2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week + event in Alpharetta

2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week + event in Alpharetta

The 2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week runs from October 16th-22nd. Next week (and every week!) parents should have conversations with their teens about the important rules they need to follow to stay safe behind the wheel of a motor vehicle. These rules address the greatest dangers for teen drivers: alcohol, inconsistent or no seat belt use, distracted and drowsy driving, speeding, and number of passengers.

In addition, the 2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week is also an ideal opportunity for parents, educators, and teen drivers to join forces to raise awareness of teen driver risks and to seek critical solutions.

The problem: Teen drivers are still dying on the road

2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week roadside memorial

Now in its 16th year, National Teen Driver Safety Week was established in 2006 to help teen drivers establish safe driving habits. Do you think it’s not a serious issue? Check out these scary, but true, teen driving statistics.

  • Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for teens (16 to 18 years old) in the United States – ahead of all other types of injury, disease, or violence.
  • The first year of solo driving is the most dangerous. Novice teen drivers are twice as likely as adult drivers to be in a fatal crash.
  • One of the worst causes of teen accidents is having extra passengers in the car. In fact, nine in ten teens report that passenger behavior is a distraction. Your teen is 8 times more likely to crash when passengers are present.
  • Speeding is the reason for one in every three teen driver crashes.
  • Teens are 3 times more likely to crash at night than during the daytime.

2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week focuses on issues and solutions

risk ahead

Problems are only issues when there are no solutions. Below are the issues and solutions to keep teen drivers safe on the road not only during 2022 Teen Driver Safety Week, but also every day of the year.

Teen driver dangers

These are the biggest dangers teen drivers face on the road:

  • Immaturity and inexperience
  • Inconsistent or no seat belt use
  • Alcohol or drugs
  • Speeding
  • Extra passengers
  • Distracted driving
  • Drowsy driving

Solutions for teen drivers

teen driver summer Drive Smart Georgia

If you’re a teen driver, here are a few tips from Drive Smart Georgia to keep be safe on the road during 2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week…and beyond!

Buckle Up!

It’s the law in all 50 states. Before even putting the key in the ignition, make sure your seat belt is fastened. Plus, make sure all your passengers are buckled up too. Seat belts reduce serious crash-related injuries and deaths by about half.

Make Adjustments

Adjust your mirrors to minimize blind spots, clean your windshield, and turn off the phone. Plus, don’t forget to adjust your headrest to a height behind your head – not your neck – to minimize whiplash in case you’re in an accident.

Be a courteous driver

Be a courteous driver by signaling properly, avoid tailgating other cars, and obeying all road rules.

Peer Passengers

People tend to think that your biggest driving distraction is a cell phone. It isn’t (but it’s certainly dangerous). The biggest distraction is peer passengers. Joshua’s Law allows no peer passengers for the six months. During the second six months, you can have just one peer passenger in the car with you. After one year, a teen driver in Georgia can have no more than three other passengers.

Put the phone in the glove box

Teen drivers (and adults too!) simply cannot multi-task while behind the wheel. So, turn your phone’s ringer off and put it in the glove box.

Learn from your mistakes

As with anything else in life, practice makes perfect. When you make a mistake, adjust your behavior and “learn your lesson.” Learning to drive doesn’t happen in just a few months. It’s a skill that must be honed and perfected over time.

Solutions for concerned parents

safest cars for teen drivers

 

If you’re the parent of a new driver, here are a few tips to help your teen stay safe on the road.

Start the Conversation Early

Talk to your teens about safe driving early and often before they reach driving age. But don’t stop there. Have conversations with the parents of your teen’s peers or friends and compare notes – both are key to your teens’ safety.

Get It in Writing

When your teenagers begin driving, we recommend you set ground rules and outline the consequences for breaking them in a parent-teen contract like the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Parent-Teen Driving Contract. Consider displaying your contract by the family car keys or near the front door.

Spell Out the Rules

No cell phones, no passengers, no speeding, no alcohol, no driving when tired, and always buckle up. These rules could help save your teen’s life.

Enroll in a AAA-approved Driver’s Education program

Driver education programs, like those offered at Drive Smart Georgia help teach teen drivers the rules of the road. After taking the 40-hour course required by Joshua’s Law, the students then hit the road to apply what they learned in class. This one-two punch has been successful in teaching teens lifelong good driving habits.

2022 National Teen Driver Safety Event

AAA, our safety partner, is hosting a “Just Drive” teen driver safety event on Saturday, October 15, 2022. Teens age 14 – 16, plus their parents/guardians are invited to learn more about driver safety on Georgia’s roadways.

Event includes:

  • Three breakout sessions throughout the day
  • Tabling maze of safety experts
  • Extraction example from local PD/firefighters

The details:

  • Date: Saturday, October 15, 2022
  • Time: 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM
  • Place: Roswell – Alpharetta Public Safety Training Center
  • Address: 11565 Maxwell Rd., Alpharetta, GA 30009
  • Sponsor: AAA

Our best piece of advice: Set a good example

good example drive smart georgia

2022 National Teen Driver Safety Week is the perfect time to start talking about teen driver safety. Don’t let your child become a statistic.

Parents should pledge to be the driver they want their teen to become. Your children learn by watching YOU. Parents influence their teen’s driving habits more than anyone else.

The lessons – both good and bad – begin early and don’t stop. Set a good example by not speeding, wearing a seat belt, avoiding distractions, and being a courteous, responsible driver. Your teen will follow in your footsteps.

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