Teen Driving: With liberation comes responsibility

Driving a car can be challenging at any age, given the task of successfully controlling thousands of pounds of forward momentum. But it is really the only way to get around in this rural area where public transportation is sparse or nonexistent. So it is a real goal for many young people who live here to get their driver’s licenses as soon as they can. Driving is liberation, at a time in life when teens are just itching for new-found freedom.

Yet with such liberation comes an  obligation to operate a vehicle as safely as possible. Next week, Oct. 16 - 22, is National Teen Driver Safety Week, a week that should make us all stop and think about the safety of young drivers and those of us who share the road with them. 

There are incidents, of course, involving drivers of any age, with older drivers needing to overcome their own limitations. But for teens, loss of concentration while driving, which can happen in any number of ways, can lead to a dangerous loss of control at higher speeds. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, speed was a factor in 30 percent of teen fatal crashes involving teen drivers. Parents can go to its website, www.nhtsa.gov, to find suggested rules to give young drivers before they take on the road: the “5 to Drive.” Until they gain more experience, only training and education can help teens avoid dangerous situations with bad outcomes. 

The nonprofit organization Survive the Drive, based in Lakeville, headed by president and executive director Bob Green, gives teens tools they need to drive more safely, protecting both themselves and those with whom they share the road. Green has presented his program on safe driving to tens of thousands of high school students in the past decade or so, making a real difference to the many young people with whom he’s connected. Parents, seriously consider having your teens take the Survive the Drive safe driving course at Lime Rock Park. It will have positive effects not only during their teen years but for the rest of their lives as drivers. And talk to your teens about the serious responsibility they’ve taken on in driving. You may not think they’re listening, but they will hear you.

Please, every driver but especially teen drivers: Don’t drive distracted. Pull off the road to send that text or email or to make that call that just can’t seem to wait. Don’t do things while driving that pull your attention away from the road or diminish your capacity. Buckle your seatbelts and make sure everyone in the car has done the same. Make sure there aren’t more passengers in the car than allowed. Don’t drive impaired; learn about designated driving now. The consequences for what may seem like a simple action could be catastrophic and irreversible. 

Go to www.teendriversource.org to find more resources to help the teen in your life learn about the critical importance of driving safely.

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