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Teen Drivers Challenged To Keep Eyes On The Road

Marin Catholic seniors are among the students who discover how hard it is to drive and text during a safety exercise at the Raceway at Sonoma.

The collision wasn't fatal, fortunately, but it could have been avoided if the driver didn't have a cell phone in her hand at the time. That was the lesson Tuesday during an exercise on distracted driving.

Jan Gritsch, trauma program manager at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, delivered a somber and sobering message to a group of teen drivers: "We've had a few young people who have been severely injured from distracted driving and these are kids who come in with severe head injuries, who had planned to graduate high school and go on to college, but the most they can muster (after the accident) is to eat and maybe feed themselves, learn how to dress themselves. It takes quite a few years to recover from something that significant. We make choices that we really have to realize who we impact when we make a poor choice such as distracted driving."


Seven teens and one teacher put their skills to the test at the Raceway in Sonoma against a course designed to simulate what it's like to drive on city streets while dealing with everyday distractions. Among the teens were two students from Marin Catholic in Kentfield, four from Mesa Verde in Citrus Heights and one from Sonoma State University.

Thompson and fellow instructor Tim Moses took the drivers through the course with a selection of four Mitsubishis.

"Dealing with the cones, it's a little difficult," said Marin Catholic senior Natalia Wallace, 17. "but it's more realistic, because it's distractions like biking, people walking on the street. It's definitely realistic."

The volunteers went through drills that included lane changes and driving while texting. Drivers were graded on how long it took them to complete the course and how many cones they hit during the course.

"If you think about what those cones represent, they're basically a crash. They're hitting a curb, they're hitting a car, something that is not part of the roadway," Moses said.

Marin Catholic senior C.J. Lyons, 17, excelled at making last-second lane changes at highway speeds, but even he had a little trouble driving and texting. He completed the course in 49 seconds without distractions, but while trying to text and open the sunroof, he took 1 minute, 1 second, and knocked over a cone.

"The proof is right here that your ability to control the car, placing it where you need it to go at any kind of consistent speed is very difficult to do when you're being distracted," Thompson said.

Wallace completed the course in 1 minute, 1.30 seconds while dealing with distractions. She completed the course in 54.10 seconds without any distractions.

Wallace offered this tip for other drivers: "I usually hand my phone over to someone else in the car to text for me when it's something important."

Lyons pointed out one of the biggest dangers facing drivers, including himself, can be drowsy driving during an early-morning commute.

Teenagers shouldn't be singled out as the only drivers likely to be distracted. How often have you seen an adult talking on a cell phone while behind the wheel, maybe while driving the kids home from school? The one adult, a part-time PE teacher in Sacramento, who joined the exercise had as much trouble as any of the younger drivers.

The event was designed to increase awareness about the dangers of distracted driving that may cause fatal or injury accidents,
especially among young people.

According to the website of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 3,092 people were killed and an estimated 416,000 injured in auto accidents involving distracted drivers in 2010, and distracted driving was a factor in 11 percent of all fatal accidents involving people 20 years old and younger.

"If you make a choice to text and drive or maybe do some kind of distracted driving, it affects you, it affects your family, but it's like a drop in a pond — it has a ripple effect," Gritsch said. "That ripple effect affects you, your family, your friends your aunts, your uncles, all the people who care for you in the hospital, all the people who care for you out in the field. So if you make a choice like that, I hope you'll think about all the people you'll affect."

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Withdraw the Civic Center Priority Development Area
Ciel Niesen-Love June 15, 2013 at 07:41 pm
I, for one, am glad they're finally doing this. I have watched for years as Marin has ignored theRead More population growth that has affected us all. Not wanting to put in a commuter train, until the traffic lining the freeway is backed up into another county in the morning, is just one example of this. Then we have the fact that most of the children that my husband and I went to school with in Terra Linda have had to move to other counties because we can't find affordable housing in this one. To top it all off, it seems that the ones who have blocked us from making the smaller additions throughout the county have been people directly involved in the real estate industry, or just local home owners so worried about the value of their homes going down, that they fail to see the larger picture. So here we are, about to make a stride in alleviating the problem, and instead of rallying to make our communities better, we're trying to make it more difficult for the people who live and grew up here to still remain close to their families, not to mention the disabled adults and large elderly population in this county that are in need of this, as well. Some of the teacher's who work in this district have to commute in that traffic every morning, because they can't afford to live in this county, either. It's a sad commentary on where our priorities are when we can't support each other as a community.
John Parulis June 17, 2013 at 11:44 am
Ciel......we're talking big box freeway developments that will add tremendous traffic, schooling andRead More tax burdens to our community. Your ideas about population growth in Marin are off.
Ciel Niesen-Love June 17, 2013 at 02:49 pm
I know the population in Marin is 1% per year, but why do you think that is? People are livingRead More longer and our children are the healthiest in the country. I'll tell you why. It's because the children grow up and move out of the county, because it's not affordable. Here is an example of my latest thoughts on the matter: As the member of a Native American tribe, I have to say that I really resent being told where I should be able to live by an immigrant such as Richard Hall. I believe that roots are important and even if the growth rate has been 1%, it's only because most of the people who have grown up here can not afford to live here and move away. The elderly who make up a large percent of the population here are living longer due to medical advances and who do you suppose will take care of them? People such as myself and for not nearly enough money to live here. So what do you propose? You think that I should move to the East Bay or the North Bay and commute? Well, due to the lack of transportation support, that sound so lovely, let me tell you. Also, the children in Marin are the healthiest in the country according to a recent article I've read. Lower children death rates and such, so who is supposed to teach them and provide care for them and for not enough money to live here? Well, many teachers and care providers that I know that have to commute or live multiple roommates. You have successfully produced a community that only grows 1% per year. Congratulations. Through your grassroots efforts of blocking housing and transportation for years and claiming they don't live up to your standards, meanwhile not providing any pushes for what you might actually feel is smarter you have shut out your county's own children and hard working patriots. So, we can work for minimum wage taking care of your elderly, your children, your precious houses and cars, but God forbid, our children go to school with yours, or that you might actually have to bump into us at the supermarket and say "hi". This is the attitude which had prevailed here and I and many other people I talk to in my neighborhood and that I've grown up with are sick of it. Also, I'd like to point out that we all work hard, and the opportunity to work has been at the help of all of the people in our communities who have helped rear us. Teachers, nurses, doctors, firemen, policeman, babysitters, and many more. Just because some jobs like teaching or care giving don't provide with as much money, doesn't make them less important. In fact, my grandma used to tell me it "God's work". It takes a village to raise your children and it took a village to raise you all.