 Spring Cleaning is here and Appalachian Wireless has the deal to get you started. Get a Samsung Galaxy S8 for a penny or a Galaxy S8 Plus for only $89.99 on the region's best network. Better service, bigger savings, that's today's Appalachian Wireless. So your agreement requires you to store for details. From January of 2017, 16 people in Pike, Floyd and Johnson counties have died in car crashes. 15 of those people were not wearing seatbelts. Deaths that could have been prevented. And when it's too late, it's too late. The Click It or Ticket targeted enforcement campaign kicked off this morning in eastern Kentucky. The Kentucky Office of Highway Safety and Highway District 12 joined together with law enforcement agencies to focus on seatbelt safety. The Click It or Ticket campaign focuses on safety education, strong laws and law enforcement officers saving lives. In 2016, the use of seatbelts in passenger vehicles saved over 14,000 lives of occupants over 5 years old. Nobody wants to get a ticket, but if we can go out and ride a seatbelt ticket, you're there and it makes somebody buckle up. And later on down the road, they are involved in a pretty serious collision and they survive. That makes it all worth it. We want people to obey the law, but we want people to get home to their families. And if we can bring fatality down by wearing your seatbelts or if we can bring seatbelt usage up, then we've done our job. Not only does wearing a seatbelt contribute to keeping motorists safe if involved in a collision, it also saves them money. Insurance companies look at the seatbelt usage rate in the county when they send their rates for auto insurance. Click It or Ticket officially begins Monday. Law enforcement agencies around the region will conduct safety checkpoints and saturated patrols during the campaign. In Pikeville, Shelby Porter, EKB News.