Thursday 27 September 2012

Teens Get Licenses Through TEA-Approved Course



BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — Alabama pediatricians will start distributing information about safe driving habits to their teenage patients and the patients parents as part of a new effort to combat teen driver fatalities, health officials said today.
A 2008 study by Allstate Insurance ranked the state the second most dangerous in the country for teen drivers, just behind Mississippi. Of the nation’s 50 largest metropolitan areas, the Birmingham-Hoover area was the fifth deadliest for those drivers, the study showed.
The Alabama Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics was one of eight groups nationwide to receive a safe driving grant from the Allstate Foundation to help combat that problem.
“In any given year, vehicular deaths account for a third to half of all preventable child deaths in Alabama,” said Richard Burleson, director of the injury prevention division of the Alabama Department of Public Health.
Too few people, Burleson said, are aware of a graduated driver’s license modified by the Alabama legislature in 2010.
Under the 2010 law, it is illegal for a 16-year-old driver (and 17-year-old drivers who have been licensed less than six months) to drive with more than one non-family member passenger.
Those drivers also cannot drive between midnight and 6 a.m. unless they are with an adult, going to or from work, a school event or a church event.
There are also exemptions for emergencies or if the driver is going hunting or fishing with the appropriate license.
To spread awareness of that law, the Alabama

While a statewide study indicates the number of teens who get their drivers license after completing a parent-taught program continues to rise, that may not be the case in Midland.
Before the parent-taught driver education program was created in 1997, 52 percent of teenagers applying for their license had completed it at school. By 2005, that number had dropped to only 12 percent, with 38.9 percent of teen drivers learning at home with their parents, according to “Parent Taught Driver Education in Texas: A Comparative Evaluation,” a study published in by the Texas Transportation Agency for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
MISD instructor Joseph Anthony Madrid said he hasn’t seen his classes shrink by that much during the last 10 years.
“We’ve got 171 kids enrolled at Lee this semester and with night classes, spring classes and the summer, we’ll teach about 750 kids this year,” said Madrid, who has taught driver education for 40 years.
While fewer students are taking school-based classes, the number of students who receive their licenses after attending a driving school has remained steady at about 47.5 percent over the last 15 years, according to the study.
Jim Carver, owner of Big C’s Driving School, said he’s seen this to be true in Midland, where the number of students taking classes at his school continue to increase.
“Parents want safety for their children and they’re scared to death to teach them to drive because they don’t want to make a mistake and hurt their child so they bring them to me,” said Carver, who thinks most students who learn to drive through the parent-taught option do so because it may be simpler.
However, it’s also more deadly

A Northampton man convicted of a 2009 drunken-driving accident that seriously injured a teenager has dropped his lawsuit against PennDOT to reduce the amount of time that his driver’s license will be suspended.
Instead, John Norton, 49, of Cherokee Drive in Richboro, will file a direct appeal to a PennDOT administrative court judge to receive more than a year’s worth of credit toward his license reinstatement, his attorney said Thursday.
Norton has faced sharp public criticism since filing the suit in Bucks County Court in July against PennDOT requesting that he get credit for the time that he couldn’t drive following his DUI-accident related arrest — including the time he spent in prison.
In an April letter to PennDOT, Norton’s first attorney, Rep. Scott Petri, R-178, asked that the transportation agency give Norton credit toward his suspension dating back to the day Norton surrendered his license in April 2009.
Norton served a little more than 18 months in prison for the March 2009 accident that severely injured a 14-year-old boy. Police say he was driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.41 — more than five times the legal limit — when he slammed into the boy, who was standing on a Richboro sidewalk

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