In 2019, through a grant from the National Road Safety Foundation (NRSF), the Georgia Governor’s Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) participated in the Georgia National Fair by setting up a booth to raise awareness regarding drowsy driving.

The Massachusetts Highway Safety Division (HSD) used grant funding from GHSA and the National Road Safety Foundation (NRSF) to launch a public awareness campaign. The campaign was designed to engage young drivers on the impacts of drowsy driving and to provide prevention education.

The New York Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee received a grant from the National Road Safety Foundation & GHSA to provide an informational webinar for law enforcement officers on the effects of drowsy driving in collaboration with Stony Brook University’s School of Health Technology & Management.


In 2018, through a grant from the National Road Safety Foundation, the Nebraska Department of Transportation Highway Safety Office (NDOT-HSO) worked with two community colleges and one private college to carry out drowsy driving educational programming and present at lunch and learns.


In 2018, Montana’s State Highway Traffic Safety Office (SHTSS) was awarded grants by both Ford Driving Skills for Life and The National Road Safety Foundation, Inc.'s partnerships with GHSA.


Choosing to tailor outreach to motorcyclists, the South Dakota Office of Highway Safety took an innovative approach to the use of its drowsy driving grant from The National Road Safety Foundation, Inc. and GHSA.


With a grant from GHSA and the National Road Safety Foundation, Maryland created a drowsy driving prevention campaign for healthcare providers

With a grant from GHSA and the National Road Safety Foundation, the Nevada Office of Traffic Safety hosted a summit to engage law enforcement on drowsy driving.

With a grant from NRSF, New York partnered with Stony Brook University's School of Health Technology and Management to develop the Stop Drowsy Driving Initiative.

THSO used a grant from NRSF to expand drowsy driving partnerships with both Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD) and the Tennessee Trucking Foundation (TTF).