102°F
weather icon Clear

Several Nevada agencies join forces to target speeders

Several Nevada law enforcement agencies have joined forces to target speeders.

The 20-day enforcement period began Wednesday and lasts until Jan. 22 as part of the multijurisdictional Joining Forces program through the Nevada Department of Public Safety’s Office of Traffic Safety. The program is geared toward improving safety through statewide traffic enforcement.

“Don’t expect a break if you get stopped for speeding,” Highway Patrol spokesman Jason Buratczuk said in a statement.

Henderson police will dedicate extra patrols throughout the city, the department said. Officers will target known speeding areas that receive the most complaints. Police in Boulder City will add extra patrols to U.S. Highway 95 and Interstate 11 within city limits during the enforcement period.

The North Las Vegas Police Department, Nevada Highway Patrol and Metropolitan Police Department will also participate in the enforcement campaign, according to Andrew Bennett, spokesman for the Office of Traffic Safety.

Additional troopers will be on freeways in the valley to look out for hazardous driving, Buratczuk said.

Bennett said the program is funded by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That money gets funneled through Nevada’s public safety office, which distributes it across 26 agencies, he said.

The office runs about 15 campaigns a year, Bennett said, with each one focusing on an element of traffic safety, such as impairment, seat belts, speed, distracted driving and pedestrian safety.

“The idea is with additional resources focusing on one problem, you create a larger footprint,” Bennett said.

Contact Blake Apgar at bapgar@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-5298. Follow @blakeapgar on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Video shows 2 murder suspects at crime scene, police say

Las Vegas police say the suspects admit they were at the scene of the crime in the southeast valley, but they deny killing a man and a woman found dead there.

Nevada mine shutting down, laying off 117 workers

The mining company said it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection because it was unable to secure funding and cannot “continue carrying on business.”

Nevada getting $6M in Johnson & Johnson settlement

Attorney General Aaron Ford said Nevada will be receiving upwards of $6 million in the settlement relating to allegations of “deceptive trade practices.”