Group wants states to raise driving age
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Group wants states to raise driving age

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  #1  
Old 09-09-2008, 10:29 AM
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Group wants states to raise driving age

CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- Taking aim at a longstanding rite of passage for 16-year-olds, an influential auto safety group is calling on states to raise the age for getting a driver's license to 17 or even 18.
Crash-related deaths are lower in New Jersey, where licenses are issued at age 17, the group says.





Adrian Lund, president of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, a research group funded by the auto insurance industry, acknowledged the idea is "a tough sell," but noted that car crashes are the leading cause of death among teenagers.
"The bottom line is that when we look at the research, raising the driving age saves lives," Lund said. He plans to present the proposal Tuesday at the annual conference of the Governors Highway Safety Association in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Not surprisingly, a lot of teens hate the idea.
"I would really be upset because I've waited SO long to drive," said Diamante White, a 16-year-old in Reading, Pennsylvania, who got her permit in July. She said learning to drive is a "growing-up experience."
Many parents agree. They also like not having to chauffeur their teens to school, sporting events and any number of other places.
"Do we really want our kids dependent upon parents for virtually everything until they go to college, can vote and serve their country?" asked Margaret Menotti, a mother in Uxbridge, Massachusetts.
She argued that keeping teens from driving would only make them less responsible. Some parents also find it ironic that this conversation is happening just as a group of college presidents have proposed lowering the drinking age to 18.
Among other things, institute researchers have compiled decades worth of data from New Jersey, the only state that issues licenses at 17. Various studies have shown that the overall rate of teens killed in crashes in New Jersey has been consistently lower than in some nearby states.
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One study from the 1990s found that the rate of crash-related deaths among 16- and 17-year-olds were 18 per 100,000 in New Jersey, compared with 26 per 100,000 in Connecticut. Those rates, researchers said, have dropped even further since both states instituted graduated driver's license programs.
Graduated licensing, which has become the standard across the country in the past 15 years, requires teens to spend more time driving with a parent or other responsible adult before they go solo. Though these rules are sometimes difficult to enforce, many states tie these more stringent standards to declining teen crash rates.
More than 5,000 U.S. teens die each year in car crashes. The rate of crashes, fatal and nonfatal, per mile driven for 16-year-old drivers is almost 10 times the rate for drivers ages 30 to 59, according to the National Highway Safety Administration. Many industrialized countries in Europe and elsewhere have a driving age of 17 or 18.
Barbara Harsha, executive director of the Governors Highway Safety Association, said she welcomes a debate on raising the driving age -- as do many who deal with public health.
"Getting the highest of the high-risk drivers away from the wheel probably isn't a bad idea," said Dr. Barbara Gaines, trauma director at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC.
But she and others -- even the Insurance Institute officials who propose raising the driving age -- agreed it is not the only option.
Gaines noted that teen drivers in the Pittsburgh area who have committed moving violations must attend a "reality education" program at her hospital. They tour the intensive care unit and talk with young drivers who have been in serious crashes.
Andrea Summers, coordinator of the teen driving program for the Delaware Office of Highway Safety, said her state and others have chosen to toughen laws without raising the driving age -- by banning teens from using cell phones while driving, imposing stricter driving curfews and expanding supervised driving time. Even New Jersey is considering lengthening the time a young driver has a permit, from six months to 12.
Still others say we are worrying too much about teen drivers, and not enough about others who cause serious problems on the road.
Karen Sternheimer, a University of Southern California sociologist who studies accident statistics, cited federal data from 2007 showing that drivers ages 25 to 34, as well as those ages 45 to 64, were nearly twice as likely to be involved in alcohol-related fatalities as 16- to 20-year-old drivers.
"The intense focus on teens diverts our attention from the real threats to public safety: speeding and driving while intoxicated," she said.
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  #2  
Old 09-09-2008, 10:41 AM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

What difference will it make if you put a 16 year old behind the wheel, for the first time, as opposed to an 18 year old? They're all kids. The only difference is the 18 year old can own the car. Like I'd really want my kid driving, for the first time, in a strange college town. She's much safer in familiar territory, imo.

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Old 09-09-2008, 12:34 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

I agree Joey....I honestly think that makes people better drives is experience. It doesn't matter if that starts at 16 or 18.
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Old 09-09-2008, 01:33 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

If we don't let them get licensed until they are 18 there are two considerations that this article neglected to mention. 1) they will not be required to take a driver education course which substantially reduces collision rates and 2) if they get their license at 18 they are going right off to college, driving unsupervised all of the time right off the bat. If they get their license at 16, must practice with an adult until 17, and then live near home for more exposure to parental influence until 18, they may then be a little safer on and off campus.
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Old 09-09-2008, 01:37 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

I'm not letting my son get his license before he's 18 simply because of the insurance factor. My insurance, when I was driving my own car, was almost $2,000 a year. If it weren't for my own bad driving, he would have already had his license. Although, it may have been a better idea to just let HIM drive ME everywhere, lol.
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Old 09-09-2008, 01:45 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

Interesting point Decent...I wonder how this will affect insurance rates. If we have more unexperienced 18 y.o.'s on the road, thereby lowering the teen death rate for 16 y.o.'s and raising it for 18 y.o.'s (it's all a numbers game) will the insurance rates follow? Now, rather than the cost starting to go down between the ages of 21 and 25, they won't go down until 25 to 27? Just wondering....
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Old 09-09-2008, 03:35 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

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Originally Posted by wendy View Post
If we don't let them get licensed until they are 18 there are two considerations that this article neglected to mention. 1) they will not be required to take a driver education course which substantially reduces collision rates and 2) if they get their license at 18 they are going right off to college, driving unsupervised all of the time right off the bat. If they get their license at 16, must practice with an adult until 17, and then live near home for more exposure to parental influence until 18, they may then be a little safer on and off campus.

This is a great point, Wen, but Driver's Education isn't the norm for many states and most private schools.
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Old 09-09-2008, 03:40 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

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Originally Posted by DeCurlyGirl View Post
I agree Joey....I honestly think that makes people better drives is experience. It doesn't matter if that starts at 16 or 18.
Geez...I totally mangled that and for some reason I can't edit anymore????????????????

I honestly think that what makes people better drivers is experience. It doesn't matter if that starts at 16 or 18.......


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Old 09-09-2008, 03:53 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

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Originally Posted by wendy View Post
Interesting point Decent...I wonder how this will affect insurance rates. If we have more unexperienced 18 y.o.'s on the road, thereby lowering the teen death rate for 16 y.o.'s and raising it for 18 y.o.'s (it's all a numbers game) will the insurance rates follow? Now, rather than the cost starting to go down between the ages of 21 and 25, they won't go down until 25 to 27? Just wondering....
Don't want to step on anyone's toes who may sell insurance BUT, you can bet the ranch that the rates won't go down, they will just move the age limits out further.
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Old 09-09-2008, 04:20 PM
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Re: Group wants states to raise driving age

i am OK with kids getting licenses at 16 but if they are caught speeding or driving recklessly or carelessly the cops need to send them a message... throw the book at them and their parents.
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