Monday, 29 September 2014

Make Your Excellent Career In Driving

BANNERGIRL.pngTo enter on to the register as a qualified instructor you need to pass three exams. To become a driving instructor, you would need to join training course meant for those who wish to become a driving instructor. The training program would ideally be split. If you are looking for secure employment, then look at the options to get driving instructor jobs. This type of job cannot be done by an individual from another country and once you have the right personality this would be a good career option. There are plenty of opportunities taking driving instructor training Leeds. In fact training new instructors is a big deal. One of the biggest in the business is Leeds driving school who earn far more from training instructors than teaching new learner drivers.
In case you love driving and believe that you can impart this knowledge to other people, this will be a great fulfillment. Along with the basics, all other car operating should be pursued carefully in order to become a safe as well as flawless driver. You can either choose to join driving instructors in Leeds jobs available with your training school or become self employed by opening your own driving instructor school. If you want a job as a driving instructor, the first thing you need to do is to qualify as an approved driving instructor with the Driving standards Agency.

Driving Centers Offer Corporate Driving

Horsforth-Driving-Test-CentreThe advantages of getting together with an approved driving trainer is that he will help one to comprehend the automobile and its elements and the right way to look after and sustain a car apart from the appropriate way to drive with the guidelines in place. All this educating is very essential not only for a test, but also for a lifetime relaxation. The Corporate Driving course will help to keep your driving protected. Corporate-Driving is in excellent need now a times, offering coaching having many years of encounter. Corporate-driving is not only about driving at reduced prices, but also about preventing he spend of power through unnecessary preventing or enhancing up, thereby assisting to decrease the destruction and the air we take in.
Corporate driver training provides you top high quality and crucial driving lesson which will create you assured while driving on the road in a very short period of time frame. Corporate Driving is in excellent requirement nowadays. It makes our lifestyle simpler and less reliant on others. But still there are many who wonder why comprehend driving when you can use the same cash to have some fun with your buddies. But the fact is, although you might find driving sessions needless right now, it is a very important part of your lifestyle. Corporate driver training offer you top high quality and essential driving session, which will make you confident while driving on street in the very brief period of time interval. Getting a corporate driving lesson with just driving will make sure that you effectively, efficiently successfully pass your test and become a protected car driver.

Thursday, 25 September 2014

Driving Lesson For Driving Solution At Islington

1With the assistance of the lessons, you will have the capacity to handle both light vehicles and substantial vehicles. It will help them a considerable measure. A ton of youngsters anticipates the age where they can begin figuring out how to drive an auto. A coach will verify you are taking in the paramount aptitudes to be a decent driver. Driving lesson Islington gives essential driving courses as well as looks over courses and progressed driving lessons. Finding a well-known school of motoring in Islington is a challenging process as there are a number of organizations that provides efficient solutions for the students. On your driving tuition you are covered under your instructor's insurance, therefore there is no need to worry about anything. But before going on your first driving lesson you need a number of things to start.
Driving lessons Islington not just essential for beginner drivers or youngsters attempting to enhance their aptitudes. They are useful for learners of all ages. Over the Internet, you can easily list down the best driving lessons Islington. In Islington, these are the best organizations offering solid and helpful driving lessons, you will obtain profitable lesson from the masters. Becoming a member of driving lesson has assisted many individuals in studying guidelines of the street successfully. Before booking any lessons individuals ought to analyze costs of various diversity trainers furthermore find an educator who has an auto that you they will feel certain driving.

Learning to be good drivers

Last winter, Neil Prissick's son was driving a friend's car when it lost a tire on the Coquihalla highway.

But he knew what to do.

"It could have been much more serious. Luckily he brought the vehicle under control and eventually off the side of the highway. But had he panicked or steered or used the breaks at the wrong time it could have been disastrous," explains Prissick of his son's actions. "He's a pretty good driver."

Although he didn't teach his son to drive, Prissick did teach him how to operate a vehicle in the snow and gain control in a skid, and it appears that the lesson paid off. Teaching is nothing knew for Prissick, who has been a driving instructor at North Shore Driving School in North Vancouver for the past six years. He started out as an instructor for Class 5 and 7 learners, which are new drivers (either adults or teens), and he now instructs for Class 4 unrestricted licence as well, so has a wide range of students. He is also an instructor-trainer so teaches others how to be instructors as well. Prissick recommends all new drivers take lessons.

"Today's driving environment has gotten so much more complex," he says, noting one of the main goals of instruction is to teach new drivers how to be defensive drivers.

There are many good adult drivers on the road, but many of them have picked up some bad habits along the way, says Prissick. Bad driving habits can often be passed on to kids from parents.

Not long ago, Prissick says he saw a mother run a red light while talking on her cellphone, and she had two daughters in the car. As well as the obvious danger that it presented, Prissick says that type of driving could rub off on the daughters as well. Kids learn by watching, and unfortunately in that case, those two girls may have learned that driving distracted and rolling through red lights is okay.

While distracted driving is a serious problem these days, there are many other errors that are common to new drivers.

Not shoulder-checking blind spots, not seeing particular signs to obey, and performing rolling stops are just some of the common errors Prissick sees with new drivers. "A lot of the common errors are habits they may have picked up from an adult or a co-pilot," he notes.

When giving the official road exam, testers are looking for a variety of components such as observation skills, the speed at which the student drives, the space in which they drive, how they communicate with other users (including pedestrians), and how they steer the vehicle, explains Prissick. So there's a lot to learn.

Basic safety that new students are made aware of at the school include proper seating position, making sure their seatbelt is properly put on so it's not twisted, and making sure the head rest is at the correct height. Some students are more confident than others when first starting out and some are "very, very nervous," reports Prissick.

All students learn at different paces and in different ways, so his teaching includes demonstration and a hands-on approach depending on the student. Sometimes he even has to draw diagrams.

As well as practical driving lessons, Prissick also teaches theory courses at the school, which include information about engine components, vehicle systems, the physics of driving and more.

"Often a new driver just gets in their car, puts the key in, puts it in drive but doesn't know all the meanings of the lights and what the different components are in the vehicle," explains Prissick.

The theory courses are meant to give them a better idea of what is under the hood and where. They learn general mechanics, how the vehicle works, how the coolant system works, how the electrical system works, how the exhaust system works and more.

"It's important that they understand how the vehicle works," explains Prissick. "In the car itself, quite often when turn the key to the 'on' position there are a number of lights that come on the dashboard. It's important they know the meanings of those lights so if they're driving along and a warning light comes on they know what to pay attention to."

Although he hasn't experienced any major surprises over the years as a teacher, Prissick says he is surprised by the amount of new drivers who don't use the emergency brake when parking.

Offering the example of an average 3,000-pound car parked on a hill, and you take your foot off the service break, all the weight of the vehicle rolls onto the pin in the transmission.

- See more at: http://www.nsnews.com/news/learning-to-be-good-drivers-1.1386980#sthash.90lInP7l.dpuf

Abbotsford school bus driver caught speeding through school zone

An Abbotsford school bus driver is probably wishing he followed the rules of the road.

Police pulled the driver over going 50 km/h in a 30 km/h zone on Bevan Avenue around 2:45 p.m.

Cst. Ian MacDonald says if that’s not bad enough, there were children on the bus.

“We have since had conversations with the school district. My understanding is that the school district will be investigating this matter further,” he explains.

MacDonald says the driver, a 40 year old man from the Fraser Valley, was issued a ticket and sent on his way.

“Much like any other driver, you know, if you happened to be speeding and you had your children in your car, you’d be issued the violation ticket unless there was something in your driving history that would indicate that you should be prohibited from driving further, or unless you’re in an excessive speed scenario,” he adds.

Dave Stephen with the Abbotsford School District says the manager of transportation will be meeting with the driver. “They’ll go over the infraction and then there’s a process, depending on how serious the infraction is.”

He says this is the driver’s first infraction. “There is a range of actions that can be taken, but first the meeting has to happen. They look at what the charges are, the ticket, there may be a conversation with the Abbotsford Police.”

Stephen says the driver may get a letter on his file or a reduction in duties. “There would unlikely be a suspension in a scenario like this where it’s a speeding infraction. If there was a more serious consequence, that would be brought to bear for looking at what would happen.”

Congressman’s daughter regains Paterson school job after having driver’s license restored

PATERSON – Less than two years after being demoted over a suspended driver’s license, Nicole Payne has regained a position that puts her in charge of the city school district’s alternative education program.

Payne, whose father and brother have served in Congress, was demoted in 2012 after Paterson Press exposed that she had her driver’s license suspended over problems stemming from a conviction for drunk driving and for subsequently driving with a suspended license.

Payne’s position at the time, interim director of non-traditional programs, required that she have a valid driver’s license.

As part of the job, she was supposed to visit various schools located in different areas of the city.

After the demotion, Payne continued working for the district as principal of YES Academy. State motor vehicle records say her driver’s license was restored as of July 10, but the records also say she must continue to use an interlocking device until January 6, 2015. Interlocking devices are designed to prevent someone whose blood-alcohol level exceeds legal limits from driving.

Two months after Payne’s license was restored, state-appointed schools superintendent Donnie Evans put her back in charge of the district’s alternative education program. District spokeswoman Terry Corallo said Payne’s appointment was approved by the state.

Officials have not yet disclosed Payne’s salary for her new job. As principal, she was being paid $102,500. Back when she was in charge of non-traditional programs, her salary was $113,630. The school district in 2012 and 2013 had taken back $6,773 from Payne as reimbursement for the promotion that was rescinded, according to public records.

Payne’s father, the late Donald Payne Sr., had been New Jersey’s first black congressman and her brother, Donald Payne Jr., won election in 2012 and still serves in Congress.

Nicole Payne could not be reached for comment. Board of Education member Chystal Cleaves, chairwoman of the personnel committee, did not respond to a phone message seeking her comments on the situation.

A resident of East Orange, Payne had worked for the Essex Regional Education Services Commission before taking a job in Paterson. Payne was convicted of drunk driving for an incident in Bloomfield in 2011, according to state records. Later, she was convicted of driving while suspended and not having an interlocking device on her vehicle for an incident in Jamesburg in 2012, records show.

Back in 2012, the state records said her license would be suspended until July 2015. But the suspension period ended a year earlier than that, according to current records.

Earlier this year, the mayor of East Orange appointed Payne to the city’s Board of Education.

- See more at: http://www.northjersey.com/news/congressman-s-daughter-regains-paterson-school-job-after-having-driver-s-license-restored-1.1094209#sthash.EFCjk71J.dpuf

SA police sting nets motorists texting and driving

SAN ANTONIO -- San Antonio police used an undercover sting operation to catch those drivers who couldn't put their phones down.

"Bobby" said he wasn't texting, just looking at his phone as his Facebook Messenger was going-off. He complained that police officers pulling him over created more of a hazard than his Samsung Galaxy.

"He came and harassed me, banged on my windows, saying I was on the phone," said Bobby. "I almost hit two cars trying to pull over. Like, they're not even worried about your safety. They're just worried about pulling you over and giving you tickets and warnings."

Research shows one in five traffic crashes is caused by a distracted driver.

The official charge is illegal use of a handheld device, with a fine of up to $202.

Talking on the phone or calling someone is legitimate, but get behind the wheel and surf the web, Facebook, text, email, and the host of other things your smartphone is capable of doing-- and you've broken San Antonio law.

State law says no drivers can use a cell phone in school zones, and drivers younger than 18 can't use a cell phone at all.

"Your eyes and your focus need to be on the road," said San Antonio police officer Douglas Greene.

In the last three years, San Antonio police have issued more than 5,000 citations for texting and driving.

Police said it is a city citation, but illegal use of a handheld device does not affect your driving record. Still, you can take driving school courses to avoid penalties.

And even if you're parked at a traffic light, officers tell drivers the law is still enforced.

textcop
San Antonio traffic officer gives a citation to a motorist for "illegal use of a handheld device."(Photo: Jason Eggleston / KENS 5)
"People seem to think, 'ok here's a good chance for me to get on my phone and text'-- you are still in violation of the city ordinance," said Greene.

Texas is only one of seven states without a statewide ban on texting and driving.

Governor Rick Perry has vetoed bills to fix that, and it may become an issue for the upcoming governor's race.

Greg Abbott has indicated he's against a statewide ban, while Wendy Davis has co-authored some of the bills in support of one.

Driver’s education combines teaching skills, gift of gab

ronically, for someone who teaches new drivers how to avoid accidents, Auburn’s Sofia Hotlen got into the driver’s ed business by accident.

A self-described perennial student, the native of Chile ping-ponged across the globe, touching down in her early years in Switzerland, Brazil, England and, finally, the United States. On her office wall on High Street in Downtown Auburn, Hotlen has degrees from San Jose State University and Sacramento State University in human resources compensation management. She speaks four languages – Spanish, English, French and Portuguese.

But instead of working in human resources, Hotlen said she unexpectedly teamed up with her brother, Miguel Guerrero’s driver education school and has not looked back.

For the garrulous driving instructor, life in the passenger seat next to teen motorists with little experience on the road hasn’t been a bad ride at all.

“I like people,” Hotlen said. “I like to tell stories. And most of the kids I teach are good kids.”

Menley Woolhether, a Placer High student learning the basics of driving from Hotlen, said her teacher has provided her with clear guidance on tricky skills like backing up in a straight line and how to handle a smaller car.

“She’s awesome – super funny and a great instructor,” Woolhether said.

After a quarter of a century in business – most of it out of a High Street storefront a quick  drive away to Placer High School to pick up students for lessons – Hotlen says that she’s instructed more than 20,000 students. The school itself has had up to 10 instructors teaching in all parts of Placer County and part of Nevada County but now has two teachers, besides Hotlen.

“I’m now having students whose parents were students of mine,” Hotlen said. “This year, I had five or six.”

Coy on her age – Hotlen says she is at retirement age and defines that as 62 or above – she said that she hopes to continue to teach.

To mark the 25th anniversary, Hotlen Driving School is holding an open house from 12:30-1:30 p.m. and 3-4:30 p.m., Wednesday with free drinks, snacks and special offers. The office is located at 1119 High St.

Hotlen said that over the 25 years next to fledgling drivers, she’s never had an accident but there have been close calls.

One memorable brush with catastrophe occurred along Auburn Ravine Road at a railroad crossing. With a train bearing down, a student’s food was frozen on the brake and all entreaties by Hotlen were futile.

Hotlen recalled that the train was about five to seven seconds from hitting the car when she stepped on the gas enough to move the car off the tracks.

Unlike many driver’s ed schools, who don’t install an optional accelerator pedal on the instructor’s side, Hotlen cars have them as an added safety feature, she said.

“It was the scariest day of my life,” Hotlen said. “We could have died. I almost quit that day.”

But Hotlen has carried on, carving out a 25-year career that started by accident.

New CAA-Quebec Driving Schools recently opened - Enhancing the quality of instruction

MONTREAL, Sept. 24, 2014 /CNW Telbec/ - CAA-Quebec recently opened two new driving schools, bringing the total number that it runs in Greater Montreal to four. This reflects the organization's commitment to applying the highest possible quality and traffic-safety standards to training the drivers of tomorrow.

"CAA-Quebec firmly intends to play an active role in the driving-schools market and to improve the quality of instruction provided to new drivers," said President and Chief Executive Officer Richard Lachance.

To that end, all CAA-Quebec Driving Schools are equipped with state-of-the-art technology. Each offers multimedia classrooms as well as a driving simulator that allows students to hone their skills in various road and weather conditions, even in manual-transmission mode. Moreover, almost all of the schools' vehicles are hybrid models.

Wanted: ratings and comments online
CAA-Quebec is also eager to assist consumers who are ready to choose a driving school. "These days, it's easy to go online and find consumer reviews of hotels, restaurants and so forth, so it's only natural that we should provide comparable information to people looking for a driving school," explained Hamid Rekouane, Assistant Director, Driving Schools, CAA-Quebec. "We'll be posting comments from students on our website, along with the schools' certification assessments from the Association québécoise des transports," he added. With this demonstration of transparency, CAA-Quebec is turning words into action, providing consumers with relevant information and inviting other driving schools in the province to do the same.

On the website, drivingschool.caaquebec.com, which is easy to use and is a rich source of road safety advice, consumers will also find a checklist tool entitled "How to Choose a Driving School," consisting of 10 questions they should ask when looking for a school. Here again, the goal is to improve standards of quality, which are so important in an industry that is in the business of training future drivers.

Plenty of personal touches to meet learners' needs
One initiative taken by the schools to ensure students' success is the Assistance + guarantee, exclusive to CAA-Quebec. Students who fail the practical exam at the SAAQ, for example, are guaranteed one-on-one follow-up sessions with an instructor to refine their driving skills.

CAA-Quebec's first driving schools opened their doors in October 2012 in Pointe-Claire and downtown Montreal, and two more were added this past June in Longueuil and Brossard. Besides passenger-vehicle driving lessons, they also offer instruction in motorcycle driving, winter driving, driving with a trailer, specially adapted refresher courses for seniors, as well as practical sessions in both automatic- and manual-transmission vehicles. Lastly, all courses are available in both English and French.

About CAA-Quebec
CAA-Quebec, a not-for-profit organization founded in 1904, provides automotive, travel, residential and financial services and privileges to its 1,280,000 members. As a leading advocate for road safety at every stage of life, its actions and services in this area include child car-seat verification clinics, a school safety patroller program, and awareness activities for seniors as well as secondary school students.

New Bill Puts Driving Schools in Reverse Gear

The motor driving school owners are an anxious lot now. And the thing that is giving them sleepless nights is none other than the proposed ‘Road transport and safety bill’ or RTSB.

The draft of the Bill, which was released by the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, specifically states that only driving schools which have at least two to three acres of land will be eligible to admit students for driving lessons.

According to All-Kerala Motor Driving School Association, the new rule will benefit the bigwigs while leaving thousands of small-time driving schools in the lurch.  “As of now, there are 3,500 driving schools in the state. Most schools don’t have the investment or the ground for imparting driving lessons. Also, tests are held on the roads in the presence of MVD inspectors. As per the new norms, the school is supposed to have its own institute. On the whole, the norms are impractical and cannot be followed by the small-time driving school owners as this will require huge investment. The owners received the licence for the schools based on their eligibility. The new norms will be unfair to the existing owners,” said association secretary K S Cheriyan.

Advocate Jose C, who studied the new draft, said that under the new rules, the schools themselves can grant licence to the new drivers.

“This will cause huge disparity in the quality of the drivers as the licences will be issued by private owners. The Regional Transport Office does not have anything to do with the process as per the framework,” advocate Jose C said.

 Yet another negative aspect of the new draft, as cited by the association is that driving lessons should be imparted to a batch only if at least 15 persons register. “It is not necessary that the schools should receive these many number of students per batch,” the association members stated.

From the point of view of the learners, the cost of taking a driving license is expected to escalate from `5,000 to `6,000 to at least `25,000, if the schools have to be upgraded to higher standards.

Fan dies from injuries sustained in driving school crash

CINCINNATI -- The family of a 30-year-old man who died from injuries sustained in a crash at Kentucky Speedway wants answers.

Stephen Cox, of Decatur, Ind., died Sunday at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, according to the Hamilton County Coroner. The crash in which he sustained his injuries occurred Sept. 14 at Kentucky Speedway in Sparta.

Cox was participating in the Rusty Wallace Racing Experience, a driving school that allows people to pay to ride in or drive race cars.

"We had an accident on the track," said Tim Bray, director of communications for Kentucky Speedway. "Emergency medical, they attended to him, they transported him to UC. That's all I can tell you at the moment."

But beyond that, not much is known about how Cox sustained his fatal injuries.

"What happened? Why did it have to happen?" said Gary Leppla, a Dayton attorney representing the man's family. "It's something that should have been safe with adequate training and an adequate vehicle."

Rusty Wallace's racing organization is trying to determine what caused the death.

Rusty Wallace Racing Experience spokesman Bill Coady did not provide details Tuesday. Wallace, a former NASCAR driver and 1989 Cup champion, was not at the track when the accident occurred. Coady said that Wallace, a Hall of Famer and an ESPN race analyst, shows up at the experience "on occasion."

Wallace's son and Rusty Wallace Inc. vice president, Greg, emailed a statement from the company to The Associated Press that said: "Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family and friends of Mr. Cox. We have been in contact with the management of RWRE — a licensee of RWI — to ascertain the facts and understand exactly what happened."

Coady said Cox's death was the first fatality in the four-year existence of RWRE, which is based in Pawtucket, R.I., and operates at 60 locations in the United States and Canada.

RWRE is among several companies bearing names of famous drivers that offer one-day fantasy-type driving experiences to the public in "condensed" NASCAR vehicles featuring manual transmissions. An advanced package in a Nationwide Series car is available, as are ride-along options.

RWRE's prices range from a $169, five-lap entry-level package on a short layout up to $1,099 for 20 laps on a superspeedway. Classroom and on-track instruction is provided depending on the package, and a driver's license is required.

Participants must have their own health insurance and are responsible for damage to the cars. RWRE offers a $60 optional plan that limits individual costs to $1,000 and says that "due to the quality of the training and cars, damage is rare."

Leppla said Cox was driving the car. It is unclear how many laps Cox had signed up for, but he had not been on the track long when the crash occurred.

"I believe he was only on the third lap," Leppla said.

Neither the Gallatin County Sheriff's Office nor the Kentucky State Police are investigating the crash.

The sheriff was not immediately available for comment, but an official at the office said driving schools rarely notify them of crashes.

It is unclear why no law enforcement agency was notified of the crash.

Donna Harrod, administrative specialist at the Kentucky State Police, said her agency was not investigating Cox's crash either. In fact, it rarely investigates crashes that occur on the speedway.

"That would be like doing a crash report every time somebody is on the track," she said. "It is on private property and we don't do those."

But the lack of investigations have left questions unanswered.

"I don't know what their process is; there may be a jurisdictional issue there," Leppla said. "We're not critical of anyone, we're just trying to get answers."

Cox's father was with him at the track, but he did not see the crash. A Montgomery County native and University of Cincinnati alumnus, Cox was living and working as a pharmacist in Decatur, Ind. Leppla said he was visiting the speedway for a special occasion.

"The family has no plan other than right now finding out what happened," Leppla said. "Right now it's, 'Why did this happen?' "

Marotti writes for the Cincinnati Enquirer, a property of Gannett.

Hard lesson for three drivers

THREE people have paid the hefty price for driving while more than three times the blood-alcohol limit.

Nikki Tanya Fraser exclaimed, "For 12 months ..." after Magistrate Damien Dwyer disqualified her from driving for a year.

"That's the penalty you pay for putting everyone's life at risk," Mr Dwyer told her as she left the courtroom.

Fraser was pulled over at 11.05pm on September 6 on Maple Dr by mobile police patrols for a random breath test.

Officers noticed the smell of liquor and Fraser admitted to having two beers prior to driving, prosecutor James Grehan said.

Her blood-alcohol concentration was 0.169%, the Mackay Magistrates Court was told.

Self-represented, Fraser said, "I'm very sorry for my mistake" when called on by Mr Dwyer to comment on her actions.

She asked to apply for a work license, but under the legislation anyone with a blood alcohol level of 0.15% or above is excluded from making an application.

"It's a shame for you... 33 years old and not even a ticket ... you started with a six," Mr Dwyer said.

Fraser pleaded guilty to high-range drink-driving and was also fined $1460 as well as the 12 month disqualification.

Grant Bruce Mullamphy pleaded guilty to having a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.19%, the court was told.

He was intercepted at the corner of Sams and Willets Rds on September 6.

Mullamphy was placed on 12 months probation and ordered to participate in the Under the Limit drink-driving program and was disqualified for 16 months.

Jake Russel Birch told the court he was glad he "didn't hurt anyone else" when he drove with a reading of 0.156% on September 6.

Police said they attended a single- vehicle crash on Gordon St about 1am.

"I'm not proud of myself," Birch said. He was fined $1460 and disqualified from driving for 12 months.

Convictions were recorded for all.

13-year-old from Cheddar named UK's best young driver

A 13-YEAR-OLD from Cheddar has been named the UK's best young driver.

Hannah Tripp has been taking driving lessons from Young Driver, which offers driving experience to people under the age of 17, and entered a competition to find the best young driver in the country, in two age categories - 11-13 and 14-16.

Over 350 entered the competition, with Hannah taking the top spot in the 11-13 category.

To claim her prize, she had her driving assessed at Exeter Young Driver grounds, and pass the online Goodyear theory test, based on the Highway Code.

The National final was held at the NEC Birmingham on September 13, and the judges included representatives from the Institute of Advanced Motorists (IAM) ex-police driving instructor Gary White, and several highly qualified driving instructors, and Goodyear.

Her achievement comes despite the fact she has only had nine lessons under the Young Driver Scheme.

Her dad, Chris, said: "It all started by a Christmas present for a Young Driver lesson, and she has now won the title.

"I am so proud of her achievement."

Mark Lewis, Director of Standards for IAM, said: "Hannah demonstrated control of her car and abilities way beyond their years, and showed so much skill behind the wheel we were delighted to award her first place in her age category.

"Congratulations to them both it's very well deserved."

Kim Stanton from Young Driver said: "This competition has proven just how much young people can learn before they are officially old enough to drive, and that so many youngsters have shown the desire to not only learn the basics but to hone their skills.

"Hannah provided a fantastic demonstration of just how good a young person can be."



Teenage drivers and the meanest mother ever: Allison Dougherty

I've mentioned my monumentally bad teenage driving before, but it bears repeating in the context of how it impacted my poor son, Frank, roughly 30 years later.
We should probably establish at the onset that I am also the world's meanest mother. Do not email me about this. I am fully aware it.
Fredricksen Library.jpegThe Cleve J. Fredricksen Library in Camp Hill. 
My truly lousy teenage driving came to screeching halt – little joke there – when I drove my stepfather's car over a neighbor's fence while my stepfather was giving me a driving lesson. The driver's education department at my high school had given up on me months before. My stepfather, ever hopeful, was trying one last time.
We considered the attempt unsuccessful. I rode the bus for the rest of high school.
My takeaway from this was: Should teenagers be permitted behind the wheel of a flying ton and a half of metal and inflammable gasoline? My internal answer to that question resulted in me attaching an extreme responsibility clause to Pennsylvania's license requirements when Frank wanted to start driving.
Extreme responsibility meaning: You might get your license after you're married and have successfully raised six children to become doctors, lawyers, priests or rabbis. Poor Frank, if he forgot to clear the table, I'd say with Oscar-worthy dismay something such as, "Well, if you can't remember to clear the table, how can I trust you to be responsible driving a car?"
My son, who is a sharp fellow, figured out about mid-way through being 16 that the license wasn't going to happen anytime soon. At 18, he looked at me one day and said, "I think we're done with this now, right?" I responded with a grumbled, "Fine," and took him for his driving test.
Seeing as we've established that I'm the meanest mother ever, it would stand to reason that you're a much nicer parent than I am and probably have every intention of allowing your child to drive before his or her 40th birthday. The Cleve J. Fredricksen Library in Camp Hill has a whole new resource to help.
The library has begun offering online practice tests for the Pennsylvania learner's permit through Driving-Tests.org to help your student study for the permit.
The practice tests are free and available to everyone.
Eleven practice tests for the permit test are there for the taking, as well as road sign tests, answers to frequently asked questions and driver's handbooks. Also offered are practice tests for the state motorcycle license test – I'm sure you can imagine what I think of motorcycles and safety – and the commercial license test.
After the first of the year, the library plans to offer permit prep-classes to students, which are expected to include information about driving safety and a pledge to be a safe, not-distracted driver – can you say teenagers and cell phones. The library's teen services coordinator, Christine Davies, also said they plan to add to the library's collection books about teen driving and navigating the world of teen mobility.
Davies said the practice test resource is a great way to get your child ready to take the permit test. She said parents could even use the practice tests as incentive for getting a learner's permit. Take all the tests, then we'll talk about your getting your permit.
I, of course, interpreted that as another avenue for license delay. Nice. If you'd like more ideas, let me know. I have a million of them.

Driving Lessons Burnley- Have The Great Driving Skills Benefit

advancedcoursePCrouchCPeaceshoppedTaking professional driving training also gives learners an additional measure of safety because most of the vehicles used for this training consist of an additional set of manages for the trainer. Driving lesson Burnley trainer are extremely knowledgeable and have the right information that is needed for educating a person with full concentrate and commitment. This strategy begins with a very relaxed and smooth discussion between you and the trainer. The lesson provide proper knowledge about traffic rules to the new learners so that they can understand the rules and avoid critical situations in the future. 
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Wednesday, 24 September 2014

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Friday, 19 September 2014

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Thursday, 18 September 2014

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Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Fatal school bus accident raises concern for safe driving habits

New details Friday in the crash that left a motorcyclist dead last week.

Nancy Horner faces careless driving charges.

She was driving the school bus that killed Thomas Bierne and seriously injured his wife Michelle.

KSFY News spoke with a school bus driver in training today.

Driving a school bus is a huge responsibility.

There is one thing the driver-in-training and his trainer repeated over and over again, and that's to constantly look and be aware of everything that's happening around you.

For driver-in-training Jim Tirrel, learning how to drive a school bus is not something he takes lightly.

"There's a lot of responsibility as far as driving safely, making sure that you're looking around and you're always watching traffic, because you're not just driving for yourself, your driving for everybody else. Plus, you have all the kids, and that is a lot of responsibility," Tirrel said.

Trainer Barb Bauer teaches drivers how to create safe driving habits.

"Look for everything. You have to look for everything. You have to look for kids, look for other motorists. You have to look, because people aren't always thinking about what they're doing. They're preoccupied with something, and they'll just cut in front of you, especially with school buses. Nobody likes to be behind a school bus. We stop a lot," Bauer said.

"Safety is the most important thing. You've got to be looking around all the time. You've got to move your head constantly. You've got to be looking in the mirrors, all of the mirrors. You see on the bus, there's lot's and lot's of different mirrors, and you have to be looking all the time," Tirrel said.

"It's hard to do, but you develop the habit of doing it. It's something you have to force yourself to do at first, and then you just do it," Bauer said.

However, that's not all it takes to become a school bus driver.

"I had to take a written test, had to take three parts, had to a regular, just for my regular CDL. Then, I had to take for my passenger. Then, I also had to take for the regular school bus," Tirrel said.

All of that before a driver can get behind the wheel to train.  It's a job which doesn't come easy.

"It's a lot of work, it's a lot more work than what i thought it was going to be, but i think it's all worth it," Tirrel said.

Friends and family of Tom Bierne held a vigil for him Friday night at 6:30.

They gathered at Marlins on North Cliff, and rode to the spot where Bierne lost his life at 57th and Western.

If anyone would like to donate to Bierne family, an account has been set up at Sioux Falls Federal Credit Union locations across Sioux Falls.

Williamson schools may boost bus driver pay

The Williamson County school board is looking at ways to resolve problems stemming from a shortage of school bus drivers, which is causing longer rides for students across the county.

The school system has 17 bus driver openings and has been forced to spread the uncovered routes among the roughly 240 remaining drivers, Superintendent Mike Looney said at a school board work session Thursday.

The system has had a hard time filling the shortage because its pay rate for drivers — which tops out at just more than $15 per hour — isn’t competitive with other bus driving jobs, Looney said.

“We’ve been ramping up our recruiting efforts,” Looney said. “One of the biggest hurdles to getting people to commit is we don’t pay competitively.”

School officials in October plan to introduce a proposal aimed at filling the shortage through more attractive compensation, Looney said.

“We’re trying to find some sort of tipping point where we can attract candidates but also save taxpayer dollars,” Looney said.

The driver shortage was among a range of topics the newly structured 12-member board discussed at the four-hour work session. Half of the 12-member board is new after three incumbents opted not to run for re-election and three others were voted out during August’s election.

The board is scheduled to meet on Monday night to take up another staff shortage — this one for teachers to handle school-age child care, commonly referred to as the extended hours program.

Some schools have had trouble filling openings for teachers who operate the after-hours program, Looney said. Part of the problem there, too, is compensation for teachers, which is slightly more than $9 per hour.

The board on Monday will weigh a temporary pay rate increase for substitute teachers through the end of this month to use as a stopgap measure until the schools can find permanent teachers for the program.

The new school board chairman and vice chairman also will be elected at the Monday’s meeting.

During Thursday’s work session, some of the board’s recently elected members proposed taking up a resolution on Monday coming out against the state’s adoption of Common Core standards.

Members instead scheduled a special meeting for 6 p.m. Oct. 6 to discuss a resolution concerning the federal education standards.

Column: Taxis for women needed out here, too

Women have made huge inroads over decades in many fields long — and unfairly — considered the exclusive territory of men. Print and broadcast journalism, of course, come immediately to mind. It’s also hard to imagine a time when all bartenders were men; it’s been well over a hundred years since the infamous 1892 crackdown in St. Louis that targeted “saloon keepers who employ women as attendants.”

Six people, The New York Times then reported, were indicted in that sweep “for employing females in ‘dramshops.’ ”

How times have changed.

One profession, however, has been largely avoided by women: taxi driver. According to The New York Times, just 5 percent of current limo, car service or livery cab drivers in New York City — and just 1 percent of medallion yellow cab drivers — are female. I think I can easily explain why: Men can be threatening.

No one can tell me women have a natural aversion to operating commercial vehicles; they’ve already been driving school buses for decades. In fact, most all of my grade school bus drivers were women.

What the bus driver phenomenon does show us is that women don’t mind driving kids around. Ferrying strange men back and forth between work or the store — or worse, home from the bar — is another story. And yet, when it’s the other way around — women hopping in the back of a car driven by a man — it always seems normal and safe, at least to us men, who really don’t think about such things.

Talk to some women, though, and many will tell you jumping in a cab is never without risk. Many won’t take a taxi alone, especially out here. That’s not to say all men are potential sex offenders; just that most sex offenders are men. And consider the criminal behavior among cab drivers that’s been reported in these publications. Riverhead Town has even created its own tax driver registry in an effort to keep criminals from driving local residents around. I certainly don’t blame women for being nervous.

This all amounts to another under-reported challenge for millions of women across this country, in both the city and the suburbs. Just for a second, forget equal pay for equal work for a second — and the other important provisions of the state’s stalled New York Women’s Equality Act. The fact is that men don’t have to worry about sexual assault as they travel to and from work or school or if, God forbid, they lose their friends at a party or club and have to find their way home alone.

This issue has inspired one company to offer a new mobile phone app and service that will help provide female taxi drivers for female riders and, with that, offer some peace of mind. News of the service, which is supposed to launch later this month in Long Island, Westchester and New York City, broke earlier this week. Legal experts have raised concerns: It’s clear, for example, that under federal law, female cabbies won’t be able to refuse male passengers. Still, this is a common sense approach to a real issue and I would urge the company, SheTaxis (shetaxis.com), to offer its services on the East End.

As all of us on eastern Long Island are aware, this ain’t New York City, and those among us who use cabs to get to work or do chores are often disabled or down on our luck. So let’s agree that women in these situations already have a tough enough go of it. At the very least, they should feel safe. If Albany lawmakers can’t cooperate to protect the health and safety of women, at least some in the private sector are stepping up.

School bus driver involved in fatal crash cited

SIOUX FALLS | A South Dakota school bus driver involved in a fatal crash with a motorcycle has been cited for careless driving.

The Argus Leader reports that 59-year-old Nancy Horner was driving an unoccupied bus from Harrisburg schools when she turned left in front motorcyclist Thomas Bierne. He died as a result of the crash and his wife remains hospitalized.

Horner was transported to the hospital with minor injuries. She's been an employee of the Harrisburg School District since 1990. She's on paid leave.

The newspaper reports the citation is meant for negligent, rather than willfully dangerous driving. It's a class two misdemeanor that carries a maximum penalty of 30 days in jail or a $500 fine.

Horner could not be reached. She's scheduled to appear in court for Sept. 30.

Ex-Pinellas school bus driver faces child porn charges

A former Pinellas County school bus driver was arrested Thursday after state investigators said they found child pornography on his computer.

William Eichenberger, 58, of 5685 35th Ave. N., of St. Petersburg, faces 10 counts of possession of child pornography.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said it began investigating Eichenberger in August after identifying a computer at his residence sharing child pornography.

A search warrant was obtained for his home, and several files depicting child pornography were found on a computer, according to FDLE.

FDLE did not say whether the files depicted any children he may have encountered while he worked for the Pinellas school district.

Eichenberger worked for Pinellas County Schools for less than a year, said spokeswoman Melanie Marquez Parra. She said he had no criminal history when he was hired in 2005. In lieu of being recommended for dismissal because of improperly reported driving infractions, Eichenberger resigned in February 2006, Marquez Parra said.

Eichenberger was booked into the Pinellas County Jail with bail set at $200,000.

Red’s wild ride: Meet the oldest bus driver in North America

People often are surprised when they learn Gerald “Red” Briggs’ age.

His eye doctor tells him he has 70-year-old eyes, he said.

His many “girlfriends” — he’s always looking for more, he’ll tell you, just before he breaks into a high-pitched giggle — might think he’s even younger than that.

Even the passengers on the buses he drives for Cyr Bus Line likely are unaware their driver is a record-setter. The 90-year-old recently was recognized as the oldest transit bus driver in North America by the Maine Driver and Traffic Safety Education Association.

“I wasn’t shooting for being the oldest driver in North America,” Briggs said. “That was never the idea. I just enjoy driving. My wife died a couple of years ago, and it gives me a reason to get up and get out and do things instead of sitting in a rocking chair and dying a couple years later.”

Several times a week, Briggs gets a call: His employer needs him to shuttle a sports team to Bucksport or Portland or Boston.

Sure, he’ll say. Where do you want me to be? When?

Then, for several hours, he’ll be a bus driver.

But that only scratches the surface.

Briggs also is a former teacher and coach, who spent more than three decades in schools across the state.

He’s a proud father of three sons.

Chat with him long enough, and you might even learn he took part in one of the most important military campaigns in world history.

Omaha Beach? D-Day?

Yeah, he was there — in the first wave that went ashore.

So yes, Briggs is a record-setting bus driver. And if that were his whole story, it would be interesting enough.

But the rest of his life has been a pretty wild ride, too.

And he’s not done yet.

War stories
When Briggs begins the recitation of his working career, he skims over a key part.

“Like a lot of us that came back from World War II,” he begins, generically, “we wanted to get into phys ed.”

That, it seems, explains his teaching career. But it skips one of the stories he knows everybody wants to hear.

Ask him again about his World War II service later, and you learn the rest of the tale.

“I was in the Seabees,” he said. “Most people, they think about them building roads out in the islands and so forth. But the outfit I was in, we went in on Omaha Beach in the first wave.”

His outfit built “rhino ferries,” which were huge barges used to shuttle troops and large equipment ashore as the battle raged.

Briggs said the peril he and his friends were in didn’t really occur to him at the time.

“When you’re 20 years old, you figure everything’s going to happen to somebody else, not you,” he said. “Some ask me, ‘Were you afraid going into Omaha Beach? ‘ The answer is ‘No.’ I wasn’t, then. You’re at that age where all the bad things are going to happen to somebody else. Not me.”

Today, he’ll admit the battle and his wartime service did take a toll.

“Now they have fancy names, like post-traumatic stress disorder,” Briggs said. “I went through all that stuff. But back in those days they just called it ‘one flew over the cuckoo’s nest,’ or something like that.”

At the end of the war, Briggs returned to Maine and began college. His job while attending school in Farmington?

He was a bus driver.

The forgotten profession
Briggs said many people know a couple of things about him, but few seem to remember another.

“Now, if any of my friends talk to me, they want to talk to me about my bus-driving stories or my war stories,” he said. “It’s just like I didn’t do anything else. I don’t know if that’s good or bad.”

That, he said, leaves out a huge chunk of his life. From 1946 until 1983, Briggs was a teacher and coach. And he was one of the state’s first driver’s education instructors.

During that period, he and his wife hopscotched around the state as Red, the coach, continued seeking greener pastures.

From Bath to Boothbay, Richmond to South Paris, the couple never stayed in one place for too long.

“And then my wife put her foot down and said, ‘Why don’t you move for money for once, instead of for a bigger gym or taller players?’” Briggs said. “So I went to Long Island, New York, where all the money was.”

Three years later, he returned to Maine to teach and coach. Then, in 1984, it was time to hang up his whistle, just like everyone else did. He was 60 years old when he retired — briefly.

“I was like everyone. You always dream of retiring,” Briggs said. “I was going to hunt and fish. But I’m sitting out there in my canoe all by myself, and I said, ‘Something’s wrong with this.’”

What was wrong wasn’t hard to figure out, he said.

“My good friends were still teaching,” Briggs said. “So I thought I’ve got to do something. And I knew how to drive buses, so I applied for a bus-driving job. And they hired me.”

Thirty years later, he’s still driving.

Age is just a number
Buses have changed a lot since Briggs first drove them in 1946.

Automatic transmissions didn’t exist back then. Need air conditioning? Open a window.

“I go back to the crank phone,” Briggs said, describing the phones he grew up using.

Nowadays, every passenger is a potential backseat driver, thanks to global positioning system apps on their smartphones.

Briggs just bought his own iPhone and admits he’s still learning to use it. But he’s a map-and-memory guy. He said he doesn’t need modern technology to tell him how to get from Point A to Point B. Chances are good he’s been there, done that. Repeatedly.

“Are you shitting me?” he asks. “My GPS is in my head.”

To Briggs, age is just a number. And he said his eye doctor has given him some good advice.

“[She says,] ‘You don’t look at numbers when you’re talking about people,’” he said.

Dana Laughlin, Cyr Bus Line’s dispatcher, said the company has confidence in their 90-year-old driver and said Briggs wouldn’t have the required license if he wasn’t qualified.

“It was his goal to get recertified for this year,” Laughlin said. “And, of course, you have to go through a lot of medical [tests] to pass to get your [federal Department of Transportation] card. He met all the guidelines and made sure all of his paperwork was there at the time it needed to be there.”

Laughlin said that in addition to certification at least every two years, a physician working for the bus line will seek additional information from a driver’s doctors if needed. During that process, any health concerns must be addressed before a driver is cleared for service. Briggs passed all required tests and has been recertified every time.

Still, Briggs said his biggest fear is that a reckless driver will hit him. If that were to happen, he knows what the backlash would be.

“What do you think the [headline will say]?” he asked. “It’ll say ‘SUV runs into bus driven by 90-year-old.’ And 99 percent of people at home, they’re going to say, ‘Oh, man. Why don’t they get that old guy off the road?’”

That old guy, though, is still confident in his abilities.

“If anybody wanted to compete with me in precision driving or any kind of driving, I don’t care. Whether it’s motorcycles or buses or what. I’d be willing to go up against anybody,” he said. “Call it being cocky, call it anything you want. That’s the way I feel.”

Briggs said he has been getting some pressure to retire — again.

His son has suggested he hang up his keys when he reaches his 91st birthday in February.

He said that’s the plan, for now — maybe.

Laughlin isn’t so sure.

“Come February, we’ll see,” Laughlin said, chuckling. “[If that happens], I think there’s going to be a big void, not seeing him in my office two or three times a week. … [He] drives up here just to say, ‘Hello, how’s everything going.’ Hopefully he continues to do that. Just because he’s retiring doesn’t mean we’re not a family.”

One thing is certain: When Briggs retires from driving, he won’t be retiring from work. Or life.

He plans on seeking another job and keeping his active social life alive.

“What do you think has kept me going for all these years?” he asked. “If I didn’t keep wanting to do things, I’d probably just wither away, right? You know, you’ve got to look for new girlfriends and every other thing to keep you going.”

Bus Driver Shortage Has School Districts Scrambling To Fill Positions

 School districts are scrambling to hire and fill gaps left by a bus driver shortage.
After 15 years behind the wheel of San Juan Unified School District buses, Better Loscutoff still loves her job.
“It’s an easy job; I got an air conditioned bus,” she said. “All i do is drive.”
But districts need more people like her as they struggle to keep enough drivers behind the wheel. Drivers are either retiring or leaving for other jobs as the economy improves.
“We only have two instructors and right now we’re so short-handed, they’re driving,” said operations supervisor Debra Kennedy.
Kennedy says the 20 hours of class time and 20 hours of behind-the-wheel instruction—both unpaid—might be keeping people away.
But the training qualifies drivers to get other driving jobs, even if they don’t land full-time work with the district. Pay starts at $14.51 an hour.
“Once you become permanent, you have all your benefits; your vacation, your sick leave,” Kennedy said. “It’s really a good opportunity for someone who’s looking for a career change or a new career.”

Book shortage hampers learner drivers

Thousands of learner drivers and motorcyclists are facing a major bump on the road before they can even start because of an acute shortage of the highway code books for ‘L’ licences under the new driving curriculum implemented on Aug 1.

Driving schools have an average of between 1,000 and 1,200 applicants for ‘L’ licences each month and the scarcity of books has delayed scheduled tests in about 200 driving schools across the country.

Malaysian Driving Institute Association president Mat Aris Bakar said the book contained a serial number for a learner driver to log in for an online test.

“If they do not finish the tests, they cannot proceed with practical training.

“This is a serious setback and JPJ (Road Transport Department) must look into the matter,” he said.

Mat Aris said the delays were more prevalent in Sabah and Sarawak, where the shortage was critical.

Previously, the code books could be obtained from third party printers but under the new syllabus, driving school operators have to buy them directly from JPJ.

Safety Driving Centre general manager C.T. Balan said his institute handled about 300 students each weekend but had only received 60 books since the new syllabus took effect.

“Worse still, there are no books printed in English for foreigners who want to get a local driving licence,” he said.

In Alor Setar, Transport Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said JPJ should have anticipated the high demand for the code books from those sitting for the driving test.

“The shortage should not have happened. I will direct the department to speed up the printing and distribution,” he said after opening the Kedah MCA’s 37th annual convention at Starcity Hotel.

In Kuala Linggi, JPJ deputy director-general Datuk Yusoff Ayob admitted the seriousness of the problem and said the department was sorting out remedial measures to address it.

“We realise the predicament faced by driving schools and are working hard to resolve this by end of the month or at least by covering 80% of the schools,” he said after launching a JPJ community programme for motorcyclists.

“We are doing our utmost to immediately supply the books and materials for driving tests.

“Among the steps are to appoint more printing firms to cope with the increasing number of orders for the books,” he said.

AAA: Fewer driver's ed classes = more teen traffic accidents, convictions

Fewer students taking driver's education in high school has resulted in an increase in teenagers in car accidents and traffic convictions nationwide, according to a recently released AAA study.

In the region, driver's education is a requirement in Virginia for those younger than 19 to get a license, but not across state line in Tennessee, where some local systems offer no driver's ed or limit it to classroom-only instruction.

"Driver's education is associated with a lower incidence of both crashes and convictions — reducing crashes by 4.3 percent and convictions by nearly 40 percent," according to a Sept. 9 news release from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety.

It said teenagers who completed driver's education scored higher on the driving exam and demonstrated "modest increases in knowledge" over peers who took no formal training."

"Overall, the findings suggest that driver's education can make a difference, but there is still much room for improvement in most existing programs," said Peter Kissinger, president and chief executive officer of the AAA foundation. "This underscores the need for states to adopt the NHTSA-supported Standards that are designed to enhance the scope and quality of driver's education."

In Tennessee, driver's ed is not required, and budget constraints led the Sullivan County Board of Education a few years ago to cease the driver's ed program in its four high schools.

"We don't do anything at all," Sullivan County Director of Schools Jubal Yennie said Wednesday of behind-the-wheel driver's education, saying that the 2014-15 school year is the second year the system has not offered the program.

Lib Sells, director of human resources with the school system, said that students do get some driver's education classroom time during Wellness 2 classes as sophomores, which is usually the time they are getting learner's permits.

Yennie said he didn't know what was filling the hands-on driver's ed void but that a defensive driving/accident avoidance driving school held at Bristol Motor Speedway each year likely is helping. With limited resources and partial state reimbursement for driver's ed, Yennie said the school board made the decision to end driver's ed, although board members said it was a good program.

Likewise, Hawkins County offers classroom driver's ed "safety" training as part of a safety class that also includes hunting and boating safety, said Beth Holt, supervisor of curriculum and instruction for that system.

She said this marks the third year Volunteer High has had no behind-the-wheel training and the fourth year Cherokee High has not had it.

In Washington County, Director of Secondary Education Bill Flanary said the classroom component is offered at both Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone high schools but only Crockett offers the six-hour behind-the-wheel course.

The Wellness 2 course in which classroom driver's ed is included is mandatory except for students in athletics, band, ROTC or cheerleading.

Johnson City's Science Hill High School offers no classroom driver's education whatsoever, said Janie Snyder, director of secondary and student services.

However, Snyder said the system in the spring and summer offers a behind-the-wheel driving class outside of school hours for no credit under what was last year a $175 charge.

A certified driving instructor, a school system employee under personal contract, offers the class, but Snyder said it had a limited number of slots since students were assigned driving in pairs.

In Kingsport, the school system still offers driver's education behind the wheel, but Dobyns-Bennett High School Principal Chris Hampton recently sent parents a letter encouraging them to consider the Accident Avoidance Workshops at BMS for their high school students.

Assistant Principal Brian Tate via email said driver's education "is a built-in two-week rotation as part of Wellness 2. Students get time in the classroom with driving rules, regulations, and verbal instruction," Tate said. "Additionally, students are given time in simulators and they get time in the car on our range and with the teacher on the road."
However, he also said D-B does not issue any certificates in relation to driver's education since it is a "two-week rotation teaching fundamentals of operating a vehicle not a full driver's education course."

He said 571 students are enrolled in Wellness 2 throughout the year, "which would mean that amount would get exposure to driver's education" at D-B this year.

"I have only received positive feedback from parents and students who have participated in previous sessions of this program," Hampton wrote. "The workshops are conducted by an outside agency that is not affiliated with Dobyns-Bennett or Kingsport City Schools. My endorsement comes as support for the safety of all of our students."

The AAA-approved driving schools this year had three-hour classroom instruction Sept. 11 with five-hour driving sessions Sept. 13 or 14. Another session is coming in the classroom Oct. 23, with driving sessions Oct. 25 and 26.

The price is $249 for a student with a permit or license and one parent or $289 for such a student and both parents. All student and parent participants are eligible for a driving certificate that in some cases will lower vehicle insurance rates.

Sponsors included BMS (which information on the program indicates supports the program and brought the price down from $359 per parent-student team to $249), Volkswagen of Chattanooga, Wellmont Health System, News5 WCYB, the Kingsport Times-News, the Kingsport Area Safety Council and Eastman Chemical Co.

For information or to register for the October sessions, call (770) 262-7009 or go to www.AccidentAvoidanceWorkshops.org.

The AAA study assessed examples of U.S. and Canadian driver's education programs evaluation methods including surveys, driver's licensing tests, driver simulators and the review of driving records.

AAA and the AAA Foundation have developed comprehensive resources including TeenDriving.AAA.com, a state-specific website to help parents navigate the learning-to-drive process; DriversZed, an interactive tool designed to teach teens how to react in various driving scenarios; and the StartSmart Online Parent Session, a two-hour webinar that explains the licensing process and parents' role, and demonstrates how to maximize the practice driving that parents/guardians are required to do with their teen.



Read more: AAA: Fewer driver's ed classes = more teen traffic accidents, convictions | Kingsport Times-News http://www.timesnews.net/article/9080784/aaa-fewer-drivers-ed-classes-more-teen-traffic-accidents-convictions#ixzz3DTTg1cUL
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Monday, 15 September 2014

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Tuesday, 9 September 2014

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Wednesday, 3 September 2014

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