Sheriff’s office reminds everyone: Fans Don’t Let Fans Drive Drunk

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Super Bowl LIV is right around the corner. This year, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is teaming up with the Hamilton County Traffic Safety Partnership to remind football fans and Super Bowl partygoers that designated drivers are the best defense against the dangers of drunk driving.

Super Bowl LIV falls on Sunday, Feb. 2. If your Super Bowl celebration involves alcohol, plan for a ride home with a sober driver. If you’re hosting the party, take care of the designated drivers. The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department reminds everyone that Fans Don’t Let Fans Drive Drunk.

Quakenbush

“Have a great weekend and enjoy the Super Bowl,” said Sheriff Dennis Quakenbush. “If you choose to drink, please have a sober driver.”

If you’re planning to be a designated driver, know that you’re the night’s MVP. No matter what, do not drink any alcohol – people are relying on you. While at the party, enjoy the food, the company, and the non-alcoholic drinks. Encourage other designated drivers on social media using the hashtag #DesignatedDriver. Your positive influence could help keep other designated drivers on the right track.

If someone you know has been drinking and tries to drive, take their keys and help them get home safely. Even if they make a fuss in the moment, they’ll thank you later.

If you’re hosting this year’s Super Bowl party, prepare plenty of snacks and non-alcoholic beverages for your guests and the designated drivers. Get creative and try out some Super Bowl-themed snacks and beverages. Support your designated drivers by tweeting their names to @NHTSAgov to add their name to the Wall of Fame and use the hashtag #DesignatedDriver. They are doing everyone a favor by keeping drunk drivers off the roads.

Ask your guests to designate their sober drivers in advance or help them coordinate with other partygoers’ designated drivers.

Drunk driving isn’t the only risk on the road: Drug-impaired driving is also an increasing problem, for men and for women alike. If drivers are impaired by any substance – alcohol or drugs – they should not get behind the wheel of a vehicle. It is illegal in all states to drive impaired by alcohol or drugs. Remember: Driving while impaired is illegal, period.

The bottom line is this: If you feel different, you drive different. It’s that simple.

If you’re heading out for a night of Super Bowl fun, make a game plan and follow these simple tips for a safe and happy evening:

  • It is never OK to drive drunk. Designate a sober driver or plan to use public transportation or a ride service to get home safely if you plan to drink.
  • If you see a drunk driver on the road, contact the Hamilton County Public Safety Communications Center at (317) 773-1282 or 9-1-1 for an emergency.
  • Have a friend who is about to drink and drive? Take the keys away and get your friend home safely.

Remember: If you drive drunk, you may lose money, your reputation, your car and even your life. Everyone should know by now that it is illegal to drive impaired. Even still, thousands die each year in drunk driving-related crashes. In 2018, there were 10,511 people killed in drunk-driving crashes. The costs can be financial, too: If you’re caught drinking and driving, you can face jail time, lose your driver’s license and your vehicle, and pay up to $10,000 in attorney’s fees, fines, car towing, higher insurance rates and lost wages.

Click here for more information on the dangers of drunk driving.