Tag: Traffic Safety

  • Chatham-Kent Police, OPP launch Festive R.I.D.E. Campaign

    By: Michael Bennett, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Ridgetown Independent News

     

    The Chatham-Kent Police Service and Ontario Provincial Police launched their annual Festive Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere (R.I.D.E.) campaigns last Wednesday night.

     

    The Chatham-Kent Police set up its first Festive R.I.D.E. spot check on Keil Dr. N., between McNaughton Ave. W. and Baldoon Road, in Chatham.

     

    This location is the traditional starting point for the Festival R.I.D.E. program in remembrance of the Pie Ladies – Verna Neaves, Marion Dawson, Jean Ripley and Bernice Phillips – who were killed at this spot when their vehicle was struck head-on by an impaired driver in the early evening hours of  Saturday, Nov. 24, 2007, as they were returning from a church function.

     

    Over 170 cars were checked at the Keil Dr. spot check.

     

    Police conducted three more R.I.D.E. programs throughout Chatham-Kent on Wednesday, checking a total of 365 vehicles and administering two roadside tests, but no charges were laid.

     

    However, the impaired driving arrest of a 19-year-old Raleigh Twp. woman on Queen’s Line, west of Chatham, at 2:50 a.m. Thursday, emphasized the frustration of police as they continue to find – and arrest – drivers who are impaired by alcohol and drugs despite all of the warnings and campaigns.

     

    “We see impaired driving as the leading cause of serious or fatal collisions every year,” said Act/Sgt. Lisa Rodger, who heads up the CKPS Traffic Management Unit. “The fact that we’re still seeing (impaired driving), despite how much we advertise ‘don’t drink and drive,’  it’s very frustrating for us.”

     

    “There are so many options – taxi, Uber, call a friend or family member, a designated driver – no matter what we say or do, we’re still catching people,” she stated. “And it’s a totally preventable offence.”

     

    Rodger said Chatham-Kent Police had already arrested 129 drivers on impaired charges before Wednesday night, 33 of those as a result of collisions, including two fatal accidents.

     

    In 2024, four lives were lost as a result of impaired driving, as police made 107 arrests, including 43 drivers who were involved in a collision.

     

    Chatham-Kent Police conducted 75 R.I.D.E. spot checks in 2024, as 6,886 vehicles were stopped and 22 roadside tests were administered.

     

    Police have already set up 78 R.I.D.E. spot checks in 2025 throughout Chatham-Kent before Wednesday’s Festive campaign kicked off.

     

    The Festive campaign begins on the third Wednesday of November across Canada in recognition of the National Day of Remembrance for Road Crash Victims to honour and remember those who lost their lives or were seriously injured in preventable road crashes.

     

    “The National Day of Remembrance is a powerful reminder of why initiatives like R.I.D.E. exist,” Rodger said. “Every impaired driver stopped could mean a life saved.”

     

    “Our officers will be visible and proactive throughout the holiday season to help ensure everyone gets home safely,” Rodger said.

     

    Motorists can expect to see a R.I.D.E. spot check at any time on any day throughout the holiday season.

     

    Along with the official Festive R.I.D.E. spot check, Rodger said officers on general patrol often set up their own checkpoints in cities, towns and rural areas across Chatham-Kent.

     

    “We understand it’s the holiday season, people like to celebrate, but do it responsibly,” Rodger said. “If you plan to drink, designate a driver, call a taxi, use a ride share service or arrange alternative transportation.”

     

    “Impaired driving is 100% preventable,” said Rodger. “We’re asking everyone to do their part this holiday season … if you’ve been drinking or using drugs, don’t drive.”

     

    Chatham-Kent Police encourages the public to report suspected impaired drivers by calling 911 when it is safe to do so.

     

  • Ridgetown man pleads guilty to Clark’s death

    By: Michael Bennett, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Ridgetown Independent News

     

    A Ridgetown man was sentenced to just over 11 months in jail in the vehicular death of a 66-year-old woman in Ridgetown three years ago.

     

    Wendy Clark, of Morpeth, suffered life-threatening injuries after being struck by a car in downtown Ridgetown on Oct. 19, 2022.

     

    She died two days later in a Windsor hospital.

     

    John Wilson, 40, learned of his sentence from Chatham-Kent Assistant Crown Scott Kerwin in a Chatham court on Nov. 14.

     

    The Ridgetown man pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing death and failing to remain at the scene of a collision resulting in bodily harm.

     

    Chatham-Kent Police also laid an impaired driving charge against Wilson.

     

    That charge, however, was dropped due to conflicting evidence in 2024.

     

    According to previously published media reports, Mrs. Clark had just stepped out of her vehicle on Main St. and was about to cross the street to go to a pharmacy when she was struck.

     

    Her common-law partner and two-year-old nephew were in the vehicle when she was struck.

     

    The driver of the other vehicle fled the scene.

     

    However, witness statements and surveillance video helped Chatham-Kent Police identify the driver, who was located and arrested.

     

    He was originally charged with failing to remain at a collision resulting in bodily harm, dangerous driving causing bodily harm and two related Highway Traffic Act offences.

     

    Wendy’s family have been advocates for safe driving – namely, impaired and distracted driving – since the accident.

     

    The family sponsors a $500 scholarship annually in the Drive Safe, Someone Loves You, Wendy Clark Memorial Award essay contest. Secondary school students are asked to write an essay on the actions a passenger can take when riding in a vehicle being driven by an impaired or distracted driver.

     

    The family sold key chains, with the ‘Drive Safe Someone Loves You’ slogan and the initials ‘WC’ for Wendy Clark, to finance the scholarship.

     

    Anonymous donors funded a memorial bench with the same inscription, along with ‘In Loving Memory of Wendy Clark,’ located in front of the Riverside Ice Cream store.

     

    Family members attended the Nov. 14 sentencing and were naturally upset that the guilty party received less than a year in jail for Mrs. Clark’s death.

     

    “It’s been an exhausting, emotional three-plus years,” Rachel Mattsson, Wendy’s daughter, said in a statement to the Ridgetown Independent News. “No amount of time would suffice for the void I have for losing my mom.”

     

    “Eleven months certainly isn’t close to enough to bring justice,” she said. “I do not wish this on anyone.”

     

    “Drive safe, someone loves you,” Rachel concluded.