Safety Program Gets Teens Road Ready

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ee 2. Safety Program Gets Teens Road Ready (NAPSA)}—Parents hold the keys when it comes to their teens’ driving safety. In fact, research shows that when parents take an active role in their teens’ driving education and set driving guidelines, they can reduce their teens’ chances of being in acrashby up to one-third. According to governmentstatistics, traffic crashes remain the No. 1 killer of teens. In 2008, teen drivers were involved in more than 1.7 million vehicle crashes, injuring nearly 400,000 teens and killing nearly 5,000. And teen traffic deaths peak in the summer, when teens spend more time on the road than they do during the school year. In addition, teens drive more at night and often travel with groups of teens—further leading to distractions. Chrysler Group has resources available to help. They’ve created Road Ready Teens, a home-based program for both parents and teens. Theinitiative helps parents ease their teens into driving, while gradually exposing and educating them about the risks they face on the road. “Chrysler Group is urging parents to pay close attention to their teens’ driving safety, especially in these high-risk summer months,” said Deb Morrissett, Vice President—Safety and Regulatory Affairs, Chrysler Group. “Road Ready Teens was designed to give parents step-by-step guidelines to help protect their teens behind the wheel. If parents and teens follow these steps, tens of thousands of teen crashes could be prevented each and every year.” The program offers a Parent’s Guide to encourage dialogue between the parent and teen, as well as an innovative teen driving safety video game, StreetWise. Roap READY—A safety program helps prepare teens for challenges behind the wheel. StreetWise is designed to increase teens’ awareness and understanding of driving risks in a fun and challenging way. The Road Ready Teens Parent’s Guide includes simple tips and tools that parents need to help keep their teen drivers safe, such as: Limit the number of passengers with whom yourteendrives. Limit distractions while driving, such as cell phone use and loud music. Remind your teen to take extra care when driving at night; most teen crashes occur after dark. * Create a Parent-Teen Road Rules Contract based on recommendations from leading safety experts. Road Ready Teens’ materials, including StreetWise and the Parent’s Guide, are available in En- glish and Spanish free of charge at www.roadreadyteens.org. The site also links parents to state teen driving laws and licensing information and other safety resources.