Women-Drivers Blog
      By Anne Fleming, Car Buying Advocate
 

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School Bus Safety Week: Prevention & Attention is Key

by AnneFleming 18. October 2009 21:33

 

Let’s talk about something that is near and dear to every Road Warrior’s heart – proper etiquette around school buses. If you are not aware of these protocols, learn them. If you know them, read them again! School Bus Safety Week (Oct. 19-23) is here again so listen up. It’s when we give a week’s worth of attention to practices that need to be observed year round.

Fact 1: Statistics prove school buses are the safest form of motorized ground transportation on the planet for children.

Fact 2: Getting on and off the safest form of motorized ground transportation on the planet for a child is the most dangerous part of a child’s travel day.

The penalty for carelessness around school buses is measured in children’s lives and lifelong guilt and remorse for the offending drivers.In the United States an estimated 500,000 times every school day, drivers illegally pass a school bus that is stopped to load or unload students – with its stop arm extended and its red and yellow warning lights flashing a desperate message. And each year roughly about a half dozen children, the majority from 5 to 8 years of age, succumb to errant drivers who fail to heed that desperate message. Many more are seriously injured.

Parents complain to educators who complain to state lawmakers who respond by passing laws that call for stiffer penalties and facilitate prosecution as a way to prevent motorists from running through stop arms. Traditionally these laws are reactionary and bear the names of children killed by stop arm violators.Despite these heightened penalties, stop arm violations have remained at epidemic proportions nationwide. The prosecute-to-prevent model has not lived up to its promise for a number of reasons. The prosecution model is flawed on its face when it comes to stop arm violations because it you have to prosecute, that means that something bad has already happened – the worst of which is a child has been injured or killed. To date prosecution has not brought any children back to life.

So far this calendar year, six children have been killed by errant drivers while boarding or exiting their school buses. One was a teenager and the others were from 5 to 8 years old. None of the motorists will do any jail time. A North Carolina judge opted for supervised probation for a 60-year-old woman who struck and killed the 16-year-old in January saying the worst punishment for the driver was her feeling of remorse and “no court punishment could be worse than that.” A new law that becomes effective Dec. 1, 2009 and carries increased penalties bears the name of the 16-year-old.  Also in North Carolina the son of an 83-year-old woman who struck and killed a 6-year-old girl as she exited her school bus in August said his mother wondered how she could go on living knowing she had killed a child. The majority of these people are normally good citizens who became distracted for just a second. And North Carolina has one of the best school bus safety awareness programs in the country.

That is why the efforts of an Arizona-based company that develops school bus safety technologies are so important. Intelligent Imaging Systems LLC has used “prevention” as the guiding principle of its research and development activities during the past five years. The result is a suite of radar-based safety solutions designed to anchor local prevention and violation detection programs developed by state and district level transportation officials. IIS protects children by preventing motorists from running through stop arms. This is accomplished with a radar activated warning system that gets motorists’ attention with strobe lights and rotating beacons that jolt drivers out of their daydreams and calls their attention to the big yellow object in front of them. A Data Collection Module that records violations on problem routes will help school transportation officials and law enforcement know where to deploy resources. Bus drivers will now have visual evidence to support their claims to law enforcement that some routes are serious problems. IIS also has a violation detection system that uses cameras to help law enforcement identify those drivers that just won’t pay attention. The IIS philosophy of prevention first is an approach that will enable lawmakers to enact legislation that will allow school districts to take advantage of the available and emerging technology to protect the lives of students without having to go to court. More information concerning this groundbreaking prevention technology is available by contacting IIS at info@intelligentimagingsystems.org.

Technology based prevention programs are viable alternatives to prosecution-based models. School Bus Safety Week is the ultimate prevention approach because it is the one time during the school year when the nation’s focus in on school bus safety and everyone talks about its importance. The theme this year is “Avoid Harm, Obey the Stop Arm.” A lot is done during one week to support the year round efforts of school districts and bus drivers. Law enforcement is out en masse riding buses and following them in police cars to make sure motorists obey the law, and motorists comply because they actually see police cars – Prevention. News organizations focus on the issue of school bus safety, children participate in poster contests and for the most part, we are inundated with a school bus safety information blitz. And this is a good thing. Unfortunately, however, the euphoria dissipates after a few weeks and things return to “normal.” Most of the activities involving law enforcement are too expensive to be sustained and after the holidays, we tend to forget.

Meanwhile, we can all contribute to a solution by driving more carefully around school buses. All societal improvements begin with the individual. Work through your school district to assess the problem and offer your assistance there. All efforts in contacting lawmakers should be coordinated and in support of your school district. Study laws in other states and compare them to yours. Adopt the best aspects of each law. My suggestion would be to study the laws in Arkansas, Rhode Island and North Carolina. Parents can check out the NHTSA Website, School Transportation news, National Association for Pupil Transportation, National School Transportation Association, School Bus Information Council, American School Bus Council, and your state Education Department for starters. You will find the links to a number of other sites to learn anything you want to know about school bus safety. The Kansas State Department of Education publishes an annual report called The Annual School Bus Loading and Unloading Survey. Reading this report will make you way smarter.

Remember: Getting an education should not be a life-threatening experience. When we lose a child, we lose a tomorrow.              

With thanks to contributing writer and difference maker, Mr. Art Gissendaner, who has researched and monitored school bus safety for five years. Art can be reached at artgiss@cox.net 

Drive Your Bargain,

Anne Fleming

www.twitter.com/women-drivers

National Child Passenger Safety Week

by AnneFleming 14. September 2009 08:45

September 12 – 18th is National Child Passenger Safety Week. Spread the word.

Here is a sobering statistic: motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death among children ages 2 to 14. It’s indeed a fact that more children die in car crashes each year than to SIDS, cancer, pneumonia, fires and drowning, combined! Amazingly, most of these deaths are completely unnecessary and are due to lack of adequate child car seats and installation.

Our partners at Auto Alliance (www.autoalliance.org) and the NHTSA have provided this quick 3 part visual to fully understand what is required to keep your infants, toddlers and young children safer when on the road. Click here to view http://childcarsafety.adcouncil.org/ 

For specific FAQ’s about what child seat is right, legal and safe for your child, visit the American Academy of Pediatrics and read the 2009 Guide for Child Safety Seats http://www.aap.org/family/Carseatguide.htm  Be informed. It’s the Law and it’s their Life.   

Drive Your Bargain,  

Anne, Car Buying Advocate

www.twitter.com/womendrivers

10 Most Dangerous Foods to Avoid while Driving

by AnneFleming 16. July 2009 11:56

Our partners at www.insurance.com have alot of research and data, and access to even more, regarding the root of car accidents. It is no accident (do excuse the pun) that drivers who eat while driving run the risk of paying more for car insurance. It's a fact, although it's not officially one of the questions on an application for auto insurance.

Eating while driving is one of the most distracting things you can do, according to a study released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute. Eighty percent of crashes and 65 percent of near-crashes involve driver distraction.

According to NHTSA, "Distraction was most likely to be involved in rear-end collisions in which the lead vehicle was stopped, as well as in single-vehicle crashes." Distractions like eating can become a problem for drivers who can't react quickly to a sharp curve or another driver's sudden stop. Unfortunately, just one accident may increase your car insurance rates as much as 25 percent.

Top 10 foods to avoid while driving

  1. Coffee. Even with a travel lid, hot coffee can find its way out of the opening when you hit a bump.
  2. Hot soup. Many people drink it like coffee and run the same risks.
  3. Tacos. Any food that can disassemble itself will leave your car looking like a salad bar.
  4. Chili dogs. Huge potential for drips and slops down the front of clothing.
  5. Hamburgers. From the grease to the toppings, it could end up on your hands and the steering wheel.
  6. Ribs and wings. What's more distracting than licking your fingers?
  7. Fried chicken. More greasy hands. You've got to wipe them off while you're driving.
  8. Jelly donuts. It's not possible to eat one without watching the center ooze out.
  9. Soda. Carbonation. Fizz in the nose. Lids that leak. Disaster.
  10. Chocolate. Try to clean melted chocolate off the steering wheel without swerving.

How widespread is this food problem?

Exxon surveyed 1,000 drivers and discovered more than 70 percent of drivers eat while driving and 83 percent drink beverages. The NHTSA study cites these driver distractions as the top reasons for car crashes - and ultimately higher auto insurance rates:

  • Using a cell phone. Calling for carry-out?
  • Reaching for a moving object. Flying French fries?
  • Looking at an object or event outside of the vehicle. Where is Starbucks?
  • Reading. Or tweeting for the closest BBQ?
  • Applying makeup. Every second counts! And, if you don't beleive it, try holding your breath for say... mmm....just 30 seconds. Ok, 25 seconds. Seconds really do matter.

No wonder drivers rarely at or dink while driving in Europe. My cousins in Ireland were shocked and confused when I questioned them about combining the pleasures of driving a car and eating/drinking a beverage - they had and would never consider it.

Drive Your Bargain,

Anne

Car Buying Advocate 

 

 

 

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