Opinions will Be Verified. Facts Will Be Checked. Your Voice Will Be Heard.

Opinions will Be Verified.
Facts Will Be Checked.
Your Voice Will Be Heard.

Lamber: A word on safety as we enter the ‘100 Deadliest Days’ for teen drivers this summer

Photo of teen drivers
Marc Lamber (Submitted Photos/DigitalFreePress)
By Marc Lamber | Thoughts on Innovation

July 4th is among the 100 Deadliest Days for teen drivers, according to AAA and this period stretches through Labor Day. During this time, fatal crashes involving teens spike and Arizona families aren’t exempt.

As a personal injury attorney, I’ve seen what these crashes leave behind. Crumpled metal. Grief-stricken parents. Teens facing life-altering injuries or the trauma of having taken a life. And here’s the part that’s hardest to swallow – in so many cases, these crashes were entirely preventable.

Let’s talk about Arizona. We’re ranked the 15th worst state in the nation for dangerous teen drivers, based on behaviors like underage drinking, seat belt neglect, and fatal crash rates. According to the 2023 Arizona Crash Facts Summary from the Arizona Department of Transportation (most recent data available), 5,419 teen drivers (ages 15-19) in Arizona were injured in a motor vehicle crash, resulting in 76 fatalities. 

Between 2019 and 2023 alone, 540 Arizona young drivers (ages 15-24), were killed in crashes. That’s not just a number. Each fatality accounts for every family whose lives changed forever.

The risks we know and can prevent

The dangers aren’t mysterious. AAA, the National Highway Traffic Administration (NHTSA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have made clear:

• Teen drivers face the highest crash risk: Drivers aged 16–19 have a fatal crash rate almost three times higher per mile driven than drivers aged 20 and older.

• Distracted driving is an epidemic. Texting, scrolling, and GPS use are all deadly when behind the wheel. Nearly six out of ten teen crashes involve distraction.

• Seat belts and speed still matter. In 2023, 53% of teen drivers who died were not wearing seatbelts. Speeding is also a critical safety factor for teen drivers. More than one third of fatal crashes involving 15 -18-year-old drivers was in part caused by speeding in 2023.

What parents can do, starting today

You don’t need to be a lawyer to have a written agreement with your child. You just need to be a parent who wants to keep their kid alive. Make the rules and consequences clear. Use the free templates from AAA as a guide or make your own. If your teen follows the rules, reward them. If they don’t, follow through.

Be a coach when driving with your teen. They won’t want to drive with you if you yell. Point out hazards and reinforce defensive driving habits. Show them what it means to drive responsibly; no speeding, no running yellows, no rolling stops. And let’s not underestimate your influence. Your teen watches when you are behind the wheel. If you’re texting at the wheel or losing your cool in traffic, they notice. And they mirror it.

Summer should be carefree, not tragic 

The summer months should be filled with first jobs, beach days, and late-night fast-food runs. But for too many families, they end in tragedy. Don’t wait until July 4 or back-to-school season to talk to your teen, because the hardest thing I ever have to do is help a family pick up the pieces after it’s already too late.

Editor’s Note: Marc Lamber is a Martindale Hubbell AV Preeminent-rated trial attorney and consumer advocate.

Category Sponsor

Learn About the Author

Published On:

Category Sponsor

Leon Law Crash AD 2

Newsletter Sign Up

Scottsdale Daily Beat - Logo

Could we interest you in Community Updates? How about Enterprise Business Reporting & Real Property & Homes?

Experience Scottsdale September 2024
VOLUNTEER ZONE NEW
FastTrack_F23_336x280 (1)
Shadows Popup
Scottsdale Arts 2