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Chapter One Driving and Mobility
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Mobility and Driver Education
Mobility: ability to move or be moved It is a fact of life Must learn the basics of driving Young drivers crash much more often Learning, practice, awareness
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What is gained from Driver Ed Course
Learn information and skills Understand problems of driving Freedom Gain useful knowledge; manage visibility, time and space, become aware.
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Useful Knowledge Personality, emotions, maturity Minimize risk
Alcohol and drug effects Interpret traffic laws Limiting factors emergencies
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Awareness of Limiting Factors
You need more than driving skill False feeling of little risk Illness, injury, meds Emotional state Drugs and alcohol
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Why is Driver Ed Important?
Crash: when a motor vehicle hits another object Young drivers are involved in significantly more Age is only 7% of population, but are involved in 14% of crashes
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Factors of Over-Representation
Young drivers lack experience Young drivers drive at dangerous times Young drivers drive differently
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HTS Motor vehicles Streets and highways People
Enables people and goods to move from place to place
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History of HTS About 100 years old only.
150 miles of paved highway in 1902 Now over 230 million vehicles and 4 million miles of paved road 60% of freight is moved on roads
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Designing good Highways
Army of engineers design today’s highways They must determine best route Plan construction of bridges Exit ramps, traffic signs, curves
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Vehicles Range from small to large Flashy to old Handling of vehicles
Safety features Care care by owner
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Drivers 194 million licensed drivers
55 million pedestrians and bicyclists Drivers must anticipate unsafe driving by others
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HTS Regulation Federal, state, and local laws
State, county and local police enforce traffic laws
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The Risks of Driving
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Federal and State Requirements
National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act National Highway Safety Act (pg 12)
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Are Drivers at Risk Risk: possibility of personal injury or damage
1 in 9 chance of a crash 1 in 83 chance of disabling 38% of yr olds deaths are in crashes 85% of traffic deaths are in first crash 57% of crashes are 1 vehicle
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Reducing Risks Keep vehicle in good condition
Anticipate action of others Protect yourself: safety belts, low beam lights Drive only when physically and mentally able Develop good driving habits
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VTS Visibility: what you can see from behind the wheel
Time: judge speed of you and others Space: margin between you and others
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The Costs of Driving
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Crash Costs $230 Billion per year in auto crashes
More than 42,000 die per year in crashes
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Lowering the Cost Seat belts could save 10,000
Not drinking alcohol could save 13,000 and another 360 injuries Driving the speed limit could save 12,000 and another 690,000 injuries
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Other Costs Operating Costs
Fixed costs: insurance, license fees, environmental Driving 15,000 miles per year would average about 52 cents per mile in costs. Cost-benefit ratio
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