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A mother’s mission to help teen drivers

Encouraging more parental involvement to prevent future tragedy

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Teen drivers face danger all week long
Oct. 26: A new study shows that teen drivers are almost as likely to get into fatal car accidents after school as on weekend nights. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

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Parents try to enforce safe driving
Oct. 26: Parents are trying all kinds of ways to enforce safe driving practices in teens. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

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July 18: How one father is Making a Difference by turning his grief over the senseless murder of his son into an institution of hope and healing. NBC's John Larson reports.

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By Ron Allen
Correspondent
NBC News
updated 5:42 p.m. ET Oct. 27, 2006

NBC News
Ron Allen
Correspondent

NEW YORK - While researching a story about teenage car crashes and why those accidents continue to end so many young lives, we met a woman in suburban Baltimore with a powerful story to share.

Robin Thompson was driving home on a clear bright day in June 2003, when she was alarmed by the sight of a wrecked car twisted around a tree. And what's even worse, Thompson soon discovered that her daughter Ashley, just 16, was the sole victim of the fatal accident.

"The car went into a skid," Thompson explained, unsure why her daughter had to swerve. “Ashley didn't have the skill to recover."

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Her mom told us Ashley was an honor student who had a safe driver contract with her parents: no cell phones and limited driving hours. She was a responsible teenager who tragically lost her life on an otherwise beautiful afternoon.

Dangers after school
To honor her memory, Thompson has been on a mission, telling teens and parents that if it can happen to her daughter, it can happen to anyone. "If that can keep just one teen alive by talking about Ashley," she said while beginning to sob, "then, I've done her proud."

The motoring and leisure organization AAA had introduced us to Thompson. The group had just released a study showing that the hours after school can be almost as deadly as weekend nights for teenage drivers.

"We think it’s in part because teens aren't really receiving the same amount of supervision during that time of the week," explained Robert Darbelnet, AAA's president. 

Safety experts also say it’s because there are so many teens in cars weekday afternoons, driving home, to work or to after school activities, and often traveling as rush hour traffic begins to build.

No. 1 cause of death among teens
Traffic accidents continue to be the leading cause of death for teenagers, some 6,000 every year. That's why the number 16 featured prominently at a driver safety session for hundreds of New Jersey high school students last week sponsored by the Allstate foundation. The idea of the session, dubbed “Keep the Drive,” is to find responsible teen leaders who will take what they learn here back to their schools. Think of it as the teen-to-teen approach.

When the moderator asked the students what the number 16 meant, he got a range of responses. Most thought it was the age most states issue driver learning permits.  Wrong. It's the number of teens who die in traffic accidents every day.

Just about every teen there had an accident story to tell. "The car in front of us stopped short, and we rear-ended it," said Julie Baker, 15.

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"We hit a telephone pole, and then we bounced back into the road, and an oncoming car hit us," explained Rey Gutierra, 17. 

Why does it happen so often? "Carelessness, not paying attention," said Jessica Ohnikian, 15. "Cell phones, I see a lot of people on cell phones."

In fact, many safety experts will tell you inexperience behind the wheel and immaturity are the main reasons teenagers get into so many accidents. Another sobering stat from the National Highway Safety administration says 7,460 15-20-year-old drivers were behind the wheel in fatal crashes in 2005. A lot of people will tell you teenagers are the most dangerous drivers on the roads. 


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