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Study: Most drivers, not just young, are taking risks

Feb 15, 2017 | 9:00 AM

DETROIT — Young drivers aren’t alone in behaving badly on U.S. roads, a trend that could be contributing to a spike in highway deaths.

Well over half of drivers in every age group have texted behind the wheel, run a red light or driven faster than the speed limit in the last 30 days, according to a new study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.

Younger drivers are the worst offenders. Eighty-eight per cent of drivers ages 19 to 24 admitted to at least one of those behaviours. But even mature drivers skirted the rules more often researchers expected. For instance, 10 per cent of drivers between 60 and 74 have texted or sent email from behind the wheel, while 37 per cent of drivers over 75 said they’d driven through a light that had just turned red.

“It was a surprise that there were relatively high rates of these behaviours among the drivers we think of as safer,” said Lindsay Arnold, a research associate with the AAA Foundation.

Arnold said the responses were similar to those in past years, indicating a troubling trend. In 2015, U.S. traffic deaths rose 7 per cent to 35,092, the largest single-year increase in five decades. They’re expected to rise again in 2016 when that data is finalized.

“It points to the need to improve driver behaviour if we’re going to reverse this alarming trend,” Arnold said.

Teen driver education campaigns have had some success, foundation spokeswoman Tamra Johnson said. Now the organization is considering the best ways to reach drivers of other ages.

The study found broad agreement on some issues. Eighty-seven per cent of drivers said they have never driven when they thought they were close to the legal alcohol limit. Ninety-five per cent said they had never driven within an hour of using marijuana. Eighty-eight per cent of drivers say it’s unacceptable to drive without a seat belt, and 82 per cent support laws requiring motorcycle riders to wear helmets.

But drivers’ behaviour sometimes contradicted their own instincts. More than three-quarters of drivers say it’s unacceptable to text or email while driving, but 31 per cent had done so in the last month and 8 per cent do so often. Ninety-six per cent of drivers say drowsy driving is a serious safety threat, but 29 per cent had recently driven when they were so tired they had trouble keeping their eyes open.

The study questioned 2,511 licensed drivers aged 16 and over. Among its findings:

— The youngest drivers — those ages 16 to 18 — were less likely to engage in speeding, running red lights or texting while driving than drivers in their 20s through 50s.

— Eighty-three per cent of drivers — and 86.5 per cent of drivers 75 or older — said they were more careful than other drivers on the road.

— Just over half of drivers feel seriously threatened by drivers talking on cellphones, but 68 per cent made a call while driving in the last 30 days.

— Drivers ages 40-59 were the most likely to use a hands-free phone in the car. Drivers ages 16-18 and 75 or older were the most likely to hold their phones and talk while driving.

— Twenty-three per cent of drivers — and 36 per cent of those ages 19 to 24 — think it’s acceptable to drive 15 mph over the speed limit on a freeway. Forty-six per cent of drivers say they have driven that fast on a freeway in the last 30 days.

— Sixty per cent of drivers say people who drive after using illegal drugs are a serious threat, but just 34 per cent say the same about people who drive after using prescription drugs.

Dee-Ann Durbin, The Associated Press