State Highway Safety Showcases

These showcases provide an opportunity for State Highway Safety Offices (SHSOs) to share their program successes and innovative practices or learn from what's happening in other states.

To submit a showcase for your state, just complete the online form.

Browse State Highway Safety Showcases

With funding from Ford Driving Skills for Life and GHSA, the Georgia Governor's Office of Highway Safety (GOHS) hosted its 2018 Youth and Young Adults Conference.

In 2017, the Washington Traffic Safety Commission (WTSC) received a grant from GHSA and the Foundation for Advancing Alcohol Responsibility (Responsibility.org) to help deter drug-impaired driving.


The Nevada Office of Traffic Safety (OTS) received a grant from GHSA and Responsibility.org to help law enforcement recognize and arrest drug-impaired drivers.

With funding from Responsibility.org, WisDOT provided Advanced Roadside Impairment Driving Enforcement (ARIDE) training to 310 law enforcement officers throughout the state.

NDOT-HSO used a grant from Ford DSFL to host two events in Lincoln and Papillion to teach local teens the importance of safe driving behaviors.

For a second year, the Illinois Department of Transportation received a grant from GHSA and the Foundation for Advancing Alcohol Responsibility (Responsibility.org) to train law enforcement in recognizing drug-impaired driving.


The Kentucky Office of Highway Safety (KOHS) partnered with the Kentucky Speedway for “Buckle Up in Your Truck 225.”

As a recipient of one of GHSA and the Foundation for Advancing Alcohol Responsibility's (Responsibility.org) grants to combat drug-impaired driving, the Montana State Highway Traffic Safety Section (SHTSS) was able to train more than a dozen new Drug Recognition Experts (DREs) in 2017.


The West Virginia Governor's Highway Safety Program was one of the recipients of GHSA and Responsibility.org's 2017 grants to combat drug-impaired 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.