September 2010 Issue
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Driving Safety Home

The work you do matters. You save lives!

By Michael Dorn | July 29, 2010 | Comments (0) | Post a comment

My son and one of his video crew were almost killed by a drunk driver while they were on the way to shoot a school safety video in Virginia this week. The terrifying experience of the impact of a Ford Mustang at 60 mph left not only injuries, many hours in the emergency room, the inconvenience of a totaled car and damaged camera gear, but horrifying memories as well. 

Because of a cruise control that was set several miles per hour below the speed limit and a quick reaction to the threat, the impact was lessened and they both survived. Though recovery from the physical injuries will take them both a while, the shock they experienced will probably last a long time. 

 Thanks to the engineers at Honda who designed his car, airbags and other safety features, they lived through a crash that might easily have been fatal a few decades ago. Thankfully, both airbags deployed just as they were supposed to. I do appreciate the 100% airbag success rate for this accident. 

I am thankful not to have lost my son or our other crew member due to the reckless actions of a drunk behind the wheel of a car. I will be forever grateful for the folks at Honda who saved my son's live by doing their job so well. 

These types of experiences really drive home the value of human life. The value of human life really defines the importance of campus safety efforts. Whether the threat is from natural disasters, acts of violence, accidents, fire or any other risk, your work is important even if it is often unrecognized. 

While I probably have no way to thank the specific people who saved my son's life, I am extremely grateful. I remind readers that the work they do to help prevent the immense pain and suffering that the loss of human life entails matters a great deal. 

While there are those who don't appreciate your work, it really doesn't matter what they think, does it?  Every tragedy you prevent averts the pain of those who love the people you protect.   

Read more about: Traffic Safety

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Author Bio
David  Burns
David Burns

With more than 30 years experience in public safety, David is the director of UCLA's Emergency Management Office. He is also a higher education consultant who is a subject matter expert in mass casualty incident management, emergency notification systems, comprehensive plan development, emergency organization, EOC design, operation, crisis communications, threat and vulnerability assessment, disaster recovery, grant administration and auditing.

James  L. Grayson
James L. Grayson

Jim Grayson is a senior security consultant with Hughes Associates Inc. His career spans more than 35 years in law enforcement and security consulting. He worked for UCLA on a workplace violence study involving hospitals, schools and small retail environments and consulted with NIOSH on a retail violence prevention study.

Michael  Dorn
Michael Dorn

Michael Dorn serves as the Executive Director of Safe Havens International, a global non profit campus safety center. During his 30 year campus safety career, Michael has served as a university police officer, corporal, sergeant and lieutenant. The author of 25 books on school safety, his work has taken him to Central America, Mexico, Canada, Europe, Asia, South Africa and the Middle East.

Robin Hattersley Gray
Robin Hattersley Gray

Robin has been covering the security and campus public safety industries since 1998 and is a specialist in emerging technologies and systems integration. She joined CS in 2005 and has authored award-winning editorial on important campus safety issues, including gang prevention, grants and funding, network integration, IP video, mass notification, emergency management and communications, crime trends and risk management.