Long Beach, CA – The Long Beach Department of Health and Human Services (Health Department) has been awarded a $215,000 grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to reduce distracted driving related collisions.
“Thank you to the Office of Traffic Safety for supporting our efforts to educate the community about the dangers of distracted driving,” said Mayor Rex Richardson. “We must continue to work collectively to remind our community that putting your phone away while driving will save lives.”
The Health Department’s GreenlightLB Program will use grant funds to support educational activities and behavioral changing strategies to reduce distracted driving in Long Beach. Funds received will support activities conducted between Oct. 1, 2023, and Sept. 30, 2024, including:
“Educating residents about making safety the number one priority when sharing the roadways is a crucial step in eliminating preventable collisions,” said Health Department Acting Director Alison King. “The efforts funded by OTS will set social norms for our youth, curb dangerous driving behaviors, and help create safer streets for everyone."
Last year, the program reached 1,500 community members via:
“Silence your phone and put it away while driving,” said Office of Traffic Safety Director Barbara Rooney. “It is a simple, yet significant action that keeps yourself and others on the road safe.”
This is the fourth year the Health Department has received an OTS grant to continue its distracted driving prevention efforts. The activities funded by this grant are in line with strategies identified in the Health Department’s Strategic Plan: to develop and implement a citywide distracted driving prevention program to change the behaviors of drivers through public awareness, education and informed decision-making; expand activities during Safe Streets Awareness Week to educate drivers on how to safely share the streets with pedestrians and bicyclists; and offer Health Department resources, training and professional expertise to community members, schools, and other service partners to build capacity, extend our reach, and advance public health goals. GreenlightLB’s program activities also help to advance goals identified in the City’s Safe Streets Action Plan to eliminate traffic-related deaths and serious injuries by 2026.