should greatly improve night airsearch missions.
3,224 flight hours were accumulated i n support of the Governor's Task Force on Drug Suppresseion, as well as Federal and Local Law Enforcement Agencies.

Marijuana find

Aviation Unit

Adjutant

Emission Control
In 1985, 433,248 vehicles were inspected. Owners of these gaso-
- line-burnina vehicles were reauired
to show proof of inspection before purchasing tags or decals on January 1, 1986, a,nd thereafter. The gross vehicle weight was changed from 6,000 Ibs. to 8,500 Ibs. There were twoother changes made. Current 10year model was changed to 12 year model and the cost of an emission inspection was changed from $3.00to $5.00. Private inspection stations in 1985numbered 352 and there were 79 fleet inspeciton stations in operation in the Atlanta Metropolitan Area.

* ,". -
Emission Inspection Station

Safety Education Unit
The responsibility of the Safety Education Unit is to conduct safety courses for school, business, and civic clubs on a variety of trafficrelated topics. The Alcohol/Drug Awareness Program is also administered and taught by the Safety Education Unit in both public and private high schools as well as other locations throughout Georgia.

DmgAwareness Class,Lt. Richard Dunn

Safety Education Activity
School Program Number ........................................ 682 School Program Attendance ..................................... 33,062 Bicycle Rodeo Number .......................................... 33 Bicycle Rodeo Attendance ....................................... 984
D.D.C. Number .................................................. 78
D.D.C. Attendance .............................................. 2,029
Civic Club Number .............................................. 147 Civic Club Attendance ........................................... 4,963
Employee Group Number ........................................ 259 Employee Group Attendance .................................... 16,553
Other Program Number ......................................... 200
Other Program Attendance ...................................... 38,285
Drug/Alcohol Awareness Program
School Instruction Hours ........................................ 16,134 School Visitation Hours ......................................... 7,402
School Program Attendance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83,356 Number of Public School Students Passed ....................... 56,393 Number of Public School Students Failed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,335 Number of Private School Students Passed ...................... 13,781 Number of Private School Students Failed ....................... 204

Adjutant

School Bus Safety Unit

The School Bus Safety Unit Conducts instructor trainer schools throughout the State for school bus Driver Trainers, supervisors, and administrators. The unit also conducts special schools for special needs, provides classroom training for bus drivers, provides training materials and aids to instructors, assists i n planning safety programs, conducts the State School Bus Roadeoprogram and co-ordinates with the field troopers in administering the statewide school bus inspection program. Ongoing programs are:
I. School Bus Driver Trainer lnstructor Schools-Basic Course Three day schools are designed to provide classroom instruction in the following areas: (1) formulating and/or upgrading a Bus Driver Training Program,(2)acquiringand usingtraining material andvisual aids, (3)preparing and making class presentations, (4) public relations with students, teachers, administrators and maintaining credibility with drivers, (5)promoting interaction and exchange of ideas. Inthe past sevenyears these courses have been attended by superintendents, assistant superintendents, transportation directors, trainers, supewisors and bus drivers who are trainers or will be used in training.

II. School Bus Driver Trainer lnstructor Schools-Advanced Course Three day schools are designed for those trainers who have previously attended the School Bus Driver Trainer lnstructor School-Basic Course. It will consist of more comprehensive lesson plans, class presentations and practical instruction techniques.

Ill. School Bus Driver Trainer Symposium A three day symposium is designed for instructor trainers who have previously attended a basic instruction school and have on-going training programs.
IV. School Bus Drivers Administrators Seminar This seminar is designed for transportation directors and other administrators who have sent instructor trainers to the basic instructor schools described above under Roman Numeral I.

"'Look left, then right, and back left again," the Trooper tells a youngster.

V. School Bus Driver Trainer Range Schools Schools are designed to provide instruction on teaching "hands-on" bus maneuvering.

VI. School Bus Driver Trainer lnstructor School Special Education Seminar This two day seminar deals only with transportation of special education children.

Adjutant

School Bus Safety

VII. School Bus Driver Institutes Pre-school institutesare designedto provideone day of in-se~iceclassroom instruction for bus drivers from six to seventeen school systems,at each institute. Smaller two night institutes are held during theschool year for two to six school systems at each institute.
VIII. Assisting i n Local Driver Training Participation in local training programs is ongoing thru school year.
IX. Roadeos are designed to improve driver skills and knowledge of maneuverability by means of practical skill tests that simulate actual driving problems. Each system may send two drivers to area competition. Competition areas generally coincide with new congressional districts. It is suggested (but not required) that representatives be selected thru local competition.
X. State School Bus Driver Roadeo Beginning with over 6000 drivers participating at the local level, thru the nine area roadeos, the field has been narrowed to approximately 40drivers who participate i n a two day event consisting of range competition, personal interviews, written test, and physical bus inspection. In the 1985 National Roadeo, two Georgia drivers finished in the top ten. Cecil Weaver from Appling County was ninth, and Robert Black from Decatur County tied for first.

Classroom instruction.

The school bus safety unit attemps to respond to all requests for assistance from local systems from checking school bus stopsto after accident schools bus inspection. Over 815,000students are transported over 8 3 million miles each year in 9 5 0 0 Georgia school buses. We are working to help keem them safe.

INTRA AGENCY HIGHWAY SUPPORT
The lntra Agency Highway Support Unit(IAHS)isa StatewideEnforcement Unit that consists of thirty-one (31) Troopers. The Unit is divided into seven (7) Districts covering Georgia. Office space is provided by the seven (7) DOT District Offices. Troopers provide enforcement and high visibility patrol functions in hazardous DOT maintenance and construction areas. Enforcement effort resulted i n 20,567 traffic stops and logged 798,900 miles.

Comptroller Fiscal Services

FISCAL MANAGEMENT DIVISION

This Division, managed by the Comptroller, is 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

Supply Services
supply Mailroom

Maintenance Services
Maintenance

Since Public Safety has 7 agencies attached to it for administrative purposes, this division also provides administrative support for the Georgia Policy 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
The Accounting Unit has the responsibilityfor the receipt andexpenditure of appropriated funds. In Fiscal qsar 1985, $63,900,526 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 is processed through the Fiscal Accounting and Control System (FACS) which produces all necessary checks and reports.

Homer Brisendine
Payroll The Payroll Unit is run by the pay-
roll supervisor. It is responsible for the preparation and statewide distribution of the department's payroll and related reporting requirements. There are 2 4 payrolls processed during the fiscal year and approximately 1548 employees paid each pay period.

FISCAL MANAGEMENT DIVISION

Central Cashier
This unit receives and audits all fees collected, through various sources,bythe departmentandtransfers them to the State Treasury. There are 56 drivers license examining stations statewide which accountedfor almost 50%of the fee revenuecollectedin fiscal year 1985. Approximately 2,800 reports were received from these stations which accounted for 1,265,830 drivers license sales totaling $5,570,104 in collected fee revenue. These fees are deposited in 56 separate bank accounts statewide and transferred to the State Treasury on a weekly basis. Other fees collected in the Atlanta Headquarters totaled $6,046,089. The majority of these collections were for driver's motor vehicle records and amounted to over $4,965,465. The total revenue collectedand transferred to the State Treasury for fiscal year 1985 was $1 1,616,192.

Budget Services Five units make up Budget Servi-
ces. They include Budget, Grants Management, Procurement, Property, and Records Management/ Printing Coordination. These units are supervised by the Fiscal/Budget Administrator.
Grants Management
Grants Management coordinates Federaland other fundscoming into thedepartment. In 1985, the Department of Public Safetv received federal funds in the amount of $3,303,270 and other funds for $1,993,698.
Procurement Section The Procurement Office is respon-
sible for the purchasing of goods and servicesfor the department. It 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 1985 they processed 11,000 transactions at a value of approximately 11 million dollars.

Records Management
The purpose of the Records Management Unit is to apply management techniques to the creation, utilization maintenance, retention, preservation and disposal of records undertaken to reduce costs and improve efficiency of the record keeping process. Records Management includes management of 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.
Property
The Pro.~er.tvManag- ement Unit maintains an inventory of over 20,000 items of non-expendable property and insures compliance with various Federaland State regulations governing the disposition of same. Also, the Property Unit has the addedresponsibilityfor our seven attached agencies.
During fiscal year 1985 Property. Unit processed approximately 7000 transactions at a value of 1,185,604.00.

FISCAL MANAGEMENT DIVISION
The Supply Unit formulates and maintains inventory stock levels and 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, assist Patrol Posts and examining stations in the field.

The Department of Public Safety

Faithful Service Awards

Employees with 30 years service
Eugene F. Bartlett Thomas H. Braswell Sybil C. Campbell Robert H. Holcombe
Employees with 25 years service
William R. Breedlove Doyle D. Broome John W. Cobb, Jr. George W. Gantt R.D. Killingsworth Carlos R. Pinyan Lester L. Rampy Henry L. Smith Faye M. Bridges Billy J. Holley James B. Logue Arnold D. Martin James B. Rawlins Herbert M. Turner Eugene T. Arrington James J. Canady Harriette J. Clower Charles W. Esloon John W. Wright June E. Downing John R. Durrence Jackson A. Lively Johnny C. Moss James C. Smith. Jr.

Employees with 20 years service
Edward G. Chapman Robert Cook Arthur M. Dampier Richard E. Dunn John R. Glen John C. Hanson Harold R. Lloyd Marie 0. Moon Wayne F. Woods James R. Benefield Thomas D. Edwards, Jr. William J. Kiser Thomas E. Raiford;Jr. William F. Rooks Jack N. Tucker Reginald Castleberry Joe A. Crocker Charles L. Griffin Charles A. Lott Charles R. Sanders Luke E. Beck Jimmy H. Collins Charles W. Colston Henry Covington Melton R. Covington Claud P. Denney Dennis W. Dixon Kenneth M. Hudson Theron H. Johnson Gary L. Jones Robert L. Jones Charles D. Ladson Charles H. Lipham Brantley Martin William C. McElrnurray Larry E. Miller Charles L. Moore Kenneth D. REarden Claude E. Sapp Douglas E. Simmons Raymond F. Taunton Franklin M. Turner Victor H. West Franklin C. White Buddy R. Wilson

Employees with 15 years service
Vernon A. Anderson Theril L. Boutwell Denton W. Brantley Thomas G. Busby Jr. Adrian L. Cahill Ronald W. Campbell Johnny W. Cooper William N. Dedmon William J. Grant Frederick N. Hailey Phillip M. Hanners Joy T. Hansen Wayne D. Heard Robert Hightower Roger W. Hutchinson William R. Kitchens, Jr Walter S. Knight Jerry E. Lanier Connie A. Lewis Windell W. Manning Diane L. Moore Larry F. Peebles Talmadge H. Perry Thomas E. Pritchett Donald R. Rice Patricia S. Rosamond Robert M. Sanders Carlton E. Stallings Larry H. Wilson William S. Young
Donna 0. Abbott
Charlie W. Bennett F.J. Boswell James L. Conner Joseph H. Craton James A. Dixon Jr. Charlotte V. Fields Charles L. Haines Donald E. Halstead Judson P. Kirkpatrick Ronnie H. McOuaig Reuben E. Odum Anthony E. Priest Brenda Raines Wally L. Roberts

Service Awards, Contd.

Employees with 15 years service
Burton D. Robertson Robert W. Scott Jr. Thomas B. Scott Jr. William S. Smith Jr. Terrell D. Williams Daniel A. Woolley Thomas J. Crawford, Jr Charles B. Edenfield Joyce D. Heath Helen J. Jackson Thomas G. Kimbrell Samuel D. Mobley Gerald F. Moses Pauline K. Nelms Jean L. Ross Theldman E. Skipper W.E. Tatum Jr. James S. Underwood Jimmy G. Albertson Edgar M. Gass, Jr. Jimmy R. Holcombe Alvah J. Lindsey Robert P. Lyons Charles L. Nutt Allen E. Pasley Jr. Trina K. Senft Evelyn I. Smith John A. Williamson

Employees with 1 0 years service
Ronald L. Bowman Edward C. Brock David M. Callaway Margaret A. Craft Raymond 0 . Davis, Jr. Richard A. Duvall Harold M. Griggs, Jr. Johnnie B. Hall Caroyln R. Harmon Ronny W. Head Gary W. Jackson Willie J. Johnson Carolyn C. Kelly Robert M. Kirk Lois M. Lloyd John E. McGlamery Sharleen H. Olsson Robert A. Pollard Albert A. Simmons Charles R. Stanton Carol R. Styles John T. Waldrop Thomas M. Bramlett Henry L. Calhoun, Jr. Cheryl S. Cochran Johnny F. Cunningham Ernest G. Dyal Jr. Billy C. Exum James C. Jordan, Jr. Goldie D. Lumpkin Nelda P. Roberts

Employees with 1 0 years service
Rodney E. Singley Daniel M. Thomas Avis C. Ashby Harry E. Benton Arletha D. Broner Larry Daniel Bobby G. Fennell Bruce W. Harris Frances E. Haynes Huey C. Howard Timothy G. Land Arthur L. Ponder Rebecca J. Pryor Morris M. Shinall Charles J. Shirling Kathy I.Simmons Nena K. Smith William B. Sumner Leroy Trimiar Emory Walker Debra C. Wheeler Howard L. Youmans, Jr. James T. Butler lvelyn N. Dukes Walter W.M. Green Gail D. LeMieux Carol F. Rodgers Gabrial R. VAdnais Lloyd 1.Welch Benjamin C. Westmoreland Willie J. White

Retirees
Cpl. T. A. Pearson SFC A. H. Hopkins, Jr. TFC K. A. Jones Lt. J. B. Ladson TFC T. L. Thornton TFC H. W. Williamson

GEORGIA TRAFFIC DEATH TRENDS TRAFFIC DEATHS
d
DEATHS 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1900 1800
ANNUAL MILES TRAVELED IN BILLIONS

DEATH RATE PER 100 MILLION MILES TRAVELED RATE 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985
6

5
3.7,,
3 -
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DUI STATISTICS
ALCOHOL LEVEL OF .10 AND ABOVE
1984 14,757 452 6659 515 10,312 1985 13,138 369 5981 424 9,293 c h a n g e -1619 -83 -678 -91 -1019
%
Change - 1 1 % -18% -10% -18% -10% -

CHILD RESTRAINT STATISTICS

CHILD RESTRAINT
Yes Yes
I\j 0
Yes N 0 No No N 0 No No N 0 No N 0 Unknown N 0 No N 0 No Yes Yes No N 0 Unknown Yes Yes

AGE
2 yrs. 6 mos. 23 mos. 2 yrs. 3 y rs. 3 y rs. 9 mos. 2 mos. 3 yrs. 18 rnos. 3 yrs. 3 y rs. 9 mos. 6 mos. II mos. 1 yr. 3 mos. 3 yrs. 18 mos. 2 yrs. 3 y rs. 1 yr. 6 rnos. 19 mos. 5 mos.

SEX

RACE

COUNTY OF RESIDENCE

COUNTY OF OCCURANCE VEHICLE TYPE

Paulding Muscogee Clayton Muscogee Douglas OH l o ALABAMA Hall FLORIDA Newton Cobb SOUTH CAROLINA Sumter Glynn Meriwether Bartow Seminole Jones Paulding Douglas Turner Haralson Clarke Lee

Paulding Muscogee Clayton Baldwin Douglas Mclntosh Clay Jackson Lowndes Harris Cobb Evans
Lee Mclntosh Meriwether Bartow Seminole Jones Paulding Douglas Turner Polk Madison Dougherty

Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Van Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car
Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car Passenger car

CHILDREN UNDER AGE 4 KILLED I N AUTOMOBILES.

18 Killed 16 Killed 13 Killed 20 Killed 9 Killed 28 Killed 10 Killed 25 Killed

1 Child Restraint in Use 0 Child Restraints in Use 2 Child Restraints in Use 1 Child Restraint in Use 0 Child Restraints in Use 3 Child Restraints in Use 1 Child Restraint i n Use 7 Child Restraints in Use

9 Not in Use 8 Not i n Use 9 Not in Use 18 Not in Use 9 Not in Use 18 Not in Use 9 Not in Use 16 Not in Use

8 Unknown 8 Unknown 2 Unknown 1 Unknown 0 Unknown 7 Unknown 0 Unknown 2 Unknown

SUMMARY OF MOTOR VEHICLE TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS

I"

GEORGIA

,1111,

For

YEAR 1 9 8 5

,Month ,t 0th" w,,cd,

SUMMARY OF

, . .ACCIDENTS

* L W ~ I C r r m n l r arr,dent% u. t h o u ~ n v o t v ~ n stea),
Mli"i n i v o or .mwnr d a m n .
r.250:.0Qr ,
n.&,k ,'<,dm,

T. !he .row"" 0, 0". wm"

T"l' rumman Inrlud.5 n..,,. ,"a ,n,-r,..

a".,,*,. Ir

DECELYBER 3 1 , 1 9 8 5

REPORT PREPARED BY

ACCIDENT REPORTING UNIT

* & MILEAGE RATES

'""Y'.'

'.',"",

1. D.L. ...I * " i d

-knm,

I. Yotor rrhlrle traffic deaths

1362

1410 -3.4%

2. E I L I ~ m. ~ao, ra,~!. -lie.* Ir.r*.d <.,,on,

46472 44599

4.2%

3 Oe.0 rate wr IW.om.m0 rehlcl-llel

2.9

3.2 , -9.4%

4 r.,., Y i d . " , rat. Dl, ~w.ma.wovajrte.miin

2.6

2.8 -7.1%

I

7.

6

%

3. LOCATION

Tmai

vum,e, or L C X",, On s:.cx>*

011 110.0~1,

Burner 3' s t n a r Total

,

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PlDP". Darnas*

,

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1.000 L. 10.000
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2r.000l o %.wo

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?!18

_-.5/49-.8 .7 7 _ - 2 9 . 2 0 7 1 -

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-162

19000_-_'1__.-4199. .8 2 5 ._16994. 2'7 3804

1 1 8 7 3 1 7 2631 ...S.?1.. 1 1 0 4 8 ..l2, 2442

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18

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= -Ee r s.mo t. ~w.wa
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92 I t s . 0w~mom

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.

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2 2.352

34

7189 620

2580

27

690:

625

103

4198 4573 11307

$8

-~ ........

- .

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112146 264 25159 4765 102391 211 23023 2469 9755 53 2136

2296 278

36472

5

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11 11 408

7 6 8 8 1 661 20191 301

76

n I1

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107 11 9 5 1

3560

5. DIRECTIONAL A N A L Y S I S A n acc~dentconrcstgng of s rerler of colllrdonr, overturning, etc.. is clasrlfded sccordlng to the fnrrt damage or onlury producing event: includes an roadway and OH roadway.

5A. TWO MOTOR VEHICLE ACC

TOL~I
u33464

L20 _-I

9051

1389

58. TWO MOTOR VEHICLE ACC.

I c0.n. wwrtce d i m % m o h a o m movlnp 2 cOlns ,a,mc ~ , r c c ~ l a n d emco~r n q

~r one c.r r . r ~ d

I b,

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~-

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1 ~ ~ t AaClC I ~ ~ ~ U I ~ , Y V A C C ~ ~ C ~ ~ Ssrmtmv ~ a m a s tk c

. 19057

200

61106

71

2429

1

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1

4707 10418
82 109

377 783
7 7 11

5 0 . ALL OTHER ACCIDENTS

I omtr ma renlr~e.or r a l ( r a y train

!:;;"- , 2 F,,.* ..hO
"

E

1 other o.,Cct .r m<m.,

1 OrtnYrn~nl

5 Other noncoii,r,on

10121
0 35
4 7 2

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0 1 -. 1 1 '. . 0

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0

0

11

6

0

0

3

0.

0

1

6. PEDESTRIAN ACTIONS BY AGE PL*'''r."
," ,a cm,,,c9 at ,"te"ec:,6" 0, c ~ o ~ ~ ~ a ~ k
" ,b C,OS,,"9 no: a, ,mtc.,eC:,on or :,cs,**,.

x.iled

1 s ~ . .n~ iea~ora,r ~ ~
1 S,$",".or x i . , n s on . f " l C l C n i S d * W I . O,"., W O i l , " ~ n r0aer.r
---

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1 199

112412

6 137

Dl,<.,,

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7 . A O~F ~DRIVER

".l,il.,

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1 / ACC LCM,

6ir:am arc a.*ts

n,vn arc a m

I. I5 l rounscr

1. 16

I 17

4 18 10 39

5 20 1s 24

6 2 1 Lo 11 7 15 1 m 44 II <I to Y

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65098 3 2 L - - 16171.- .

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P utoa 10 d s t 0 7 4

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15429 7 1-- 3 7 1 8 .

11. 15 A older

6084 48

1553

li., ? e < e . , rXl.lI1$.* a / * ","!to

I -(

288

710

na

$5 I C I e r

Not S Y L d

n

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Atkinson Bacon Baker Baldwin Banks Barrow Bartow Ben H i l l Berr i e n Bibb Bleckley Brant ley Brooks Bryan

621 485 446 394

23 $02

802 645

7

20 254

348 319

54

304 257 2,551 2,471

12 221

553 497

12

236 1,111 2,841 2,751 234

1,155 916 689

46 872

828 763

94

814 770 72

91 393

857 822 129

6,830 4,4153,453 371 4,537 7,852 6,086 909

1,020 937

161 586 1 , 3 3 7 1 , 2 1 6

2 1

668 566

17 494

784 692

50

731 490 570

15 686

245 195

3

595 556 61

56 398

541 514

6 2

461 342

35 303

566 498

18

1,103 808 1,187 644 884

55 868

512 417 113

48 957 A 435 290

7 4

13 1 29 673 10 662 712 90

5 3

33 179

2 196 214 17

15 4 17 163

8 182 188 24

180 5 305 1,832 111 1,601 2,245 268

94 7 146 959 59 900 1,164 24

134 14 419 270 78 592 767 33

480 6 5,088 247 419 4,968 5,754 499

27 1 719 143 119 766 981 48

5C 2

2 383

6 375 391

8

2

746

1

1 745 748

76 7 30 493 81 545 604

4

17 5 222 41 11 245 274 24

77 7 274 735 42 93E 1,051 16

119 7 1591,229

46 1.37 1,434 133
-

T
90 802
17 231

24 232 1 268 2,511
24 1,188

2

35 802

499 6,253 48 1.029
4 399
748

4 608

24 298 16 1,067 133 1,567

47,865 .00 8,636.20 9,857.00
200,449.40 78,167.96
102,043.00 545,741.70 144.608.72
19,926.80 52.236.56 44,535.40 20,329.00 80,425.45 105,956.45
I

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Burke Butts Calhoun

2,150 1,732 1,786 1,279 9 1 1
367 308

99 1,670 88 1,259 15 204

1,9371,637 1,405 1,264 1,108 943

Camden

2,739 857 1,898 172 2,097 2,162 1,404

Candler

2,191 1,731 1.848

5 1 2,012

634 549

Carroll

3,420 2,593 1,368 270 1,431 3,989 3,163

Catoosa Charlton

3,437 2.289 1,283 758 470

212 1,861 54 536

3,503 2,455 552 384

Cha tham

6,489 4,323 4,065

Chattahoochee 45H 349

Chat tooga

2,359 2,010

Cherokee

6,337 5,983 2,109

Cl n r k e

1,040 993

Clay
#

361 248

425 4.770 3,381 2,755

18 310

655 569

228 981 3,1242,731

291 3.859 9,372 8,888

65 636 1,291 1,245

51 196

935 601

114 108 136 119
16 10 87 101 45 36 900 624 676 315 22 27 54 40 14 14 290 153 943 611 66 36 11 1 0

13 187 1,988 113 2,119 2,291

153

6 243 1,477

62 1,324 1,782

97 16

1 217 80

4 235 301

3 4

13 2671,958

372,142 2,262

100

3 155 1,386

29 1,506 1,570

40 1

15 6 0 5 1 , 9 1 4 1 0 8 2 , 0 7 1 2.624

671

3 842 1,556 159 2,028 2,557

365

3

60 411

14- 378

485

16

1 5,125

1 8 8 208 5,149 5,421

677

1 121 255 22 321 398

2 4

3 494 1,251 121 1,482 1,866 1 338

3L 2::r 19 4,933

24 234 4,371 5,191

355

-

1 36

;:1:,

20

153 2,444 175,273.65

1 114 1,896 138,624.77

3 4

335 23,363.90

100 2.362 41 1,611

- 1 8 0 , 5 2 5 . 3 5
124,115.00

671 3,295 305,476.50 .

365 2,922 209,154.60

16

501 25,933.00

677 6,098 376.357.66

2 4

422 27.302.50

338

355

36

2 0

--

-

2,204 5,546 1,256
357

159,360.70 446,498.05
86,074.10 38,950.00

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE

COUNTY

Clinch Cobb Coffee Colquitt
- Columbia
Cook Coweta Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson Decatur Dekalb Dodge
t

175 130 12.06C 9,077 10,31:! 1,870 1,684 1,230 1,033 2,613 1,683 2.05C 4,605 1,557 4,191 4,150 3.293 2,153 2,083 1,695 4,475 2,143 3,203 2.016 7 7 2 1 , 0 0 5
580 562 1,283 892 6,807 6,122 5,493 1,156 1,085

4 131

120 98

260 9,513 6,933 5,659

227 1,119 2,374 2.160

53 852

877 784

58 2,281 2,353 1,930

112 4,076 1,515 794
1 220 2,893 3,256 2,880

35 1,767

921 797

1 1
163 3,706 2.443 1,592

68 1,364 2,076 887

, 17 374

468 459

123 780 1,799 1,326

228 5,049

76 714

780 752

1 161 43 111 103 133 118
19 11 111 92 624 439
27 4 1 169 118 144 104
58 102 160 122
34 14 106 100

1 10 102 1,018 7,293
5 128 1,325 8 38 1,177
230 2,150 5 521 2,872

5 113

/E 7

16

277 8,371 8,485

152 1,363 1,605

206

30 1,118 1,245

21

29 2,314 2,409

58

32 3,016 3,425

4 4

14 850 3,026 31,677 122 6 1,769 2,197 5 708 1,271 3 321 175 6 3581,082

79 3,541 3,955

9 9

4 9 1 , 8 1 2 1,848

204

155 3,832 50 1,597

4,121 2,029

/1 68 303

104 507

I
600 1 66

761,228 1,516

26

1,306

1-9 8

34 1,487 1,538

1

3 699

4 38 651 741

3 7

1
-

16

133 10,388.00

8.485 666,300.37

206 1,811 156,411.85

22 1,267

79,109.50

58 2,467 159,870.30

44 3,469 241,545.54

99 4.054 361,285.33

204 2,052

88,655.00

68 4.189 369,925.56

303 2,332

98,844.62

66

666 33,862.50

26 1,542 178,748.00

1 1,539 111,778.00

37

778 42,170.48

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Dougher t y Douglas Early Echols Ef f ingham Elber t Emanuel Evans Fannin Fayette Floyd Forsyth Franklin Fulton
t

2.378 2,034

92

1.866 4,265 3,827

1

154 2,000 315 2,503 2,469

361

4,291 3,264 2,140 298 3.336 4,575 3,652 1,310

786 16 538 1,673

90 1,982 2,301

227

844 553

6 7

136 99

9

880 745 428 38

734 656

9 3

535 1,251 769

3 7

2 4

7 78 685 22 633 785

3 2

96 118 89

8

7

I

12

7 1

2 42

8 5

6

689 725 649

2 3

3 2

61144

579

13 606

1 7 3 6

39

384 1,987 1.807

66

5 6

4 247 496 51 626 804

30

3,495 2,707 775 185 2,638 2,507 2,222

132 119 11 239 2,098 251 2,297 2,588

143

834 739 1.055 870
939 904 2,794 2,437 1,548 1,494

8 5

483 889 795

4 5

6 1

158

628 1,3011,111

194 163

3 2

609

891 877

112

145

86 2,012 3,458 3,025

68

45

122 1,013 1,531 1,477

332 285

5 56 437

3 Ij 844

19

I 5 1492 219

1619 2,005

7 1,34R

1

28 482 521

85

/ 196 864 1,059

30

20 612

I 7 3 1

36

: 92+2,366 2,716

169

58 1,296 1,407 j 100

1,503 886 963 68 1,178

934 682

90

352 1,047 119 1,406 1.518

7 1

16,93014,97C11.28: 9 3 3 1,1,532 11,009 9,844

178

8 28

5,772 , 3 3 -

361 2,830 143,729.00

227 2,528 215,867.50

3 2

817 74,883.00

6

9 1

5,201.00

39

774 72.426.80

30

834 92,640.10

143 2,731 255,732.41

85

606 53,334.35

30 1,089 122,814.30

3 6

767 39,093.80

169 2,885 153.998.50

2 102 1,509 130,234.50

71 1,589 105,392.50

50 5,755 542,794.77

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE

FINES BONDS FORFEITED AND

Glascock Glynn Gordon Grady Greene Gwinnet t Habershnm Hal 1 Hancock Haralson Harris Hart Heard
. Henry

57 50

3

32

46 44

4,029 1,301 2,789 122 3,194 3,759 2,763

3.467 2,397 1,159 175 2,414 5,624 4,826

1,423 1.059

89 1,018 891 706

1,096 666 749 68

847 672 534

3.921 3,424 1,590 297 2,779 3,864 3,502

1,175 1,047

7 6

807 1,191 1,090

3,091 2,981 55C
1
769 716

79 2,204 3,074 2,985

4 7

523 627 587

2,506 1,603 1,139 76 1,928 2,278 1,798

1,923 1,572 933 134 1,282 1,402 1,177

581 505 97 6 1

1 I 634 534

2 7

326 433 377 450 773 662

1,788 1,335 874 68 ?,422 1,539 1,398

10 15 118 63 375 260 8h 83
10 14 184 62 134 178 106 39
15 15 193 173 201 164
77 95 79 80 65 83

2 53

49

55

2

1 247 2,836 30 2,953 3,113

511,851 50 705

3,606 171 1

7 266 1,019 56 1,203 1,341

59

1 174 763

I 66 884 1,003 1 32

1 1 553 2,594 167 3,003 3,314 144

1

I

/ 4 242 895 9 9 1 , 1 5 0 1,229

16

1 319 2,419 164 2,432 2,902 I/ 330

3 428

1

2 1,707 132

1 12 301 441 144
1 90 1,535 1,929 351

I 9 '1,461 515 139 1,773 2.145 1 89

- 3 199 287 45 448

3 357 226

4 519

512

14

587 / 43

4 148 860 43 848 1,051
- --- -.- - -

2

5 7

2,386.20

3,113 230.992.85

172 3,778 363,659.00

4 63 1,404 117.880.28

32 1,035 96,630.00

145 3,459 231,596.20

16 1,252 128,058.97

330 3,232 226,433.28

144

585 24,650.10

351 2,280 195,702.00

89 2,234 188,049.50

14

539 35,668.20

43

630 35,851.00

1,051 60,664.50

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE

COUNTY

Irwin Jackson Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins Johnson
Jones Lamar Lanier Lauren~ Lee Liberty I.incol n

668 617 2,605 1,575 1,820
381 345 703 660 1,902 1,478 822 636 520 479

17

520 694 649

64 1,266 1,523 1,266

16

272 462 442

62

425 638 615

8 1 1,481 1,349 1,149

4 6

680 954 777

3 5

318 601 562

1,941 1,808

74 1,461 1,404 1,341

1.163 1.025 145 58

797 1,605 1,494

282 254

16

215 149 140

6,473 5,525 2,267 195 5,303 4,049 3,620

1,589 1,344

88 1,199 1,917 1,700

3,344 1,663 1,593 314 1,412 1,149 775

25-9 241

52 33 147 137
13 17 17 17 107 80 21 16 43 22
31 32 119 95
30 33 296 175
83 74 160 131
14 15

2 74 510 40 578 624

3 9

10 214 2,321

59 1,786 2.594

96

1 175 292 11 343 478

1

5 138 356 76 432 570

72

3 76 1,562

72 1,556 1,674

5 1

4 71 495 15 494 581

13

1 125 195 43 345 363

55

5 2571,377

541,480 1,589

149

2 867 22 182 958 1,071

121

1 - 88 - 134 - 26 229 -

248 .

28

9 911 5,186 182 5,848 6,279 1 87

- 7 172 1,153

86 1,266 1.461

11 350 2,172

31 2,198 2,553

109 4 269 94

88 130 10 137 228

4

39

663 31,109.00

96 2,690 193,106.50

1

479 30.286.50

72

'642 66.149.47

51 1,725 108,688.50

13

594 61.026.50

55

418 25.959.00

149
121
-.-- 28
87
113 4 364
4 - --

1,838 1,192
276 6,366 1,574 2,917
232

115,958.00 101,437.00
26,614.00 457,015.34 108,153.00 221,467.15
14,862.50
1

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Lowndes Lumpkin McDuf fie McIntosh Macon Madison Mar ion Merivether Miller Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Murray

11,927 6,068 8,274 668 9,666 4,395 3,064

401 393

16

226

449 442

3,304 2,160 2,142 158 2,236 2,693 2,158

2,040 6 0 4 1 , 6 1 2 87 1,594

465 245

551 510

7 6

250

544 518

766 697

51

394

739 709

1,191 1.041

80

642 1,392 1.163

2.531 2,366

183 1,542 1,891 1,740

807 612

6 6

576 1,224 964

1,042 991

56

813

702 644

3,949 2,408 3,334 149 3,300 2,823 1,954

444 409

20

32 1

333 320

4 , 2 4 6 2 , 8 7 3 3,134 1,437 1,081

225 59

, 3 , 2 7 4 ,948

2,139 1,640 1,807 1.417

555 335

50

29

229 168

121 123

67

4 7

239

167

3 7

3 6

191 143

4 5

49

4 5

4 7

137

55

20

19

171 158

223 116

15 687 15,351 297 -5,200 16,335

252

3 232 59 13 231 304

13

2 1,0581,912

179 2,844 3,149

3 7

9 110 2,249

18 1,972 2,377

22 25

2 99 435 13 467 547

11

3 57 649 84 633 790

3 1

237 431 29 612 697 225

7 2,044

1 10 312 1,982 2,366

126

1

1

65 588

30 622

/ 683

25

3 8 1 672 37 727 7.90

7

I

I

1 552 2,048 113 2,575 2,713 1 99

3

1:+17!+913,7591 3 406 41 48 485 495

7 8

713,811

4,207 1 72

1 1,126

341,128

642

3 2

-

252 16,587 1,368,887.00

13

317 19,090.70

37 3,186 255,694.40

47 2,424 176,357.50

11

558 52,723.70

31

821 54,829.50

225

922 41,516.00

126 2.492 201,176.97

2 5

708 52.651.50

7

797 61,736.00

102 2,818 191,941.50

7 8

572 29,603.71

72 4,279 291,440.50

65 1,262

78,503.00 i

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EWERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Newton Oconee Oglethorpe Paulding Peach Pickens Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Pu tnam Qui tman Rabun Randolph
-

3,568 2,833 2,236 1.597 1,479
493 462 1,480 1,421
I
1.275 708 935 2,137 1.909
529 439 1,131 1,060 1,810 1,615
508 478 830 791 365 186 355 291 1,411 864

184 2,852 2,642 2,405

49 1,274 931 884

32

284 1,013 965

90

695 3.148 3,062

100 1,019 582 478

38 1.708 2,824 2,604

3 2

377 485 423

5 8

700 726 708

135

863 3.487 3,238

77

272 483 458

48

400 803 774

4 2

170 906 489

3 3

229 367 315

77 1 939 3.958 2,953

131 133

175 193

47 54

323 251

49 52

144 56

51 63

126 77

321 250

72 66
-
57 53

12 19

9

8

61 67

7 7812,724 1793.328 3,684 138 2

140 3,824

6 479 795 138 1,256 1,412

74

74 1,486

1 329 72 47 351 439

4 5

45

493

12 769 214 217 834 1,200

68

68 1,268

4 167 739 57 925 963

38 1

39 1,002

8 1,816

5 125 1.788 1,946 114

114 2,060

1 34 197 12 243 243

3 2

3 2

275

2 803 236 12 1,629 44

31 833 1,070

34

1 46 1,222 1,719 212

34 1,104 1 213 1,932

2 383 18 46 399 447

42

-.

-

I
5 1 38 517 37 427 592 115 1

4 2

489

116

708

l-29/[:?! 1 42 276 15 236 333

1521

276

307

27 1,157

990 1,196

- - --

27 .

2 7

360

8

8

315

72

72 1,268

--- -- - - - - .-

283,225.50 70,554.00 45,422.00 89,563.50 74,710.00 120,881.50 15,032.20 110.088.95 157,859.00 41,994.00 45,330.00 34,372.70 23,164.50 93,763.00

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

MONTH

Rockdale Schley Screven Seminole Spaulding Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaferro Tattnall Taylor Telfair Terrell

3.374 3,059 1,111 363 2.072 3,009 2,828

189 241

230 200

14

163 339 310

20

15

1,140 940

7 5

803 1,481 1,283

106

7 1

649 369 1,968 1,875

60 19 153

450 999 653

5 2

53

I
996 2.165 2,067

544 429

817 733

105

342 1.008 937 144 120

296 224

2 7

156 944 724

32

2 4

2,184 1.878

192 1,298 4,113 3,583

221 171

1.975 1,552

92 1,305 1,505 1,354

90

68

1,173 724 1,115 15 1,104

501 395

21

20

. -

1,813 1,590

149 1.129 1,950 1,796

122

80

1.172 967

39

904 526 468

8 2

56

1,557 1,390

129

8921 1,294 1,213

61

1.066 754

56

52

7 2,317 153 379 2,501 2.849

130 5

3

257

4 239 261

16

7 701,241

3 4 1 , 2 8 8 1,345

107

4 18 559 22 531 599

21

6 349 1,439

21 1,574 1,809

1

3 162 503 62 673 727

35

1 21 211 23 217 255

20

7 596 1,351 97 1,675 2,044

45

1 51 1,719

83 1,577 1,853

219

3 62 980 30 1,047 1,072

27

6 125 1.010

I 59 996 1.194 1 35

1 814

- 39 64 952

I
917 176

135 2,984 300.059.30

16

277 16,562.50

107 1,452

97,650.50

21

620 40,623.50

1 1,810 239,746.90

35

759 73.961.10

2 0

275 19,907.00

45 2,089 189.029.80

219 2,072

76,050.12

27

1,099

77,685.00

35 1,229 113,004.00

176 1.093

53,915.00

65 1,355

96,895.50

21 1,017

76.523.50

COUNTY

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

Tif t Toornb s Towns Trentlen Troup Turner Twiggs Union Upson Walker Walton Ware Warren Washington

6.943 3,081/5.039 186 5,827 3,677 2,405

1,861 1,539

150 1,136 1,805 1,630

195 141

24

124 317 256

2,77b 2.118 2,128 53 2,589 717 623

3,866 2,984 2,020 342 2,380 2,712 2,117

3,071 1,214 2,667 80 2,772 1,230 704

1,162 1,032 465 38

929 561 508

363 304

39

201 641 560

2,841 2,666

119 1,497 2,597 2,479

2,662 2,307
--
2,155 1,912

239 163 108

569 1.545

3,457 2,986

- -

~~

1,612 1,509

1,757 1,149

55 1,392 1,621 1,250

1,013 613 687 28

826 745 527

297 281
4

18 , 2 0 1 320 313

346 186 119 85
52 37 24 26 464 312 89 61 70 79 8 5 76 236 185 738 456
- ---
98 132 19 21 72 34 15 17

7 493 5,880 98 5,939 6,471 173

3 1841,125 45 1,19C1,354 124

2 166 10 10 146 186

10

1 3292,264 462,539 2,639 133

12 488 3,569 231 3,645 4,288 193

3 571 1,873 9 264 646 3 177 78 1 1,007 1,432

2 1 3 2 , 5 9 0 2,657 119

20 908 52 244

, 930

7 1

1 307

9

100 1,740 2,539

8 5

9 569 1,077 132 1,074 1,778 224

9 304 1,452 87 1,548 1,843

95

1 72 1,186 44 1 , 2 3 8 1,302 104

693

6 787 818

2 4

125 14 259

303

23

173 6,644 547,588.80

124 1,478 130,554.00

10

196 19,405.50

133 2.772 168,701.40

193 4,481 365.672.46

13 132 2,789 163,620.24

71 1.001 59,076.00

9

316 24,940.00

85 2,624 252,328.00

224 2,002 169,488.90

95 1,938 147,200.00

104 1,406 74,050.00

24

842 39,552.00

23

326 30,592.00

4

COUNTY

BY COUNTIES

Wehster Wheeler White Whitf ield Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson Worth

577 375

17

475 753 558

30

2 1

1 2 5 6 258 29 513 543

20

828 759

29 549 526 499 39 32 4 581 72 42 613 695 25

525 516

29 306 616 610 76 99 4 228 54 166 343 448 16

5,436 3,845 2,176 392 2,873 6,171 5,179 1,193 524 16 3,369 306 169 3,246 3,828 375

507 424

24 354 792 709 43 12 1 446 17 11 406 474 79

880 784

60 639 1,833 1,671 94 53 1 1 2 7 696 40 699 683 19

250 243

14 166 263 254 27 45 3 11 141 28 174 180 16

2,234 1,882

70 1,795 2,925 2,581 117 141 9 68 2,108 25 2,020 2,201 35

Other *

6,917 6,028 3,343 362 4,272 3,190 2,748 65 23

1 2,934 231

126 2,670 3,315 166 I I

20 563 25 720 16 464 375 4,203 79 553 19 882 16 196 35 2,236

29,642.00 46,414.75 28,443.00 273,059.00 35,169.00 67,971.80 12,808.50 110,440.30

166 3,472 267,396.50

Grand Total

370.757 247,411 133.434 18,030 232298 283.359 239,692 23.184 16,860 701 98,992 164.838 13.751 241,587 276.787

15,150 170

28

15.387 292808

- - -- - --

--

"Other" includes all activity not identified with a particular county. Some reporting stations delineated certain city activity (including City of Atlanta, which was broken out of two reporting stations) while others simply grouped all their activity which was generated outside their territory as "other".

22,474.526~
I

ACCIDENT AND ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE BY COUNTIES

COUNTY

I

I

* ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE

ENFORCEMENT EXPERIEN&*

TOTAL s p e e d i n $ D r i v i n g

D e a t h s Injuries A c c i d e n t s A r r e s t s BY

U I By

County County

APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN

6

20 1

3

4 2

0

119

4

15

8

611

8

9 3

15

406

9

698

4

236

2

118

2 3

2067

7

123

5

7 7

7

120

9

162

327 103 242
12 95 1
93 876 1520 4 7 7 307 5483 214
191 235 267

1065

686

108

62 1

502

2 3

446

254

20

304

22 1

12

2551

1111

236

1155

872

46

814

393

9 1

6830

4537

371

1020

586

16 1

668

494

17

731

686

15

595

398

5 6

46 1

303

35

1103

868

55

1187

957

4 8

BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAY TON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT

14

440

932

5409

3950

498

13

146

340

2150

1670

99

7

254

434

1786

1259

8 8

1

43

82

367

204

15

15

306

542

2739

2097

172

3

58

154

2191

2012

5 1

20

1026

2016

3420

1431

270

6

456

3

28

959

3437

1861

212

2 5

758

536

5 4

34

3455

10958

6489

4770

425

4

13

15

458

310

18

3

168

326

2359

98 1

228

18

747

139 1

6337

3859

29 1

11

1311

3610

1040

636

6 5

3

15

2 1

361

196

5 1

2 7

2443

7028

3352

2189

9 2

3

4 7

150

175

131

4

6 8

6536 17578

12060

9513

260

10

320

574

1870

1119

227

10

171

870

17'30

857

5 1

*
COUNTY
COLUMBIA

* ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE
D e a t h s Injuries A c c i d e n t s

--

** ENFORCE.mNT 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

14

455

1425

2613

2281

58

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 i MURRAY

ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE *
Deaths Injuries Accidents

ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE **

TOTAL Speeding Driving

Arrests BY

UI By

County County

2

28 1

409

2506

1928

7 6

10

192

29 1

1923

1282

134

4

204

395

58 1

326

6 1

3

8 0

79

634

450

2 7

10

568

1344

1788

1422

6 8

7

825

2075

5870

4773

50 1

2

74

16 1

668

520

17

12

315

670

2605

1266

64

1

67

158

38 1

272

16 -

8

130

308

703

425

6 2

4

126

25 1

1902

1481

8 1

4

6 6

181

822

680

46

1

23

43

520

318

3 5

7

3 3

33

1941

1461

74

3

122

262

1163

797

5 8

1

4 3

7 0

282

215

16

11

352

880

6473

5303

195

8

74

8 4

1589

1199

8 8

13

328

654

3344

1412

314

0

3 6

8 7

259

169

12

1

5 7

6 8

1160

600

85

4 11927

9666

668

4

164

314

40 1

226

16

3

8 4

219

55 1

250

7 6

3

180

288

766

394

5 1

1

3 6

39

1191

642

8 0

6

242

525

3304

2256

158

10

140

192

2040

1594

8 7

8

176

340

2511

1543

183

1

5 n

45

807

576

66

3

119

331

1042

8 13

5 6

6

168

405

3949

3300

149

3

2 2

2 0

444

32 1

2 0

7

200

286

4246

3274

225

2

178

394

1437

948

59

COUNTY
MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUI TMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE S CHLEY S CREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN

* ACCIDENT EXPERIENCE
Deaths Injuries Accidents

ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE**

TOTAL S p e e d i n g Driving

A r r e s t 8 BY

U I By

County County

2 5

2 104

7559

1

1

0

7

38 1

686

3568

2852

184

7

187

176

1597

2852

49

1

54

4 7

493

284

32

12

422

645

1480

695

90

4

169

385

1275

1019

100

8

166

174

2137

1708

38

2

109

162

529

3 7 7

32

2

8 9

126

1131

700

58

13

4 15

802

1810

863

135

3

117

184

508

272

7 7

5

121

48 1

830

400

4 8

1

2 2

19

365

170

42

2

2 7

5 6

355

229

33

1

85

106

1411

939

7 7

34

2177

7829

1267

1007

62

7

667

1574

3374

2072

363

3

29

38

230

163

14

7

7 7

130

1140

803

7 5

5

9 7

117

649

450

60

7

82 7

17 10

1968

996

153

6

259

554

817

342

105

1

3 2

54

296

156

2 7

7

380

1033

2184

1298

192

1

6 9

9 1

1975

1305

9 2

3

19

2 2

1173

1104

15

6

9 9

187

1813

1129

149

2

6 1

8 3

1172

904

3 9

2

8 1

175

1557

892

129

1

9 1

192

1066

838

56

6

392

977

2226

1406

130

7

15 1

1004

694 3

5877

186

3

208

606

1861

1136

150

2

39

54

195

124

2 4

1

38

90

2776

2589

53

>

---

COUNTY

-.TROL'P TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH
-OTH-ER
TOTAL

-- - -
*
ACCIPENT EXPERIENCE

7-
ENFORCEMENT EXPERIENCE*"

TOTAL Speedin$ Driving

Deaths I n f u r i e s Accidents Arrests BY

UI By

County County

15

745

1796

3866

2380

342

4

113

208

3071

2772

80

10

8 0

72

1162

929

3 8

3

76.

8 5

363

20 1

3 9

2

322

56 1

284 1

1497

119

10

644

1160

2662

569

239

10

300

567

2155

1545

108

11

311

804

1757

1392

55

2

54

110

1013

826

2 8

6

125

369

297

20 1

18

9

224

531

857

588

3 8

1

20

3 1

577

475

17

5

3 1

4 0

828

549

29

4

173

240

525

306

2 9

20

95 1

2559

5436

2873

392

1

13

4 5

507

354

24

3

104

207

880

639

60

3

137

24 1

250

166

14

10

203

343

2234

1795

7 0

0 1362

0 81054

C! 212393

6917 330757

4272 232298

167 18030

*Accident Experience-all reporting agencies **Enforcement experience-GSP only

FATALITIES BY MONTH FOR 1985
JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
TOTAL

RURAL

URBAN

TOTAL

JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER
TOTAL

PEDESTRIANS

MOTORCYCLES

BICYCLES

HOLIDAY TRAFFIC TOLL FOR 1985

HOLIDAYS
MEMORIAL DAY FOURTH OF JULY LABOR DAY THANKSGIVING CHRISTMAS NEW YEARS
TOTAL

ACCIDENTS
1250 2405 1522 2731
376 893
9177

INJURIES
479 798 513 892 129 301
3112

FATALITIES 80

ONE (1) FATALITY EVERY 5.3 HOLIDAY HOURS.

COUNTIES WITHOUT A TRAFFIC DEATH FOR ONE YEAR (1985)
BACON ECHOLS GLASCOCK LINCOLN

HOURS

GSP ACTIVITY REPORT

ACTIVITY
ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY
Accident Number ........................ Accident Hours .......................... Fatalities Number ....................... Injuries Number ......................... Arrest M/H Total ........................ Speeding > 55 MPH .................... Speeding 56-70MPH ................... Speeding 71-80MPH ................... Speeding 80 MPH ....................... Arrest DUI Alcohol/Drugs .............. Arrest Mechanical Defects ............. Arrest M/H Truckers ................... Arrest Other Total ....................... Arrest Littering ......................... Arrest MVI .............................. Arrest I&M .............................. Arrest Other Truckers .................. Arrest Total Interstate ................... Warning M/H Total ..................... Warning Speeding ....................... Warning Mechanical Defects ............ Warning M/H Truckers ................ Warning Other Total .................... Warning Littering ....................... Warning MVI ........................... Warning I&M ........................... Warning Other Truckers ............... Warning Total Interstate ................ Pedestrian Enforcement No. . . . . . . . . . . . Criminal Inv. No......................... Criminal Inv. Hrs........................ Criminal Apprehended No.............. Stolen Vehs. Recovered No. . . . . . . . . . . . Other Stolen Property No............... Aid To Other Agency No................ Aid To Other Agency Hours ............. Motorist Assists Number ................ Road Check Hours ....................... Partner Number ........................ Partner Hours ............................ Enforcement Patrol Hours .............. Total Patrol Number ..................... Total Enforcement Hours ................
NON-ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITY
Dignitary Security Number ............ Dignitary Security Hours .............. Security Detail Number ................ Security Detail Hours ................... Escort Number ......................... Escort Hours ........................... Relay Medical Number ................

TOTAL
25.21 8 44.014
714 17.262 282.813 1. 132 47.860 166.706 20.860 18.096 2.238 8.002 53.675
171 34 929 1. 233 132.505 252.155 136.834 59.242 6.465 44.71 0 210 1 34 1. 184 850 50.305 954 271 997 575 273 72 7.583 10.530 31.927 15.672 2.622 21.003 896.505 125.720 988.721
95 754 22.549 41.112 157 842 1. 474

ACTIVITY

TOTAL

Relay Medical Hours ..................... Other Relay Number ..................... Other Relay Hours ........................ Aviation Detail Hours ...................... Safety Education Detail Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . MVI Detail Hours ......................... Radio Detail Hours ......................... Driver License Detail Hrs.................. Training Hours-Instructor ............... Training Hours-Student .................. Civil 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 .................... License Pickup Number ..................
Total Non-Enforcement Hours ............

302.553

ADMINISTRATIVE DUTY
Staff Meeting Hours ...................... Report Hours ............................... Inspection Hours .......................... Complaint Investigation No............... Complaint Investigation Hrs.............. Other Investigative Hrs................... Other Administrative Hrs.................
Total Administrative Hrs...................

7.647 46.271
5.154 990
4.008 2.140 152.657
21 7.877

LEAVE HOURS
Sick/Emergency Hours .................. Annual Leave Hours ...................... Pass/Day Off Hours ...................... Compensatory Hours .................... Military Leave Hours .................... AWOL Hours ............................. Leave W/O Pay Hours .................. Suspension Hours .......................
Total Leave Hours ........................

41.265 106.276 736.079
2.322 4.748
97 512 942
892.241

Total Other Miles ......................... 646.858 Total Patrol Miles ......................... 21.641.445 Total Miles Traveled ...................... 22.288.303
Total Hours on Duty ...................... 1.509.151

GSP SPECIAL OPERATIONS ACTIVITY REPORT

ACTIVITY

TOTAL

ACTIVITY

TOTAL

EMISSION CONTROL ACTIVITY
I&M Station Visits No................. I&M Station Visit Hrs.................. I&M Station Inspection No. . . . . . . . . . . I&M Station Inspection Hrs. . . . . . . . . . School Bus Inspection No. . . . . . . . . . . School Bus Complaint No. . . . . . . . . . . School Bus lnsp/Comp Hrs. . . . . . . . . I&M Investigation No. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I&M Investigation Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I&M Training No..................... I&M Training Hrs.................... I&M Training Attendance ............ Emission Control Admins Hrs........
Total I&M Detail Hours ...............
SAFETY EDUCATION ACTIVITY
Number Schools Visited ............. School Program Number ............ School Program Attendance ......... School Program Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Films Shown No.....................
Slide Program No. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pamplets Distributed ................ Bicycle Rodeo No.................... Bicycle Rodeo Attendance ...........
D.D.C. No.............................. D.D.C. Attendance .................... D.D.C. Hrs............................. Civic Club No.......................... Civic Club Attendance ................ Civic Club Hrs......................... Employee Group No.................. Employee Group Attendance ......... Employee Group Hrs.................. Other Program No.................... Other Program Attendance ........... Other Program Hrs..................... Radio Spots Taped .................... Radio Spots Aired ..................... Radio/TV Programs .................. Study Preparation Hrs................ Safety Education Contacts ........... Public RelationsVisit No.............. Public RelationsVisit Hrs............. Safety EducationAdminis. Hrs.........
Total Safety Education Hrs............

AVIATION ACTIVITY
Aircraft Maintenance Hrs..................... Flight Number .................................. Flight Hours .................................... Traffic Enforcement Hrs......................... Searches Number ............................... Searches Hours ................................ Aviation Admins Hrs.............................
Total Aviation Hrs...............................
ALCOHOL/DRUG AWARENESS PROGRAM
School Instruction Hrs.......................... School Visitation Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . School Program Number ...................... School Program Attendance ................... No. of Public School Students Pass ........... No. of Public School Students In-Comp. . . . . . . No. of Public School Students Failed ......... No. of Private School Students Pass ........... No. of Private School Students In-Comp....... No. of Private Schools Students Failed . . . . . . . No. of Others Students ........................ In-Service Training Hrs........................
Total Alcohol/Drug Awareness Hours ......... Total Administrative Hrs.........................

FATALITIES BY P O S T

POST

FATALITIES

................

I

24

POST

FATALITIES

25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56

TROOP

24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26

TOTAL 1.362

FATALITIES 131 163

F A T A L I T I E S BY . . TROOP

161
. All fatalities for DeKalb County included in Troop C
98
. All fatalities for Bleckley County included in Troop K
157

TOTAL

1.362

License Examiners Yearly Report

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

FAILURES

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

56,044 49,009
1,653 1,760 1,382
813 1,483 1,086 1,572 2,020

3,555 3,416
56 86 34 16 52 36 43 72

32,366 1,107

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 O
Code S Code T Code V

Total DPS-23
lssued for Year ............ 377,368
Total Renewals
lssuedfor Year ............ 1,269,463
Tota I
Out-of-State License ...... 137,150
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

Male Female Court Department
DUI Suspensions - 1 year DUJ Suspensions - 3 year Points Suspensions - 1 year Points Suspensions - 3 year Leaving Scene of Accident - 1 year Leaving Scene of Accident - 3 year
Driving With License Susp/Rev/Canc Homicide by Vehicle License Surrendered in Lieu of Bond Failure to Appear in Court Conditional License Suspension All Other Suspensions Conditional License Revocation Physical/Mental Disability Habitual Violator HV Probationary License Revoked HV Probationary License Cancelled Limited Permit Revoked Limited Permit Cancelled All Other Cancellations
TOTALS
Court Department

SUSPENSIONS REVOCATIONS CANCELLATIONS

YEAR

YEAR

YEAR

BREAKDOWN

REINSTATED

202

0

0

65,476

3.26 1

239

CORRECTED REPORTS
YEAR .............................. .2,915

NOLO CONTENDERES
Year.. ................................. 610

OTHER ACTIONS

HEARINGS
Scheduled .......................... 1,715 Decisions ........................... 1 ,I33

D.I. CLINIC REINSTATEMENTS
DUI. ............................... 21,912 All Others ..........................5,228

INSURANCE REINSTATEMENTS
All ................................... 385

PHYSICAVMENTAL DISABILITY
Exam Passed .......................... .40

HABITUAL VIOLATORS
Exam Passed .......................3,131

RESCINDED
DUI.. ................................ 1,103 HV .................................. 305
All Others ..........................2.117

REVOCATION AND SUSPENSION

Number Paying Fee ($20.00). ........................................................

43

Amount Paid ....................................................................... $ 8 6 0

Number Paying Fee ($25.00). ......................................................... 31.083

Amount Paid ....................................................................... $777.075

Number Fees Transferred .............................................................

125

Number Fees Refunded ............................................................... 2.360

Pending DUI Nolo Contendere Orders ................................................. 26.567

Pending DUI Nolo Contendere Suspension Deleted .................................... 11.745

Dl Certificate Entered for Nolo Credit -Ticket Not On Record.......................... 5.986

Pickups Issued for Driver's Licenses................................................... 4.618

Pickups Served ....................................................................... 1.541

Bail Receipts Received from Courts ................................................... 4.997

Failure to Appear Reinstatements ..................................................... 17.915

Warning Letters Issued ............................................................... 35.284

Limited Permits Issued................................................................ 1.209

Suspensions Expired ................................................................. 14.148

SR-25 ...............................................................................

0

Failure to Appear Forms Forwarded Out of State for Suspension ....................... 16.578

Failure to Appear Forms Forwarded Out of State for Reinstatement .................... 8.567

HV Probationary Driver's Licenses Approved ........................................ 4.204

HV Probationary Driver's Licenses Denied ............................................. 159

HV Probationary Driver's Licenses Issued ............................................. 2.640

Certified Records ..................................................................... 7.973

Driver Improvement Clinic Point Reductions ...........................................

346

Appeals Filed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

72

Appeals Won by Department .........................................................

43

Appeals Lost by Department .........................................................

4

DOT Warning Letters ................................................................. 3.391

DOT Suspensions .................................................................... 2.835

DOT Reinstatement Fees ($10.00) ....................................................

171

Amountpaid ....................................................................... $ 1.710

SAFETY RESPONSIBILITY

ACCIDENT REPORTS RECEIVED .............................

4. 5 0 3

ACCIDENT CASES PROCESSED .............................

5.4 4 4

ACCIDENT CASES CLOSED ...................................

6. 6 8 1

JUDGMENT SUSPENSIONS ..................................

1. 1 4 4

SECURITY SUSPENSlONS .....................................

4. 653

OUT OF STATE SUSPENSIONS ..............................

521

REINSTATEMENTS ..............................................

4.0 0 8

PICKUP ORDERS .................................................

2. 147

SECOND NOTICES ................................................

2. 3 5 8

HEARINGS SCHEDULED .......................................

210

STATUS REPORTS ...............................................

1.3 7 8

NUMBER PAYING $25.00 RESTORATION FEE ..........

37

SECURITY DEPOSITED ......................................... $44.108.39

SECURITY DISBURSED ......................................... $1 1.382.83

SECURITY RETURNED .......................................... $21.797.94

PROPERTY BONDS POSTED .................................. $38.466.01

PROPERTY BONDS RELEASED .............................. $41.682.03

BALANCE ON DEPOSIT ........................................ $45.598.42

MEDICAL ADVISORY BOARD
Cases recommendedfor revocation by the Department .........................................316*
Cases recommendedfor return of license by way of
renewal. reinstatement. etc.. by Department...................................................265 Medical reports receivedfrom physicians.........................................................463
Reports receivedfrom individuals. other than
physicians. regarding subjects with physical/mental disabilities ............................. 59 Licenses revoked due to reports from physicians.................................................225
Licenses revoked due to reports from individuals
other than physicians............................................................................31 Cases referred to the Drivers License Advisory board.............................................54 Cases recommendedfor revocation by Board .....................................................41
Cases recommendedfor returned licenses by renewal.
reinstatement. re-testing by Board...............................................................13
"includes cases to remain revoked
5 0

NO-FAULT

NOTICES OF CANCELLATIONS

Mailed to Insured ................................................................................. Completed & Returned by Insured ........................................................ Suspension Orders Issued ................................................................... Suspension Orders Withdrawn ............................................................ Reinstatements ................................................................................... Number Paying $10.00 Fee .................................................................

0
0 0 3. 309 0
0

CONVICTION TICKETS
Suspension Orders Issued ................................................................... 17.503 Court Corrections ................................................................................ 408 Reinstatements ................................................................................... 7.609 Number Paying $25.00 Fee ................................................................. 8.086

OTHER

Second Suspension Notices ................................................................. DPS 22-A ...................................................................................... DPS 832 .............................................................................................. DPS 1101 ............................................................................................ DPS 1102 ............................................................................................ DPS1107 ............................................................................................

0 4. 550 1.041 4. 437 1. 182
271

NO FAULT INSURANCE
The Department of Public Safety No Fault Unit is responsible for getting owners and operators of
vehicles tocomply with the No Fault Law.Georgia's No Fault lnsurance law requires all vehicles to be
covered by a minimum 15-30-10-15 nofault policy and that proof of coverage must be carried in the
vehicle at all times. lnsurance companies are required to report cancellations to the department when it is evident that replacement coverage has not been obtained. The owner's license is suspended until coverage is proved and a reinstatement fee of $25.00 is paid.

MOTOR VEHICLE RECORDS

Request for 3 year records ........................................................... Request for 7 year records ..........................................................

2.077. 831 147.212

Revenue Collected: For three year requests ($2.50) ................................................ $5.194.577.50 For seven year requests ($3.00) ............................................... 441.636.00

TOTAL

$5.636.213.50

Total photo enlargements for Police Agencies ..............................

8. 353

Written and phone requests from Courts and Law Enforcement Agencies (No Fee) .................................

32. 764

Information requests from Public by Phone ...................................

6. 225

HEARING SECTION IMPLIED CONSENT
Implied Consent Affidavits ......................................................................... 5.334 Implied Consent Hearings Scheduled ........................................................ 2. 137 Implied Consent Hearings -- Suspension Upheld ...................................... 429 Implied Consent Hearings -- Suspension Withdrawn ................................ 896 Implied Consent Hearings -- Failed to Appear ........................................... 196 Implied Consent Hearings -- Rescheduled ................................................. 320

Cases on Appeal .......................................................................................

30

Appeal Won by Licensee ...........................................................................

5

Suspension Upheld by Court .....................................................................

13

Agency Reviews ........................................................................................ 91

Transcript Requested by Attorney ($40.00) ................................................ 36

Implied Consent Reinstatements ............................................................... 640 Implied Consent Second Notices ............................................................... 1.234 Implied Consent Class Instructor Hours ..................................................... 9 6

Revocation Hearings Scheduled ................................................................ Revocation Hearings -- Rescheduled ........................................................ No Fault Hearings Scheduled .................................................................... No Fault Hearings -- Rescheduled ............................................................ Safety Responsibility Hearings Scheduled ................................................. Safety Responsibility Hearings -- Rescheduled ..........................................

733 37
233 14
78 9

School Bus Warning Letters ...................................................................... School Bus Hearings Scheduled ................................................................ School Bus Hearings -- Upheld ................................................................. School Bus Hearings -- Withdrawn ...........................................................

761 99 19 65

TICKET CODING

Conviction reports received from Georgia Courts ............................ Processed ...................................................................................

930. 2 9 4 843. 871

Total Amount Paid (Fee paid to Ga. Courts
for processed citations) ............................................................... $210.967.75

Conviction reports received from out of State .................................. Processed ...................................................................................

121.274 8 1.090

Non Resident Compact on out of state driver's license Suspensions ............................................................................... Reinstatements ..........................................................................

16.578 8. 567

Issuing Department Citations on DUI ..............................................

52. 636

Mail Ga. citations and etc. on out of state residents
to home state for processing .......................................................
5 2

165. 145

Computer Services
JOBS/DOCUMENTS PROCESSED BY DATA CENTRAL

Affidavit .............................................. Bail Bond ............................................ Cancellations ....................................... Corrections .......................................... FTA Deletes ......................................... FTA Green Cards .................................. Hearing Decision .................................. HV Appeal ........................................... Envelope Served ................................... Envelope Surr'd & Served ....................... HV Clinic ............................................ HV Duplicate ....................................... HV Green Cards ................................... HV Orders ........................................... HV PS ................................................
HV Prob. Lic. Application ......................... HV Prob. Lic. Revoked ............................
HV Prob. Lic. Cancelled ........................... SR Delete ........................................... Nolo .................................................. Physical Disability ................................. Surrendered License .............................. Point Credit ......................................... SR-22 & SR-26 Insurance ...................... Reinstatements .................................... Court Suspensions ................................ NF Forfeiture ....................................... Juvenile CRT Susp................................ Mandatory Appeal ................................. Inmate Purge ....................................... Court Appeal Won ................................. I.C. Affidavit ......................................... Address Changes .................................. IC Hearing Request ................................ IC Hearing Decision ............................... IC Green Cards ..................................... IC Appeal ............................................ License Attached .................................. LP Application & Served .........................

LP Cancellation ....................................

36

Nolo Credits ......................................... 5.956

DUI Nolo Deletes .................................. 14.292

NF Delete ............................................ 3.365

NF Fee ................................................

569

NF Decision .........................................

242

NF SR22A Cancelled .............................

37

NF Service ..........................................

474

NF Hearing Request ...............................

285

18 0 Day Ext.........................................

513

Combined Records ................................

680

Deceased Purges ..................................

154

Scanner Edit Errors ............................... 93.023

New App. Edit Errors ..............................

8. 173

Citation Corrections ............................... 52.899

Scanner Tapes ..................................... 1.612.593

DUI Permit Errors ..................................

217

DUI Permit Tape ................................... 1.319

IC Appeal Lost ......................................

2

B.B. Delete ...........................................

7

Citation Add ........................................

15

I.C. 180 Day Permit ...............................

71

SR Suspensions ...................................

1.584

HV Pickup ...........................................

3.055

9800 # ...............................................

490

Eye Test .............................................

488

FTA Suspensions .................................. 15.849

HV Appeal Won ....................................

3

Forms & Green Cards ............................ 79.325

MVR's ................................................ 120.758

DPS23's ............................................ 324.365

Accidents ............................................ 21 1.892

License Attached .................................. 25.841

MVI ................................................... 444. 183

Trooper Activity .................................... 10.898

Vehicle Accounting ............................... 60.946
Drug & Alch. Cert.................................. 130.746

Arrest Tickets ....................................... 52.636

Conviction Tickets ................................ 638.727

TOTAL .....................................

Budget

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY SCHEDULE OF APPROVED BUDGET ALLOTMENTS
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1985

PERSONAL SERVICES REGULAR OPERATING EXPENSES TRAVEL MOTOR VEHICLE EQUIPMENT PURCHASES PUBLICATIONS AND PRINTING EQUIPMENT PURCHASES COMPUTER CHARGES REAL ESTATE RENTALS TELECOMMUNICATIONS PER DIEM, FEES AND CONTRACTS CAPITAL OUTLAY POSTAGE CONVICTION REPORTS PEACE OFFICERS TRAINING GRANT DRIVER LICENSE PROCESSING HIGHWAY SAFETY GRANTS

ORIGINAL LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL

AMENDED

BUDGET

APPROPRIATION ADJUSTMENTS

TOTAL

FUNDING PROVIDED Appropriation Allotments State Funds Federal Funds Other Revenues Retained
Carry-Over from Prior Year Transfer from Reserved Fund Balance

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY STATE REVENUE COLLECTIONS FUND STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1985
CASH RECEIPTS
STATE REVENUE COLLECTIONS
Drivers' License Fees Class 1 Learners' Licenses
One (1 ) Year - 1 13,778at $1.50 Class 1 and 2 Licenses
Four (4)Years - 1,041,281at $4.50 Class 2,3,4,and 5 Licenses
Six (6)Months - 26,499at $1.50 Class 3,4,and 5 Licenses
Four (4)Years - 55,707at $8.50 Class 1 Learners, 1,2,3,4,5a,nd Veterans, Inmate and National
Guard Licenses - 120,899at No Charge Department of News Media ldentlfication Cards -
2,851at No Charge
Habitual Violators Reinstatement Licenses
3,095at $25.00
Limited Permits
1,515at $2.00
Probationary Licenses
2,832at $20.00
Public ldentification Cards
21 ,I 23 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 l)nclassified Revenue
Total Cash Receipts
CASH BALANCE JULY 1,1984
State Revenue Collection Fund
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY BUDGET FUND
STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES YEAR ENDED JUNE 30,1985
EXPENDITURES
PERSONAL SERVICES Salaries and Wages Employer's Contributions for: F.I.C.A. Retirement Health lnsurance Personal Liability lnsurance Unemployment Compensation lnsurance
Workers' Compensation lnsurance
Assessments by Merit System
REGULAR OPERATING EXPENSES Motor Vehicle Expenses Supplies and Materials Repairs and Maintenance Utilities Lease/Purchase of Equipment Rents (Other Than Real Estate) lnsurance and Bonding Claims and Indemnities (See Schedule) Tuition and Scholarships Other Operating Expenses (See Schedule)
TRAVEL
MOTOR VEHICLE EQUIPMENT PURCHASES (See Schedule)
PUBLICATIONS AND PRINTING
EQUIPMENT PURCHASES
COMPUTER CHARGES
Supplies and Materials Repairs and Maintenance Lease/Purchase of Equipment Other Expenditures (See Schedule) Software Equipment Purchases Per Diem and Fees Computer Billings, DOAS

REAL ESTATE RENTALS (See Schedule)
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
PER DIEM, FEES AND CONTRACTS Per Diem and Fees Contracts (See Schedule)
CAPITAL OUTLAY Repairs and Maintenance 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 Publications and Printing
HIGHWAY SAFETY GRANTS Grants to Counties, Cities and Civil Divisions (See Schedule)
Total Expenditures
Excess of Funds Available over Expenditures

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

REVENUES
APPROPRIATION ALLOTMENTS General Appropriation Amended Appropriation

FUNDS AVAILABLE

FEDERAL FUNDS (See Exhibit "G") Direct Grants Sub-Grants Federal-Aid Funding Agreements

OTHER REVENUES RETAINED(See Schedule) Total Revenues

CARRY-OVER FROM PRIOR YEAR
Transfer from Reserved Fund Balances Federal Grant Balances GSFlC Construction Project No. 6BA-48
Total Funds Available

Locations