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A deadly combination. Who are the highest risk in fatal crashes of distracted driving? 6% Bus Drivers 12% Light-truck drivers and motorcyclists 13% 20.

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Presentation on theme: "A deadly combination. Who are the highest risk in fatal crashes of distracted driving? 6% Bus Drivers 12% Light-truck drivers and motorcyclists 13% 20."— Presentation transcript:

1 A deadly combination

2 Who are the highest risk in fatal crashes of distracted driving? 6% Bus Drivers 12% Light-truck drivers and motorcyclists 13% 20 to 29-year olds 16% Under-20 age group 24% 30 to 39-year olds

3 Cell phone use while driving 4x’s as likely to get into crashes serious enough to injure themselves. Delays a driver’s reactions as much as having a blood alcohol concentration at the legal limit of.08% While teenagers are texting, they spend about 10% of the time outside the driving lane they’re supposed to be in. Talking on a cell phone causes nearing 25% of car accidents.

4 Visual Taking your eyes off the road Manual Taking your hands off the wheel Cognitive Taking your mind off what you’re doing

5 Distracted Driving: any non-driving activity a person engages in that has the potential to distract them from the primary task of driving and increase the risk of crashing. Fact: Texting while driving is especially dangerous because it combines all 3 types of distraction.

6 Drunk or Texting and Driving?.08 Alcohol Consumption While Driving: Takes 4 feet when braking Reaction time at 35 mph is.46 seconds (unimpaired:.45 seconds) Cell Phone use While Driving: Takes 36 feel when braking (reading email) Takes 70 feet when braking (sending text) Reaction time at 25 mph is.57 seconds when reading, and.52 when texting

7 Collision Prevention Formula Recognize the Hazard Understand the Defense Act Correctly, In Time

8 Recognize the Hazard  Scan ahead, around and behind your vehicle  Check mirrors every 3 to 5 seconds  Use the “what if….” strategy to stay alert and spot hazards

9 Act Correctly, In Time  Be alert and concentrate on the driving task  Choose the safest driving maneuver to avoid a crash  Remember other drivers may act in time, but they may act incorrectly

10 Consequences You are at risk of harming, or even killing yourself and others. A car accident caused by distracted driving can result to serving time, community service, and can cause your insurance to go up. Emotional damage that can last a lifetime.

11 Prevention is the key  Out of sight, out of mind: put your phone where you can’t get it. No phone, no texting.  Silence is golden: Turn the notifications off. The less you hear the less you’ll respond.  Designate a texter: Borrow a friends thumb.  Find your app: An app can help you stop texting and driving.

12  DriveOff  DriveMode  TextBuster  DriveScribe  Canary

13 Understand the Defense  Know what to do to avoid a traffic hazard  Know the consequences of your driving choices  Know the basic defenses

14 Before you pick up the phone, consider whose lives will be affected  John Breen John Breen  Kena H. Kena H.  Cynthia H. Cynthia H.  1085 ECHO: The Reggie Shaw Story 1085 ECHO: The Reggie Shaw Story

15 Don’t let this be the end of your day

16 Prepared by English 2010-Sp13- Asplund, Project Group 7  Patty MacSparran  Natalie Tahan  Sarah Regan  Taylor Hammer  Rosemary McCarter  Sarah Payne


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