The Nation's Worst Drivers

When faced with a written test, similar to ones given to beginning drivers applying for licenses, one in ten drivers couldn't get a passing score, according to a study commissioned by GMAC Insurance.

The GMAC Insurance National Driver's Test found that nearly 20 million Americans, or about 1 in 10 drivers, would fail a state driver's test if they had to take one today. GMAC Insurance is part of General Motors' finance subsidiary, GMAC.

More than 5,000 licensed drivers between the ages of 16 and 65 were administered a 20-question written test designed to measure basic knowledge about traffic laws and safety. They were also surveyed about their general driving habits.

Drivers in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic states did worst. Twenty percent of test-takers failed there.

The state of Rhode Island leads the nation in driver cluelessness, according to the survey. The average test score there was 77, just eight points above a failing grade.

Those in neighboring Massachusetts were second worst and New Jersey, third worst.

Northwestern states had the most knowledgeable drivers. In those states, just one to three percent failed the test. Oregon and Washington drivers knew the rules of the road best. In Oregon, the average test score was 89.

According to the study, many drivers find basic practices, such as merging and interpreting road signs, difficult.

For instance, one out of five drivers doesn't know that a pedestrian in a crosswalk has the right of way, and one out of three drivers speeds up to make a yellow light, even when pedestrians are present, the study said.

Drivers not only lack basic road knowledge, but exhibit dangerous driving behavior as well.

"As a nation of drivers, we've made little progress in the past 10 years to curb some of the most dangerous driving behaviors, including drinking and driving and speeding," said Susan Ferguson, senior vice president of research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

One out of 10 drivers regularly exceeds the speed limit by 11 or more miles per hour, with drivers aged between 18 and 24 years showing the greatest propensity for speeding, the study said.

Speeding increases both the likelihood of an accident and the severity of the crash, the company added, citing research from IIHS.

Younger drivers are the most likely to fail a written driving test while those between the ages of 50 and 64 are the most likely to pass.

These are the average scores on a 20-question driver's test administered to more than 5,000 licensed drivers in a survey commissioned by the GMAC Insurance.

Nation -- 82.7

  1. Oregon -- 89.4

  1. Washington -- 88.4

  2. Iowa -- 87.7

  1. Idaho -- 87.5

  2. Wyoming -- 87.4

  1. Vermont -- 86.6

  2. Nebraska -- 86.5

  1. Wisconsin -- 86.3

  2. Montana -- 86.2

  1. West Virginia -- 86.2

  2. Minnesota -- 86.1

  1. North Dakota -- 85.6

  2. North Carolina -- 85.2

  1. Indiana -- 85.1

  2. Alabama -- 84.7

  1. Virginia -- 84.7

  2. Nevada -- 84.7

16 Missouri -- 84.7

  1. Ohio -- 84.3

  1. South Dakota -- 84.3

  2. Colorado -- 84.2

  1. Kansas -- 84.0

  2. Michigan -- 83.8

  1. New Hampshire -- 83.7

  2. Tennessee -- 83.4

  1. Maine -- 83.2

  2. Arkansas -- 83.1

  1. South Carolina -- 83.1

  2. Georgia -- 82.9

  1. New Mexico -- 82.9

  2. Oklahoma -- 82.8

  1. Texas -- 82.7

  2. Utah -- 82.6

  1. Arizona -- 82.6

  2. Mississippi -- 82.5

  1. Delaware -- 82.5

  2. Kentucky -- 82.5

  1. Pennsylvania -- 82.1

  2. Louisiana -- 81.7

  1. Illinois -- 81.6

  2. Florida -- 81.1

  1. Connecticut -- 80.9

  2. California -- 80.4

  1. Maryland -- 79.8

  2. Washington, D.C, -- 79.8

  1. New York -- 79.8

  2. New Jersey -- 78.3

  1. Massachusetts -- 77.2

  2. Rhode Island -- 77.0

Anyone agree with the rankings?

Patrick '93 Cobra

Reply to
NoOption5L
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most yankees arent to smart

hurc ast

Reply to
flaming/"c/""

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Reply to
Spike

I went from 43rd to #1! Give me the hard charger trophy :-) Really though, Oregon drivers seem more in a hurry to go nowhere. Two lane freeways, bumper to bumper and people want to get around and in front of me for some reason? Cali did have lots of gory wrecks. Six lanes both ways, millions of people from around the world,(except California)look out!

Reply to
Gill

Without seeing the actual questions there's no way to really judge this. Did they ask meaningful questions like "Should you move to the right when it's clear to do so and let traffic approaching from behind pass?" Or did they ask "Which is the correct answer to How far should your horn be able to be heard, 100 feet, 200 feet, 250 feet, or

1000 feet?", which is really a pointless question as far as how good a driver someone is.

-- Jim '88 LX 5.0 (now in car heaven) '89 LX 5.0 vert '99 GT 35th Anniversery Edition - Silver Mods to date - Relocated trunk release to drivers side, shortened throttle cable, PIAA Driving lights.

Reply to
Ashton Crusher

a fan clutch in an electric fan LMFAO

hurc ast

Reply to
flaming/"c/""

NO WAY!!

How can there possibly be drivers _anywhere_ with less of a clue than in MA? Somebody obviously fudged the numbers.

There's a reason I prefer the _train_ into Boston. :(

-- John C. '03 Cobra Convt.

Reply to
John C.

"NoOption5L" wrote in a message:

We need to remember that this test was given by GMAC Insurance to (more than likely) Chevy owners. I'd also like to know the ages of the people tested. Especially the ones that failed. Personally, I can't see how a written test about laws, can measure ones ability to drive. That's why they have a written test and a driving test to get a license. I think they should ride with a group of people from each state and grade them on their ability to drive. Then I think the rankings would be fair. We need to also realize that some people do bad on written tests, but fair better on an oral test.

If you want to witness some real BAD drivers, go to Miami, FLA!!! Down there, they think the first one to an intersection, and blows their horn, has the right a way! When I lived and worked down there, I seen a ton of accidents where someone ran a red light and t-boned another car. The person causing the accident would always say, "But I blew my horn first!" One time I was sitting in the left turn lane, with my left turn signal on, and a kid rear ended me, cause he was looking over at his passenger and talking to him. At the very last second, he happened to look forward and see me, and slammed on the brakes! Thank GOD the speed limit was only 35!!!

Gary

Reply to
GEB

On 27 May 2005 19:58:52 -0700, snipped-for-privacy@aol.com wrote something wonderfully witty:

Well I don't have any reason to believe that the people conducting the testing or the rankings had any reason to lie, but a written test is really no indicator what so ever in how good of a driver someone is or is not. Just because they may know all the rules of the road doesn't mean they actually follow them.

Now if they took that data and combined it with the number of citations issues, accidents involved in and total dollar of damages and produced a rank order listing I would have a little more faith in the numbers. Otherwise it is just an exercise in how well people do on a certain test. Proves nothing.

For example NJ, my home state, rank last. Virginia the state I currently live in ranked 14th. Based on my own personal experiences of driving in both places the Virginia drivers are the absolute worst especially in the area of tailgating. Now the drivers in NJ do exceed the posted limit the large majority of the time, but I would rather be passed by a speeder then rammed by a woman on a cell phone (which just recently happened in Virginia).

Reply to
ZombyWoof

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Reply to
Spike

Hey! Spikey Likes IT!

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Spike

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Reply to
Spike

Reply to
RichA

I also used to live in VA and agree 100%!!! The vast majority of VA drivers suck! From tailgating, to hordes of left-lane lane bandits, to stopping at the end of on-ramps, to rubber-necking slow downs, to lack of blinker use, to you name it. In fact, while traveling I could tell how close I was getting to the VA border by how bad the drivers were getting... I didn't even need a map.

Yep, VA has the worst drivers I've have ever encountered, bar none.

Patrick '93 Cobra

Reply to
NoOption5L

Keep in mind that most of those drivers, especially in the Northern Virginia area, are from other states or countries. ;)

Reply to
Michael Johnson, PE

He can't find the shift key, doesn't use a parenthesis or a period and used the wrong "to", yet he criticizes others for not being _too_ smart.

LMFAO!

hurc ast = an uneducated fat slob, with body odor, buck teeth, and a bad haircut, who sits behind a computer picking his nose while trolling newsgroups.

Patrick '93 Cobra

Reply to
NoOption5L

Just go out on the road on any given day and you will see that half of these people shouldn't be driving. Don't need a test to prove it.

Reply to
Rod Williams

"Michael Johnson, PE" wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@comcast.com:

I think that everybody pretty much thinks the drivers in their own state are the worst. What this _really_ says is that U.S. drivers in general are horrible.

Reply to
Joe

Exactly. I can count the number of people I know in Northern Virginia that was born and raised here on two hands. I bet 75% of us are transplants that brought the traffic mess with us. It's probably the same in many other areas.

Reply to
Michael Johnson, PE

It's the case here. This used to rural. Then some magazine aid that this was the place to live because of the fresh air, medical, and all the rest of the pluses, including no gangs, no traffic problems, etc. BOOM! People flocked here to get their families out of the mess in the LA basin, and SF Bay Area. In a very short time we went from about

36,000 to about 100,000. And those pe>Joe wrote:

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1965 Ford Mustang fastback 2+2 A Code 289 C4 Trac-Lok Vintage Burgundy w/Black Standard Interior Vintage 40 Wheels 16X8" w/BF Goodrich Comp T/A Radial 225/50ZR16
Reply to
Spike

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