AAA survey reveals risky driving behavior from boomers

AAA survey reveals risky driving behavior from boomers

AAA survey reveals risky driving behavior from boomers

Teen Drivers Not So Bad

Survey finds boomers are riskier than rookies

Getty Images More than 75 percent of those ages 40 to 59 admitted to speeding, running red lights and texting while driving. Conventional wisdom holds that teenagers are the worst drivers on the road. But a new study shows that boomers actually beat them out when it comes to bad driving. In a poll of 2,511 licensed drivers from the AAA Traffic Safety Foundation — weighted to roughly reflect current demographics — 88.4 percent of younger millennials (ages 19 to 24) admitted to speeding, running red lights and texting while driving. And 12.5 percent of that age group thought that was OK. Among those 25 to 39, 79.2 percent said they had engaged in those dangerous behaviors. Some 75.2 percent of those ages 40 to 59 and 67.3 percent of those 60 to 74 copped to the same misbehavior. And for the oldest group, those 75 and older, it was 69.1 percent. That last statistic is roughly comparable to rookie drivers of age 16 to 18, whose percentage was 69.3 percent. “Before you start finger-pointing, look in the mirror,” AAA spokesman John B. Townsend II told the Washington Post. David Yang, the foundation’s executive director, focused on the devil-may-care attitude of those millennials who see nothing wrong with driving recklessly. “It’s critical that these drivers understand the potentially deadly consequences of engaging in these types of behaviors and that they change their behavior and attitudes in order to reverse the growing number of fatalities on U.S. roads,” he said.

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