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Teen Driver Safety Week |
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HARRISBURG - October 14-20 was proclaimed as Teen Driver Safety Week, by Governor Tom Corbett, noting two significant pieces of legislation that he signed into law in the past year aimed at increasing safety for teens. Corbett’s proclamation coincides with the safety week’s national observance. In the past year, Corbett signed Act 81, which enhanced teen driver safety by strengthening the graduated driver licensing law, and Act 84, which requires safety training for 16- and 17-year-olds seeking motorcycle licenses. “Over the past year we’ve made great strides in ensuring our youngest drivers have as much experience as possible on our roadways,” PennDOT Secretary Barry J. Schoch said. “PennDOT is wholeheartedly invested in traffic safety, and the bills the governor has signed emphasize the state’s commitment to future generations of safe drivers.” In August, Corbett signed Act 84, which requires 16- and 17-year olds who want to obtain a motorcycle license to first complete the Pennsylvania Motorcycle Safety Program’s Basic Rider Course (BRC). The 15 hours of training they receive through the BRC counts toward the 65 hours of on-the-road training riders under the age of 18 must complete to obtain a motorcycle license. From 2007 to 2011, there were 109,313 crashes involving at least one 16- to 19-year old driver in Pennsylvania, resulting in 942 fatalities. Nearly 53 percent of those crashes involved the teen driver driving too fast for conditions (28,148 crashes), driver inexperience (11,071), driver distraction (10,028) and improper/careless turning (8,614). The risk of a crash involving any of these factors can be reduced through practice, limiting the number of passengers riding with a teen driver, parents setting a good example for the teen driver, obeying all rules of the road and exercising common sense. As a part of their obligation to help teen drivers become more responsible, safer drivers, parents should:
For more information on young driver safety, visit PennDOT’s highway safety website, www.JustDrivePA.com and select the “Young Driver” link under the Traffic Safety Information Center.
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