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Fatal accidents capture attention, renew focus on safety

Deadly crashes rise only slightly, but drivers are urged to pay attention

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A North Carolina man was killed in an accident on Interstate 80 near the Illinois 47 overpass in September 2012. (Herald File Photo)

Statistically, Grundy County did not suffer a significant increase in fatalities due to traffic accidents than previous years, but law enforcement officials say any loss of life is too much and, year after year, it doesn't seem to be decreasing.

Looking back at the most read Morris Daily Herald articles of 2012, crime and accident reports top the list. But this year, those reports of loss of life seem to top the local news.

The Grundy County Coroner's office saw seven deaths due to traffic accidents this year, Coroner John Callahan said, but this does not include accidents in Grundy County whose victims were transported to hospitals out of the county and later died. Last year, there were five fatalities due to traffic accidents.

Although seven may not seem alarming, one Morris man had just become a grandfather for the first time and another was a 26-year-old special education teacher from Ottawa.

In a neighboring county, a young sister and brother of Seneca died when the sister, who was driving, left her lane for unknown reasons and her vehicle was then hit by a semitrailer, killing her and her 12-year-old brother.

Traffic accidents happen for all sorts of reasons, but many times it's because of someone driving while impaired, whether that is because of being under the influence of drugs or due to a distraction, such as texting or talking on a cell phone, Morris Police Chief Brent Dite said.

"The reality is, people are in control of their own decisions," he said.

Dite said they make a decision to drive while intoxicated or to pick up their phone and send a text while behind the wheel.

Of the seven traffic fatalities handled by the coroner's office, five of the seven victims had alcohol in their system, Callahan said.

This doesn't include others in the area who were killed or injured due to being hit by a drunk driver, such as the Ottawa woman who was killed in an accident where her boyfriend was charged with aggravated driving under the influence.

"It just comes down to the responsibility of the driver," Callahan said. "Go back to the basics of driver's ed. We tell the young kids this is not a given, it's something you earn, a driver's license, and it is a ton of responsibility that comes along with that right to drive."

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