Northland Injury law has represented many teenage drivers who have been involved in accidents during the summer months. As fathers first and then attorneys, it is important for us to promote teen driver safety and alert parents that your teen drivers are more at risk during the summer months than any other time during the year.
The so-called 100 days of summer between the Memorial Day and Labor Day holidays are upon us, and while they may be the most fun, relaxing days of the year, for teen drivers they’re also fraught with grave danger.
With school out, AAA warns that as the mercury rises, so do teen driving fatalities, making summertime the “100 Deadliest Days” of the year.
Car crashes already are the leading cause of death for U.S. teens, who have the highest crash rate of any age group, AAA stated. During the summer months — when drivers rack up 20 billion more miles than at other times of the year — an average of 260 teens are killed in accidents each month. That’s a 26% spike compared to the other months of the year. Not only are teens themselves more likely to die in car crashes, they also have the highest rates of crash involvement resulting in the deaths of others, including passengers, pedestrians or occupants of other vehicles, AAA stated.
Moreover, risk increases “exponentially” with the addition of each younger passenger in a car driven by a 16- or 17-year-old. Compared with a 62% risk reduction when one passenger age 35 or older is in a teen driver’s car, the risk of being killed increases 44% with just one passenger younger than 21; it doubles with two passengers under 21; and quadruples with three or more passenger under 21.
To help keep young drivers — as well as their passengers, other motorists and bystanders — safe this summer, the Insurance Information Institute advises the following precautions:
If you or anyone you know has been involved in an automobile accident and needs an attorney, don’t hesitate to call our office at 816-400-4878 for a free consultation.