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A new Graduated Driver License Law was passed during the last
general assembly. This law will take effect on October 1,
2006.
The goal of Graduated Driver License Law is to curb the overall
number of crashes involving teenage drivers, especially the
high number of deadly crashes with teen involvement.
Kentucky currently has one of the highest teen crash rates
in the nation. Teenage drivers account for only 6 percent
of the state’s driving population, yet they are involved
in about 18 percent of fatal crashes in Kentucky and more
than 20 percent of all highway crashes in the state.
The Graduated Driver License Law creates an intermediate period
of six months between the learner’s permit and a full,
unrestricted license. During the intermediary phase, teenagers
will have a full license with two restrictions on their driving
privileges. One of the restrictions stipulates no driving
from midnight to 6 a.m., except in cases of emergency. Also,
the teen driver will be allowed no more than one unrelated
passenger under the age of twenty.
Transportation Cabinet Secretary Bill Nighbert, underlined
the success other states have had with a Graduated Driver’s
License Program. “North Carolina and Michigan, for example,
have done studies that show as much as a 25 percent reduction
in crashes involving 16-year-old drivers, after passing GDL
legislation,” said Secretary Nighbert. “These
are the kind of positive results we’re striving for
in Kentucky.”
MEDIA
CLIPS
LifeSavers
April 2006 - PowerPoint presentation
TODAY
SHOW CLIP
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