Minnesotans for Safe Driving
 

Beginning Drivers, What can Parents Do...

When parents understand the risk factors involved in letting 16 year olds get behind the wheel, they can act to improve the situation for their own children.

Allow your teenager with a permit as much supervised driving time as possible
Be aware of the high risk when your novice licensed driver wants friend in the car.
  Allow only one   teenage passenger with your child for at least the first 6 months of
  licensed driving. Don't assume  that your teenager drives with their friends the same way they drive with you.
With or without a curfew law, prohibit late night driving that's unsupervised.
Don't assume that your teenager is using the seatbelt just because they use it when
  driving with you
Choose safe cars. Avoid performance cars for novice drivers.
Prohibit ANY drinking and driving

Three Factors that work together to make the
teen years so deadly for young drivers

1.
Inexperience All young drivers start out with very little knowledge or understanding of the complexities of driving a motor vehicle. Like any other skill, learning to drive well takes technical ability, good judgment and experience. These skills are needed to properly make the many continuous decisions, small and large, that add up to safe driving. This is why it is so necessary for them to practice with an adult in all kinds of conditions, before and after they get their license.
2.
Risk taking behavior and immaturity Adolescent impulsiveness is a natural behavior, but it results in poor driving judgment and participation in high risk behaviors such as speeding, inattention, drinking and driving, and not using a seatbelt. Peer pressure also encourages risk taking.
3.
Greater risk exposure Teens often drive at night with other teens in
the vehicle - factors that increase crash risk
Statistics show that one in four teens will have a crash in their first year of driving

Fatal Crash Statistics For Young Drivers

Teen drivers are different from other drivers, and their crash experience is different.  Compared to other drivers, a higher proportion of teenagers are responsible for their fatal crashes because of their own driving errors.
A larger percentage of fatal crashes are single-vehicle crashes compared to those
involving other drivers. In this type of fatal crash, the vehicle usually leaves the road and overturns or hits a roadside object such as a tree or a pole.
A larger proportion of teen fatal crashes involves speeding, or going too fast for
conditions, compared to other drivers.
More teen fatal crashes occur when passengers, usually other teens, are in the  car than do crashes involving other drivers. Two out of three teens who die as passengers are in vehicles driven by other teenagers.
Among 16 year old drivers, the crash rate per mile driven is 43% greater than for 17  year olds- 2.7 times (270%) greater than for 18 year olds and 3.9 times (390%) that of  19 - 20 year old drivers. In Minnesota 2001 Crash Facts: Teenage drivers represent 8%  of the licensed drivers but our 15% of the crash involved drivers.


First Contributing Factor in crashes
Listed by law enforcement in the area of
Driver Inexperience was:

5.79% for 16 year olds
3% for 17 year olds
1.9%for 18 year olds
.41% for other ages

Minnesotans for Safe Driving
8700 West 36th Street, Suite 1E • St. Louis Park, MN 55426
email: info@mnsafedriving.com
Office 952/238-0970
Fax 952/238-0720
Toll Free 877/870-7466

 

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