Driver Safety
Learning objectives
- Identify unsafe driving decisions that often cause vehicle accidents
- List driving practices and current vehicle technologies that will help to prevent vehicle accidents
- Identify ways to appropriately respond when driving in unexpected circumstances
Course overview
Great training and caution are essential to lowering the risk related to your mobile workforce.
The primary intended audience for this lesson is workers who drive passenger vehicles such as cars, pickup trucks, and vans for business purposes. While this course
may be helpful for CDL holders, we do have a lesson specifically for CMV
drivers: Safe Driving Behavior for Commercial Motor Vehicles (CMVs).
Driving in Inclement Weather
- Anticipate slippery or other dangerous road conditions and adjust your driving to suit conditions.
- When you identify hazardous road conditions, slow down. Reducing your speed will allow you to identify and react to hazardous conditions sooner.
- Use extra caution when driving at night and in fog, heavy rain, or snow.
- Use headlights after sunset or when visibility is 1000 feet or less (1000 feet = 330 yards or about 3 football fields).
- Drivers are encouraged to use headlights all the time-even in daylight hours.
Safe Driving Practices
- Adjust your speed to driving conditions.
- Be aware of slower moving vehicles, especially trucks on hills.
- Remember, if you cannot see a truck’s mirrors, the truck driver cannot see you.
- Be alert for motorcycles.
- Be aware of pedestrians and cyclists—they have the right of way.
Establish a safe following distance. This should range between 2 and 4 seconds depending on weather and other driving conditions. To determine this safe distance, watch the vehicle ahead of you pass a specific mark. Then count “one-thousand-one, one-thousand-two., etc.” If your front bumper passes the same mark before you finish counting, you’re following too closely.
Always leave plenty of space between your vehicle and the other vehicles around you. This space cushion protects you from others. Try to keep that space cushion on all sides of you— ahead, to each side, and behind.
If a vehicle is following you too closely, increase your following distance and increase your space cushion. When you stop near or behind a truck or other large vehicle align your vehicle so the other driver can see you. Remember—if you cannot see their mirrors, they cannot see you.
Defensive Driving
- Always use extra caution when moving your vehicle in reverse.
- Scan ahead at least 10 seconds, 1/4 mile, or to the next intersection or curve.
- Check traffic behind you frequently.
- Reduce your speed when necessary.
- Approach intersections with caution.
- Be alert of other drivers making changes.
- Let other drivers know what you plan to do.
- Avoid sudden changes in speed or direction.
- Apply the brake lightly when trying to stop on a slippery surface. Do not pump ABS brakes.
- Never use cruise control on slippery or icy roads.
- Be patient and adjust to the flow of traffic.
- Check your blind spot before changing lanes.
- Be aware of other vehicles changing lanes.
If your vehicle breaks down, drive your vehicle off the roadway as far as you can, whenever it is possible to do so. Then, signal for help by turning on your vehicle’s emergency flashers, tying a white handkerchief or scarf to the window or antenna, or by raising the vehicle’s hood and if possible, set out flares or portable warning signals.
Wait for help. Don’t walk along the freeway. Don’t accept help from strangers. Ask them to call the authorities. Be cautious if people who are not police officers, firefighters, or traffic control personnel signal for you to stop. If your car is bumped from behind in a secluded or dark area or if you are followed by a car and are not sure of their intentions, drive to the nearest well-lighted and busy public area, police department, or fire station and call for police assistance.
- 30 minutes
- English, Spanish
- Instant Safety Video
- Unsafe Driving Decisions
- Safe Driving Practices
- Responses to the Unexpected
- Driving in Fog
- 5 Tips for Driving in Fog
- Driving in Fog PDF
- Driving at Night
- Headlight Laws Vary Little Throughout the Nation/
- Share the Road Tips Drivers Cyclists and Pedestrians
- http://www.dmv.org