.
Feedback

Summer DUI Arrest Campaign at 136 in County

Los Altos has one arrest so of the 136 made in the past week. Morgan Hill scheduled a DUI checkpoint Aug. 24, and more are on the way.

 

A national end-of-summer crackdown on drunken driving that began last Friday is in full swing throughout the Bay Area with DUI arrests up in some counties in the first week of the operation, law enforcement officials said.

The Summer/Labor Day National Anti-drunken driving campaign is headed by county AVOID programs, including Santa Clara County's "Avoid the 13." It  coordinated through the state's Office of Traffic Safety is upping law enforcement presence for 17 days, which began Aug. 17.

In Santa Clara County, the "Avoid the 13" campaign has netted in
136 arrests for DUIs, or "driving under the influence," thus far. 

A DUI checkpoint was scheduled in Morgan Hill Friday, followed by
a series of checkpoints throughout the county. DUI checkpoints will be conducted on Saturday September 1, in the cities of San Jose and Milpitas. Extra DUI "saturation patrols" will be deployed in the cities of: Campbell, Milpitas, Los Altos, Mountain View, Los Gatos, PaloAlto, San Jose, Santa Clara, Gilroy, Sunnyvale, Morgan Hill, Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Altos Hills, and the unincorporated areas of Santa Clara County.

The crackdown targets drivers in August, said California Office of Traffic Safety spokesman Chris Cochran, because "it's a high DUI month" and leads into the Labor Day holiday at the start of September.

Cochran said other enforcement periods more predictably connect to higher drunken driving arrest rates, such as New Year's or the Fourth of July. Statistically, he said, some of the year's most deadly DUI days tend to fall in August each year.

Solano and San Mateo counties' anti-DUI campaigns saw a decrease in drunken driving arrests so far in the operation compared to arrests from 2011.

In Solano County, 12 drivers were arrested compared to 20 in 2011. Also in San Mateo County, DUI arrests were down in the first six days of the campaign. Last year 82 arrests were made in that time period, while this year only 59 arrests were reported.

Extra patrols will be dispatched to South San Francisco and Burlingame Friday as part of the operation.

In Alameda County, a third sobriety checkpoint of the summer operation will be held Friday night at 8 p.m. at an undisclosed location,
campaign officials said.

 

Agency

Aug. 17

Aug. 18

Aug. 19

Aug. 20

Aug. 21

Aug. 22

Aug. 23

Campbell PD

0

1

1

 

0

NR

NR

CHP - Gilroy

4

5

9

1

NR

NR

0

 

CHP – San Jose

6

7

12

1

3

6

5

Gilroy PD

2

1

2

0

1

0

1

Los Altos PD

0

0

0

1

0

 

0

Los Gatos PD

2

0

0

 

1

 

 

Milpitas PD

0

0

1

1

1

1

0

Morgan Hill PD

0

2

1

1

0

1

0

Mountain View PD

2

2

3

0

1

1

 

Palo Alto PD

2

0

0

0

0

 

0

San Jose PD

9

 

10

7

2

1

2

Santa Clara PD

2

0

0

1

NR

NR

 

Sunnyvale PD

0

1

1

1

0

1

4

San Jose State U.

NR

NR

NR

NR

NR

NR

NR

Cumulative

 

49

90

103

113

124

136

Daily Total

29

20

41

13

10

11

12

— Bay City News wire contributed to this report 

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Los Altos Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
mtnview_parent April 12, 2013 at 03:06 am
The only problem with the charter school is that they cause more problem than they solve. TheyRead More want to close Covington, then Blach. So, they don't provide flexibility at all. They keep going to court. This is a case were the remedy is worst than the disease. The original idea is that we have to be creative with the 10th site. Land is scarce, and most likely, we cannot provide the same facility than other school within the district. People are not happy about being moved from their school (with good reason I feel) Solution: provide an inspiring project. May be an immersion program, or a more academic program, or maybe a program to help english learner from K-3. If we don't innovate with a more flexible program, we might just need to redraw the boundaries every 5-7 years. Nobody can foresee the future, but you can build flexibility.
Mitch Caldwell April 11, 2013 at 11:36 pm
Maybe offering a magnet school could help with stability? It can balance out enrollment at otherRead More schools so that attendance boundaries do not have to be redrawn. Isn't the charter school doing that for the LASD district right now?
mtnview_parent April 11, 2013 at 10:36 pm
I saw you had a good discussion on the definition of a neighborhood school. But beyond theRead More definitions, I would like to ask why does palo Alto school District and Cupertino School district have a mix of neighborhood school and some choice school. Those are two high performing district right next to us. Can a choice school be an excellent way to stop the highly disruptive attendance boundary change ? People say I am for statu quo, that I am against change. I feel that family and children need stability, that is why we don't change spouse at the pace the BoT change the attendance boundary. People who want some stability at home (and their school) do make a reasonable request.
Karen Janowski April 22, 2013 at 12:19 pm
And you can join the Drive Less Challenge that starts today and runs for the next two weeks. JoinRead More any time during the 2-week period. Check it out at www.DriveLessChallengeLA.com. Try out some alternative transportation, like bicycling or walking (or even carpooling with other families) with your kids to school, bike to the grocery store for those one or two items or walk to the local coffee shop instead of driving. Take the train on a weekend adventure to San Francisco or light rail to San Jose. It's a good opportunity to try something you might not have done before. Have fun with it!