Parents and Teen Drivers Disconnected on Graduated Licensing

AURORA, ONTARIO--(Marketwired - Sep 16, 2013) - There are strong disconnections between Canadian parents and teens regarding graduated driver licensing (GDL) laws, according to a new State Farm survey. However, the opportunity for improved dialogue could potentially lead to safer teen driving and may even save lives. In the lead-up to what State Farm hopes will be the first officially recognized National Teen Driver Safety Week, 500 parents of teen drivers and an independent sample of 280 teen drivers were surveyed in June about their perceptions, opinions and behaviours in relation to provincial GDL laws.

Critically, the findings suggest parents of teen drivers believe their teens are following GDL laws more methodically than teens report. They also suggest parents monitor their teens' adherence to GDL laws more than teens report. Yet, there's one thing that parents and teens are aligned on - the most likely reason that teens don't follow GDL laws is peer pressure.

Key survey findings include:

Parents overestimate teens' adherence to two key GDL laws:

  • Nighttime driving - 69 per cent of parents believe their teen almost always follows nighttime driving restrictions while fewer than half (48 per cent) of teens indicate to almost always following this law.

  • Passenger number restrictions - 64 per cent of parents believe their teen driver almost always obeys this life-saving statute while only 42 per cent of teens state they almost always follow this restriction.

Parents significantly overestimate the impacts of their monitoring efforts:

  • Eighty per cent of parents feel that their monitoring of teens' adherence to GDL laws is one of the reasons that teens will follow driving restrictions; only 56 per cent of teens agreed with this.

  • For nighttime driving restrictions, 63 per cent of parents said they almost always monitor their teen's obedience to the law while only 33 per cent of teens report this was the case.

  • For passenger number restrictions, 58 per cent of parents said they almost always monitor their teens and only 22 per cent of teens state their parents almost always monitor their adherence to the law.

Under the (wrong) influence:

  • Parents and teens listed peer pressure as the most likely reason for teens to not follow GDL laws (34 per cent and 33 per cent, respectively).

"The survey findings highlight the need for greater dialogue about teen driver safety within families, communities and with public policy makers," says Sam Palmerio, Public Affairs Manager, State Farm Canada. "Car crashes are the leading cause of death for Canadian teens and GDL laws are critical to reducing high-risk driving situations. With the right focus and conversational tone, we can empower teens to consistently make smart decisions as they enjoy the freedom that comes with getting a driver's licence."