Safety and other impacts of vehicle impound enforcement.

Author(s)
Cooper, D. Chira-Chavala, T. & Gillen, D.
Year
Abstract

California Vehicle Impound Law California vehicle impound law took effect on January 1, 1995. The law allows a police officer to seize a vehicle operated by a person whose license is suspended or revoked or who has never been issued a license. The seized vehicle shall then be impounded for 30 days. In California, a driver must be stopped for some other infraction before his/her license can be checked. The City of Upland, located in western San Bernardino County, has a population of 67,453 residing in a 15.2 square-mile area. The city's 169 miles of roadways support about 600,000 vehicle-miles of travel daily. Upland Police Department implemented a vehicle impound program in January 1995 as part of its overall traffic enforcement. The number of impounded vehicles in Upland grew significantly from about 20 per month initially to about 130 per month at its peak. Evaluation Objective The purpose of this evaluation is to assess the impact of Upland's vehicle impound program on traffic safety (crashes and on-the-road behaviour) and police department resources and operations. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
C 35353 [electronic version only]
Source

Berkeley, CA, University of California, Institute of Transportation Studies ITS, 2000, 52 p., 18 ref.; Research Report ; UCB-ITS-RR-2000-1 - ISSN 0192-4095

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.