Mesa Police Department Traffic Section
10 Tips to Reduce Teen Accidents
The cause of many
teenage crashes is not an issue of insufficient
skills or knowledge. It's often an issue of
attitude and maturity. You, the parent, and your
influence can help shape a responsible attitude
about driving.
- Remember, you are
a role model.
New drivers learn a lot by example, so
practice safe driving. Teens with poor
driving records often reflect the behavior
of parents with poor driving records. That
means Mom and/or Dad need to obey speed
limits and demonstrate safe driving habits.
- Supervise as much
practice driving as possible.
Parents should take an active role in their
teenagers driving practice. Make a firm
schedule to supervise your future driver and
stick to it. Let your teen drive in a wide
variety of driving conditions to build
experience and confidence. Give your
teenager a chance to get the feel of
inclement weather, heavy traffic, urban and
rural situations and night driving.
Plan on supervising for at least six months
in order to get a teen acclimated to the
road before he or she takes a driving test
to get a license.
- Be firm about
safety belt use.
If you wear your safety belt every time you
drive, your son or daughter can adopt this
behavior more easily. Require that your
teenagers wear safety belts at all time --
no exceptions.
- Discuss realistic
consequences of drug and alcohol use.
Teenagers realize that driving under the
influence of alcohol or drugs is clearly
dangerous, but face-to-face discussion with
Mom and/or Dad is a strong
reinforcement. Remind them that it is
illegal for teens to drink alcohol -- and
illegal to anyone to use drugs. Discuss how
marijuana, other drugs and alcohol can
impair their senses. Talk about the chemical
effects on their perceptions and reaction
time after they've consumed even one drink
or smoked one joint. Let them hear it from
you that alcohol, marijuana, or other drug
use when driving is totally
unacceptable. For more help getting
the point across with your teens, visit www.TheAntiDrug.com/TeenDriving.
- Restrict passengers.
Teen drivers often transport their
friends. It's a practice that has to be
limited and supervised carefully. Having
more passengers in a car increased the
chance of greater risk-taking, primarily
because of greater peer pressure. It also
leads to greater distractions.
- Limit night driving.
Many teen car crashes take place between
9 p.m. and 12 midnight. Beginning drivers
should be restricted to driving during the
day initially, and gradually introduced to
night driving as they gain experience.
- Keep it slow and safe for starters.
Remember that teens need to stay away from
fast-moving, high volumes of traffic until
they feel comfortable in such situations,
and until parents feel they have had
adequate experience. Gradually introduce
more difficult driving situations such as
highway driving, merge ramps and major urban
areas.
- Train for poor weather conditions.
Don't expect your teenager to be
comfortable driving alone in poor weather
conditions. They'll feel more comfortable if
you've been on the road with them coaching
them through rainstorms, snow, wind, sleet,
and ice. Limit your teen's driving during
periods of bad weather until the teen
demonstrates a high level of competence and
confidence.
- Restrict cell phones to emergency only.
Don't let bad habits begin. Provide your
young teen with a cell phone for the car for
emergency situations only. The phone can be
programmed to access limited locations: 911
and family members' home and work
numbers. It if is necessary to use a
cell phone, instruct your teenager to pull
safely over to the side of the road, on a
side street, or in a parking lot to make an
emergency call.
- Choose safe vehicles for your
teenagers.
Proper attention to the vehicle a teen
drives is as important as his or her actual
driving.
- Avoid small cars, trucks, and sport
utility vehicles. Often small cars
offer poor protection in a crash, and
trucks and sport utility vehicles are
more prone to rolling over. Parents
should exercise caution when considering
vehicles such as these.
- Look for automobiles with high
safety ratings (air bags, crumple
zones, etc.). Look at federal statistics
and consumer-report literature to help
evaluate the safety rating of a vehicle.
The Insurance Institute for Highway
Safety (IIHS) offers valuable vehicle
and safety advisories. Visit their Web
Site at www.highwaysafety.org.
Some parting thoughts for
parents:
- Speeding is the top reason that teens lose
control of their vehicles.
- Teens are more likely to crash at night;
their risk of a fatal crash at night is
three times as high as in the day.
- The risk of a fatal crash among teenagers
increases with every additional passenger.
- Many states have adopted graduated
licensing programs that limit new drivers'
privileges. Restricting late-night driving
and putting limits on the number of
passengers allowed are common aspects of
these policies. In some states, the teenager
has a longer period of supervised driving
before being permitted a license to drive
alone. Learn more about graduated
licensing programs from these Web
sites: www.highwaysafety.org
and www.nhtsa.gov.
If your state doesn't have a graduated
license program or has only weak
requirements, you may want to take steps to
promote a good graduated licensing system.
- GEICO offers parents teen safe driving
materials on its Web site (www.geico.com)
and links to other important resources.
This information provided
from a brochure titled "Can I Borrow The
Car? Young Drivers: The High-Risk Years" published
by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety;
Parents. The Anti-Drug; and Geico.
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