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Texting-While-Driving Simulator Will Be On Display At Trinity Catholic HS

Trinity Catholic High School students will get a first-hand look at just how dangerous it is to text and drive with the Arbella Insurance Foundation's distracted driving simulator, Distractology.

AAA says teenagers are three times more likely to get into fatal car crashes than adults, in part due to the increase in distracted driving and cellphone use.

AAA says teenagers are three times more likely to get into fatal car crashes than adults, in part due to the increase in distracted driving and cellphone use.

Photo Credit: Provided/ AAA

The mobile classroom designed to promote safe driving will be at the school from Monday, May 7 through Friday, May 11.

Bearingstar Insurance is proud to bring Distractology, which was developed and funded by the Arbella Insurance Foundation.

Distractology was one of the first programs in the country to address distracted driving with young, inexperienced drivers. Drivers who have completed Distractology are proven to be 19 percent less likely to have an accident and 25 percent less likely to receive traffic violations*.

According to the CDC, 9 people are killed every hour and more than 1,000 are injured as a result of distracted drivers. Teens have the highest crash rate of any group in the United States. According to new research from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, new teen drivers ages 16-17 years old are three times as likely as adults to be involved in a deadly crash. What’s more, 86 percent of teenage drivers have driven while distracted, even though 84 percent know it’s dangerous.

“Using your phone while driving triples your risk of a crash and the distracted driving problem keeps getting worse,” said John Donohue, chairman, president and CEO of the Arbella Insurance Group and chairman of the Arbella Insurance Foundation. “It’s our hope that by working together with new drivers, educators and parents, we can once and for all break the addiction so many drivers have to their mobile phones and create a new generation of safe drivers who believe distracted driving is unacceptable.”

Distractology features a mobile classroom outfitted with two high-tech driving simulators designed to give new drivers the chance to experience the perils of distracted driving. Simulations are based on real-world examples, including texting, posting to social media sites like Facebook and Snapchat, and changing the radio all while navigating residential and highway conditions. Arbella recently debuted a new scenario which prompts students to take a selfie behind the wheel. In 2016, there were more than 70,000 Instagram posts tagged #DrivingSelfie, #SelfieWhileDriving, #HopeIDon’tCrash, and other driving selfie-related hashtags.

To date, more than 15,000 new drivers, meaning those that have been licensed less than three years or have a learner’s permit, have completed the Distractology training, with 96 percent willing to recommend it to their friends.

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