1 / 46

T EEN D RIVER S TUDY C OMMISSION IMPROVING TEEN DRIVER SAFETY

T EEN D RIVER S TUDY C OMMISSION IMPROVING TEEN DRIVER SAFETY. T EEN D RIVER S TUDY C OMMISSION. TDSC established through legislation (Assembly Bill A617), (Senate Bill S1962) Signed into law by Governor Corzine March 2007. M ISSION. To conduct a comprehensive review of

charde-lynn
Download Presentation

T EEN D RIVER S TUDY C OMMISSION IMPROVING TEEN DRIVER SAFETY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TEEN DRIVERSTUDY COMMISSIONIMPROVING TEEN DRIVER SAFETY

  2. TEEN DRIVER STUDY COMMISSION • TDSC established through legislation (Assembly Bill A617), (Senate Bill S1962) • Signed into law by Governor Corzine March 2007

  3. MISSION To conduct a comprehensive review of teen driving in New Jersey and make recommendations that will ultimately reduce crashes and save lives.

  4. TDSC MEMBERS • Legislators • School administrators • Government and law enforcement officials • AAA, driving school and insurance industry professionals • Teen driver • PTA member

  5. TDSC TOOLS & TIMETABLE Public hearings, expert panels and an in-depth examination of available research were used to assess the problem. Six month timetable to complete work and report back to the Governor and Legislature.

  6. CURRENT GDLLAW Permit at 16 (6 hrs. BTW) or 17 (hold min. 6 months) License at 17 (hold provisional license min. 12 months) Restrictions: nighttime, passengers, seat belts, portable electronic devices

  7. NJ YOUNG DRIVERS • Every 9 minutes a teen crashes in New Jersey • Car crashes #1 killer of teens (17-20 year olds) • 2001-2007, more than 400 NJ teen drivers/passengers killed in crashes • Teen drivers represent 5% of driving population, but are involved in 12% of crashes • 59,702 teen driver crashes in 2007, up 4% since 2005

  8. CRASH CAUSATION FACTORS • Driver Inattention • Unsafe Speed • Failure to Yield Right of Way to Vehicle/Ped • Following too Closely • Road Surface Condition • Backing Unsafely • Failure to Obey Traffic Control Device • Other Driver/Ped Action • Improper Lane Change • Improper Turning

  9. NJTEEN CRASHES • Prevalence in June, October, December • Friday between 3-6 p.m., Noon-3 p.m. • Middlesex County (suburban) greatest # • Hudson County (urban) lowest # • Sussex County (rural) greatest % of all crashes (1 out of 4)

  10. MORRIS COUNTY YOUNG DRIVERS 3,045 teen driver crashes, 2007 (17% of all crashes) Parsippany – 410 Florham Park - 55 Roxbury – 254 Madison - 64 Rockaway – 382 Wharton – 51 Randolph – 263 Boonton - 65 Mt. Olive – 240 Chester - 76 Denville – 165 Kinnelon - 46 Morristown/Twp. – 161/103 Lincoln Park - 41 Dover – 120 Morris Plains - 48 East Hanover – 118 Chatham - 67 Montville – 126 Mendham - 48 Pequannock – 124 Harding - 30 Long Valley – 113 Netcong - 21 Jefferson – 88 Mountain Lakes – 8 (96 over 5 years)

  11. SEVEN KEY AREAS • Graduated Drivers License • Driver Education • Driver Training • Enforcement • Judicial • Insurance Industry • Schools • Technology

  12. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Develop an event-based GDL monitoring program that includes sanctions (training, suspension and postponement) that effectively deter GDL and non-serious and serious motor vehicle violations.

  13. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Until event-based monitoring and enhanced sanctions are implemented, ban plea agreements for traffic offenses committed by GDL holders.

  14. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Implement the programming changes necessary to ensure that MVC’s current and pending computer system can accommodate all components of the GDL law.

  15. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Develop a GDL identifier that must be affixed to a vehicle when driven by a permit or probationary license holder.

  16. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Require a parent/guardian to attend a teen driver orientation program with his or her teen prior to applying for a permit.

  17. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Require teens to complete a minimum number of hours of certified practice driving during the permit phase.

  18. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Extend the permit phase from a minimum of six months to one year for all new drivers 16 to 20 years of age.

  19. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Limit the number of passengers in the probationary phase to one regardless of the passenger’s relationship to the driver.

  20. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Sanction, in addition to the teen driver, all passengers 16 to 20 years of age on a permit, probationary or basic license, who violate the GDL passenger and safety belt restrictions.

  21. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Lower the nighttime driving hours restriction from 12 a.m. to 11 p.m. for probationary license holders.

  22. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Close the loophole in the seat belt law to ensure all back seat passengers 18 years of age and older buckle up.

  23. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Appropriate funding for driver education through the GDL-mandated Driver Education Fund.

  24. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Develop and deliver to public and private schools a standardized traffic safety/driver education curriculum and incorporate it into New Jersey’s Core Curriculum Contest Standards for students in grades K-12.

  25. ESSENTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS Amend the GDL law and the corresponding regulations to clearly define six hours of behind-the-wheel driver training.

  26. THE NEW AND IMPROVED GDL Permit Phase • Minimum age of 16 • Pass vision screening and written test • Complete a parent/guardian teen orientation • Hold permit for a minimum of one year • Minimum 6 hours behind-the-wheel training for 16 year old permit holder, optional for permit holders 17-20 years of age

  27. THE NEW AND IMPROVED GDL Permit Phase (cont) • Minimum 50 hours of certified practice driving (10 of those hours must be at night) Minimum of 100 hours of certified practice driving (20 of those hours must be at night) without behind-the-wheel training • Display a “GDL” identifier (color specific) on vehicle

  28. THE NEW AND IMPROVED GDL Permit Phase Restrictions • Limit of one passenger regardless of relationship to driver (unless passenger is 25 years of age or older) • No driving between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. • No use of portable electronic devices (i.e., hand-held or hands-free cell phones, ipods, video games, etc.) • Driver and all passengers must wear seat belts

  29. THE NEW AND IMPROVED GDL Probationary Phase • Complete all requirements of the permit phase • Pass skills/road test • Minimum age of 17 • Hold probationary license for one year • Display a “GDL” identifier (color specific) on vehicle

  30. THE NEW AND IMPROVED GDL Probationary Phase Restrictions • Limit of one passenger regardless ofrelationship to the license holder(unless passenger is 25 years of age or older) • No driving between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. (waiver available for employment and religious activities and/or emergency situations) • No use of portable electronic devices (i.e., hand-held or hands-free cell phones, ipods, video games, etc.) • Driver and all passengers must wear seat belts

  31. EVENT BASED SANCTIONS Non-Serious Violations: • 1st offense – attend an MVC approved driver improvement program (30-day license suspension for non-compliance) and 60 day postponement of full licensure • 2nd offense – 60-day license suspension and 120 day postponement of licensure • 3rd and subsequent offense – 90 day license suspension and 180 day postponement of full licensure.

  32. EVENT BASED SANCTIONS Serious Violations: 180 day suspension and postponement for all GDL holders committing serious violations (i.e., high rate of speed, racing, reckless driving, leaving the scene of a crash, DWI)

  33. PASSENGER SANCTIONS Passenger and seat belt violations result in assessment of the GDL fine ($100) and event-based sanctions for all GDL license holders (permit and probationary phase) or Basic license holders 16 to 20 years of age in the vehicle.

  34. WHERE WE ARE TODAY Attorney General Directive Effective Sept. 17, 2008 – bans municipal prosecutors from offering plea agreements to all GDL holders 3 points trigger training and monitoring for 12 months; additional points trigger 90 day suspension 17 yr olds #1 user of “unsafe operator”

  35. IDENTIFYING GDL HOLDERS

  36. LEGISLATION Four bills released by Assembly Transportation Committee: A3067 – codifies ban on plea agreements A3068 – parent/teen orientation, 12 month permit, practice driving, 6 hrs BTW A3069 – vehicle identifier (Kyleigh’s Law) A3070 –nighttime and passenger restrictions, “probationary”

  37. LEGISLATION Two bills approved by the full Senate: S16 – nighttime and passenger restrictions, “probationary” S2314 –vehicle identifier (Kyleigh’s Law)

  38. LEGISLATION Closing the backseat loophole: A870 – Assembly approved in February S18 – stalled in the Senate Governor will sign!

  39. LEGISLATION Scheduled for Introduction in the Assembly: A3635 – Driver and passengers cited for GDL violations

  40. MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT Revise MOA to include police departments notifying schools when teens commit GDL and/or moving violations. Tie to parking privilege OAG/DOE MOA Committee reviewed, including in 2009-10 FAQs

  41. GDLCHECKPOINTS • Tie education with enforcement • Engage schools in pushing out the message… Don’t Drive Stupid • Set up check points at/near schools and other teen frequented areas • Emphasis isn’t on writing tickets, but violations are cited • DHTS provides enforcement grants, materials

  42. TEEN SOCIAL MARKETING

  43. SOCIAL MARKETING Other partners: • NJSIAA • NJAHPERD • NJPTA • NJEA

  44. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS • Statewide curriculum (who owns it?, core content standards) • Requirements for driver training professionals (CEUs, service agreements, oversight) • Police/prosecutor training • Best practices for communities (DCH Auto Group, Alive at 25 How to Guide) • Web-based resources (www.ugotbrains.com; www.NJteendriving.com) • Ongoing GDL research

  45. MORE INFORMATION Commission Report, Don’t Drive Stupid materials and Alive at 25How to Guide: www.njsaferoads.com

  46. MORE INFORMATION Pam Fischer NJ Division of Highway Traffic Safety 609-633-9272/9021 pam.fischer@lps.state.nj.us

More Related