Thursday, June 15, 2017

Drunk-driving impact driven home for Red Jacket students

SHORTSVILLE — “Oh my god. What have you done?” screamed Elizabeth Maslyn, yelling outside the wreckage of a two-car accident in which a fellow Red Jacket High School student was “killed.”
Frantically screaming, walking around, bending over and putting her head in her hands, she realistically pleaded with emergency workers to save two other teens trapped in one of the cars during a mock demonstration of a fatal accident caused by underage drinking and driving.
The scene, played out in the parking lot of Red Jacket High School, included Maslyn and other student actors and real-life first responders, Ontario County sheriff’s deputies and state Supreme Court Justice Craig J. Doran, administrative judge of Seventh Judicial District.
“Impaired driving is the number-one cause of death for teens and young adults,” Deputy John Peck told about 100 students gathered in the school auditorium where the program started with a video of young people drinking and laughing at a party, opting not to call parents to pick them up, but to drive home on their own.
The video ended with a screech and faded to black, after which the students went outside where real fire engines, ambulances and first-responders tended to “accident victims” — one covered, indicating he had died.
The real Jaws of Life extraction tool was used to remove the roof of the smashed car containing the “body.” Nearby, Olivia Straub, a junior portraying an injured victim, was placed on a stretcher to be taken to a waiting helicopter while Deputy Joe DiMariano administered sobriety tests to Cal Case, a senior who portrayed the drunk driver under the fictional name Giovanni Rodriguez.
The body, played by senior Nate Lecceardone, was picked up by Kevin Henderson, a real county coroner who was to take it in a white hearse provided by Fuller Funeral Home.
The students, some visibly moved, returned to the auditorium where they first watched a video of the handcuffed Rodriguez being processed and placed in a cell to await arraignment. A sign on the wall reads, “Drive Drunk and Visit a Few More Bars.”
Peck, the school resource officer, reported Rodriguez had a blood-alcohol level nearly three times the legal limit.
Live actors then took the stage, sitting on a couch wondering why their son Nate had not yet come home when deputies knocked on the door to give them the tragic news.
The lights shifted to Doran and a juror in a courtroom where Rodriguez was found guilty of vehicular manslaughter and sentenced to the maximum penalty of five to 15 years in prison.
“One of the most difficult responsibilities for this court is having to impose sentence on a young person who, like you , has your whole life ahead of you,” Doran scolded Rodriguez, noting he also thinks about the families of the deceased and how their lives are forever torn apart.
Lecceardone then appeared in a cloud of smoke, dressed in black, telling students how he missed out on graduation, going to college and meeting his future wife.
“But most of all, I never had the chance to say goodbye,” he said. “I hope everyone can learn from this.”
Peck told the students such programs are presented with their safety in mind, as many are preparing to head off to college where they will likely face situations involving drinking or drug use.
“I hope this sends a message and you are very careful and don’t get yourselves in trouble,” Peck said. “I don’t want to come to your house and knock on your door and tell your parents you’ve been killed.”
Ontario County STOP-DWI Coordinator Sue Cirencione said the program is presented every year across Ontario County to get the message out.
“There’s nothing more impactful than hearing and seeing what could happen,” she said. “It’s a good thing for the students to understand their actions have an impact on this community, not just themselves.”
Red Jacket District Superintendent Charlene Dehn commended school and community participants for working together to send a powerful message to students about the dangers of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
“Hopefully this experience will help our students make good decisions and understand the impact one poor decision can have on them, their family and friends for the rest of their lives,” she said.
Dehn also singled out Donna Schaertl, a volunteer, whom she said was instrumental in putting the program together and writing the scripts.
“I just want to prevent a family from going through what our family went through,” said Schaertl who lost a 4-year-old son in a drowning accident 19 years ago. The mother of six has three children attending school in the district.
“I just know what a tragedy feels like to a family, and I just want to prevent a family from going through what our family went through,” added Schaertl, who has turned her own tragedy into a mission to give back to the community.
By the numbers
54% Increase in the percentage of teens in high school who drink and drive
1 ... in 10 teens in high school drinks and drives
17 Number of times more likely young drivers (ages 16-20) are to die in a crash when they have a blood-alcohol content of .08 percent, the legal limit in New York and most states.
Source: mpnnow.com


Location: United States

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