The Normal Police Department has been awarded a federal fiscal year 2026 Sustained Traffic Enforcement Program (STEP) grant from the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), providing funding to enhance local traffic safety and enforcement efforts through September 2026.
Normal Chief of Police Stephen Petrilli said the department applied for and was selected to receive the grant as part of IDOT’s ongoing initiative to reduce traffic-related injuries and fatalities. The funding will help support both education and enforcement operations throughout the year, focusing on high-risk times such as holidays and weekends.
Petrilli explained that the department’s work under the grant is heavily focused on education and enforcement.
“First and foremost is public education,” Petrilli said. “If we can educate people in a way in which now they become informed of what we are enforcing, kind of the dangers behind distracted driving, speeding, DUI, the whole point of this is prevention.”
Under the STEP grant, Normal police will conduct additional enforcement campaigns targeting speeding, impaired driving, distracted driving and more. Special patrols will also coincide with statewide initiatives like “Click It or Ticket.”
“The whole campaign is focused around a few initiatives: seat belt enforcement, speed enforcement, distracted driving enforcement and then we do a lot of DUI driving and influence campaigns around holidays,” Petrilli said. “We really try to do education to encourage people not to drive while intoxicated.”
Some of those enforcement periods will align with holidays known for increased travel and alcohol consumption, such as Thanksgiving, St. Patrick’s Day, the Super Bowl, Memorial Day, Labor Day and the Fourth of July.
While measurable goals such as crash reduction and citation data are part of the grant requirements, Petrilli emphasized that traffic safety improvements are not always immediately visible through numbers.
“When we do aggressive enforcement, you can see at times that we’ll see kind of ebbs and flows in our traffic crash data,” Petrilli said. “It’s not always the amount of tickets that you write … That’s why we lean really heavy on the education side of things, encouraging people to take responsibility for their own behavior.”
Petrilli noted that since participating in STEP grants, the department has observed encouraging changes in driver behavior.
“We have seen areas that have seen reductions in speed,” Petrilli said. “We don’t see as much distracted driving. Those are always encouraging metrics for us to look into.”
Beyond enforcement, the department plans to raise awareness among residents about safe driving habits through community education and visibility efforts.
Petrilli said the grant reflects the department’s continued commitment to public safety.
“This grant is just another extension of our ability to deliver excellent public safety services,” Petrilli said. “It’s a value to add to the community and an enhancement in public safety. It allows the police to be more active in the community and a greater presence as it relates to traffic enforcement.”









