Dorris

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於 2013年3月6日 (三) 01:41 由 Dorris (對話 | 貢獻) 所做的修訂 (新页面: In current years, two organizations have been formed to combat the deadly menace of drunk drivers. MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) was formed to stop drunk driving, assistance the vi...)

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In current years, two organizations have been formed to combat the deadly menace of drunk drivers. MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) was formed to stop drunk driving, assistance the victims of it and avoid underage drinking. SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions) was designed to give students with the finest prevention and tools to deal with underage drinking, drug use, impaired driving and other destructive decisions. The two organizations take different approaches to drunk driving and each is succeeding in its personal way.

MADD was founded in 1980 by Cindy Lightner, following the death of her 13 year old daughter who was killed by a drunk driver out of bail for a hit and run accident only two days earlier. Lightner and other mothers who had lost youngsters to drunk drivers formed MADD in an effort to cease the much more than 30,000 alcohol connected driving deaths each and every year. They worked, not only to educate the public about the dangers of drunk driving, but to adjust societal attitudes about drinking and driving.

By 1982, MADD had established 100 chapters across the nation. MADD appeared in newspapers and on Tv. It addressed lawmakers, presenting not just statistics, but the faces of the victims of drunk drivers. Thanks to their efforts, President Reagan signed into law the Uniform Drinking Age Act in 1984. MADD expanded its campaign from Dont Drive Drunk to Dont Drink and Drive.

To accomplish this, it has advised greater beverage taxes, lower drunk driving arrest thresholds, and roadblocks developed to frighten men and women out of social drinking. It has also created Victim Influence Panels, where people convicted of driving although intoxicated hear the stories of parents, relatives and pals of victims of drunk driving accidents.

Twenty-six years immediately after the founding of MADD, alcohol related driving deaths in the United States have been lowered to about 17,000 annually. Nowadays MADD has 600 chapters, community action teams and offices in the United States. domestic assault

SADD was founded by Robert Anastas of Wayland High School in Massachusetts as Students Against Driving Drunk in 1981. SADD emerged as a response to far more than 6,000 young men and women becoming killed in alcohol related accidents each year. Anastas and 15 other students wrote the Contract for Life to facilitate communication among young individuals and their parents about potentially destructive choices associated to alcohol.

SADDs method to the difficulty was to develop peer-to-peer educational programs in school chapters ranging from middle schools to colleges. In 1997, SADD expanded its mission to contain underage drinking, substance abuse, impaired driving, violence, and suicide. SADDs applications are keyed to the demands of individual school areas. These include peer-led classes, forums, workshops, conferences and rallies, and other awareness-raising activities.

Over its initial decade, SADD has worked with numerous federal and state agencies, nonprofit groups and foundations to get its message across. By 1990, due in part to the perform of SADD, the quantity of young people killed in alcohol related accidents fell to 2,000 per year.

Each MADD and SADD have been influential in reducing the number of alcohol related deaths in the United States.