The Kansas Department of Transportation honored five Kansans with
Transportation Safety Recognition Awards for their efforts to improve traffic
safety. The awards were presented today at the 25th Annual Transportation
Safety Conference that took place April 2-3 in Wichita.
Recipients are honored in two categories - People Saving People
Award and the Hero Award.
The People Saving People Award recognizes an individual or
organization that has made outstanding contributions to the improvement of
transportation safety behavior in Kansas. The 2019 recipients are:
Rita Lesser, Perry – Lesser teaches at
Perry-Lecompton High School and also serves as the sponsor for SAFE (Seatbelts
Are For Everyone). As the SAFE sponsor, she teaches students about seat belt
usage and distracted and impaired driving by creatively utilizing sidewalk
messages, PSAs on YouTube, pledge cards, posters, window painting, health fair
booths, drunk goggles and the Convincer (a crash simulator).
Amber Rollins, Olathe – Rollins is the Director of
KidsAndCars.org, an
organization that focuses attention on children left unattended in or around
vehicles. She was instrumental in the passing of a
Good Samaritan law (HB 2516) in Kansas to protect citizens from liability if
they break into a vehicle to rescue a trapped child, vulnerable adult or
animal.
Overland
Park Police Department – The Overland Park Police Department utilized the Data-Driven Approach to Crime and Traffic Safety
(DDACTS) to significantly reduce the number of crashes at Oak Park Mall and two
major intersections adjacent to the mall. Officers focused on hazardous traffic
violations and made every effort to monitor seat belt violations,
distracted driving, teen drivers and motorists driving while impaired. As a
result, overall crashes were reduced by 17 percent - from 214 crashes in 2017
to 177 in 2018.
The Hero Award recognizes the individual who risked his or her own
life for someone else when they happened upon a crash or while trying to
prevent the likelihood of a crash in a one-time traffic safety-related
incident. The 2019 recipients are:
Deputy Robert K. Kunze, III, Sedgwick County – Kunze
demonstrated extreme bravery and courage during a traffic stop in which he was
mortally wounded but still managed to pursue and capture his assailant. He very likely saved
the lives of two citizens onsite at the traffic stop and all the responding law
enforcement officers who followed.
Sergeant Mitchell Talley, Miami County – Talley responded to a medical
call in which a man was bleeding from a self-inflicted four-inch laceration on
the left side of his neck. Talley believed the victim had severed an artery,
and he continuously applied pressure to the area until EMS arrived and took
over. The man survived because of Talley’s meritorious actions.
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