![]() |
![]() |
|
|
|
||
|
|
||
![]() |
TEEN DRINKING / DRIVING Rite Of Passage: Preventing Underage Drinking And Driving A Guide For Parents Alcohol use by teen drivers is an especially deadly mix. More than a third of all motor vehicle-related teen deaths involve alcohol. Everyone in California pays when teens drink and drive. The consequences can be devastating: wasted lives, loss of loved, permanent disabling injuries, broken relationships, overwhelming medical bills and other expenses. California faces a challenge in preventing underage drinking and driving. According to the 1997-98 California Student Survey (CSS), the California Department of Justice reports a troubling increase in teen binge drinking and driving while under the influence of alcohol or other drugs. Adding to the challenge is an anticipated surge in teen population in the next decade. Almost 40 percent of 11th graders have driven after drinking, according to the 1997-98 CSS. Each year, more than 1,900 underage drinking drivers are involved in collisions, causing injuries or deaths in California. These drivers under the age of 21 are only 5.4% of the state's drivers, but are responsible for 13% of the alcohol-related crashes. (Automobile Club of Southern CA, 1999 report.) Even when a collision does not occur, there are still economic consequences. A first-time misdemeanor conviction for driving under the influence can cost the driver approximately $11,000 in fines, legal fees, increased insurance costs and other related expenses over the three years following arrest. (Automobile Club of Southern CA, 1998 report.) The California Office of Traffic Safety predicts that because of an estimated 33 percent surge in the teen population, many more teens will be on the roads in our state this next decade. Yet, teen drivers don't have to be a menace on the roadresearch consistently finds that parents are extremely influential in the decisions that children and teenagers make. Your attitudes, values and behavior are critically important in the lives of your children. Teen drivers are also more likely to be at fault in a collision. In California, 16-year-olds are at fault 66 percent of the time. This high risk status results from a mix of inexperience and immaturity. Suggestions For How Parents Can Positively Influence Their Children If your child is a pre-teen:
If your child is a teenager:
Resource Information For more information on underage drinking and driving and the Check Yourself . . . Never Drink and Drive campaign, the 1997-98 California Student Survey or other crime prevention materials, write to: California Attorney General's Office |
|
![]() |
Home > Safety Tips > For Families > Teen Drinking / Driving | |
![]() |
||
About EPD | Careers | Directory | Divisions | Information | Forms | Links | News | Safety Tips | Youth Info