Views of parents of teenagers about graduated licensing after experience with the laws.

Author(s)
Ferguson, S.A. Williams, A.F. Leaf, W.A. & Preusser, D.F.
Year
Abstract

Parents of 15 year-olds in Florida and Connecticut were first interviewed in 1996 about their views concerning new licensing requirements in their states. Connecticut had introduced a 6-month learner's permit requirement, effectively increasing the licensing age from 16 years to 16 years, 6 months (16 years, 4 months with driver education). Florida enacted a 6-month learner's permit period plus a night driving restriction for 16 and 17 year-olds. In 1996, parents were very supportive of the new requirements, particularly the minimum permit period and night-time restrictions, even though they recognised they would be inconvenienced to some extent. The same parents were interviewed again in 1999, after most of their teenagers had obtained driver's licenses, and were even more supportive than before of the additional restrictions. Few parents reported that the laws inconvenienced them, and less than 20 percent said the laws had made it harder for their teenagers to get jobs. Furthermore, many were in favour of additional requirements, such as teenage passenger restrictions, not currently part of their states' laws. These findings should encourage other states to proceed with graduated licensing systems or to augment systems already in place. (A)

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Publication

Library number
20010493 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Arlington, VA, Insurance Institute for Highway Safety IIHS, 1999, 9 p., 9 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.