Featured Advertisers
Tue, Nov. 24  -   -  Mobile  -  RSS
  

Make a post about this story on FredTalk. Get a printer-friendly version of this page. E-mail this story to a friend.


Visit Jonas Beals's blog: Stafford County News and Notes

First Sgt. Brian Jacobs of the Stafford Sheriff's Office monitors traffic at Mountain View High School on the first day of school last week.
PHOTOS BY MIKE MORONES/THE FREE LANCE-STAR

View More Images from this story

Visit the Photo Place

View the Stafford County community page

Keeping students safe

The Stafford Sheriff's Office prepares drivers for the new school year

Date published: 9/15/2009

BY JONAS BEALS

First Sgt. Brian Jacobs stepped out into Mountain View Road and waved his arms up and down in front of a black Honda Civic. Jacobs was in front of Margaret Brent Elementary School.

"Slow down!" he shouted. "This is a school zone!"

The message was clear: Summer break is over for school kids and drivers alike.

Stafford County law enforcement worked their annual "School's Open" campaign last week. It was a reminder that drivers need to slow for school zones, stop for buses, wear seat belts, stay off cell phones and be alert for young drivers.

The program started in 1992 as a preventative measure and educational opportunity.

Sheriff's deputies are assigned to each county school, where they monitor traffic speed and stand watch over the again-active intersections.

Jacobs was covering two schools at once last week--Mountain View High School is directly behind Margaret Brent Elementary. He stood at the exit and implored young drivers to wear their seat belts.

"We're trying to be preventative," said William Kennedy, Sheriff's Office public information officer. "Our goal is not to catch speeders, it is to keep the students safe, first and foremost."

Road safety has been a major concern for Stafford County officials over the past few years. Supervisor Mark Dudenhefer lost his teenage daughter to a car crash, and he has championed education efforts focused on new teen drivers.

Although there were no teen traffic fatalities in the county last year, road improvements for safety reasons are still a high priority in Stafford. Ideally, the most dangerous roads will be widened, reflectors will be installed and re-engineering will remove hazardous turns, but those things take time and money.

"What can you change right now?" Jacobs asked. "You can change driving behavior through education."

But not all students on the road after school are driving. While most are riding school buses--which drivers should always be aware of--some are on foot. A few Stafford elementary and middle schools allow children to walk to and from school.

Rodney Thompson is such a school, and Amy Lee is a crossing guard who helps keep those students safe.


1  2  Next Page  


Follow us on
twitter
fredericksburg.com Facebook page


Read more stories about Stafford
Date published: 9/15/2009


What do you think?
Enter your FredTalk username and password to post a comment on this story. If you are registered on FredTalk or another part of this site, use that login here. Otherwise, you can just REGISTER here... .

Username: Password:

Post title:


Please keep it brief: (512-character limit)
Please make sure CAPS LOCK is off. Posts in ALL CAPS will be deleted.)


By checking this box, you agree to the terms of the FredTalk User agreement.