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ALABAMA’S SAFETY BELT AND CHILD RESTRAINT LAWS
Alabama’s safety belt law requires that each occupant, regardless of age,
be restrained. For maximum effectiveness, a seat belt should be drawn
snugly across the hip bones.
Alabama’s child restraint law requires that children through age 15 must
be restrained when riding in motor vehicles in Alabama. The law applies to
occupants of front and back seats of passenger cars, pickup trucks, vans (with
seating capacity of 10 or fewer), minivans and sport utility vehicles. Violators
will have points assessed against their driver record, in addition to incurring
a fine.
The law requires the following size appropriate restraint systems:
Infant-only seat or convertible seat used in the rear-facing position
until an infant is at least 1 year of age or 20 pounds.
Convertible seat in the forward position or forward-facing seat until
a child is at least 5 years of age or 40 pounds.
Booster seat until a child is 6 years of age.
Seat belt until a child is 15 years of age.
WEARING SEAT BELTS IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE WAY TO REDUCE HEALTH
AND SERIOUS INJURIES IN TRAFFIC CRASHES
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C H A P T E R 4
THE DRIVER
Accident records show that over 90 percent of the highway crashes are
caused by driver error, lack of knowledge, inattention, physical or mental
condition, improper attitude or faulty judgment.
Any professional driver will tell you that it takes much more than basic
skills to make a good driver. After learning and mastering the basics, a driver
must continue to study the fine points of good driving and those physical and
mental conditions that affect driving.
YOUR PERSONALITY AFFECTS YOUR DRIVING
If you are worried, distracted, or if your mind is preoccupied, you cannot
count on being sufficiently alert to drive safely. Home troubles, quarrels, mis-
understandings, financial worries, serious illness in the family, personal fears,
or over-confidence make you far more likely to have an accident. They can
make you temporarily accident-prone. Strong emotions can work the same
way. Persons who have just had violent arguments or who are angry or in
grief, need some time for cooling off, or for making an adjustment before they
drive. Taking it out behind the wheel on streets or highways is very poor judg-
ment and can prove an expensive way to expend emotions. Worry and safe
driving do not mix. If worried, ill, nervous, frightened, angry, or depressed,
let someone else drive.
As a well-adjusted person, you are more likely to make a good driver, partly
because you are inclined to recognize that traffic situations require fair shar-
ing of the road.
You act, not merely from your personal point of view, but from the point
of view of all street and highway users. You have developed social responsibil-
ity.
There is something about getting behind the wheel and in control of the
power, speed, and bulk of a car that reveals the type of individual you are. You
can soon see whether you are inclined to be a bully, a thoughtless lawbreaker,
and a self-centered lane-stealer; or whether you are reliable, courteous, and
sportsmanlike. Whether a younger or an older driver, if you are psychologi-
cally and emotionally mature, your driving reflects your readiness to share the
road in the interest of traffic safety. Good driving attitudes and sound actions
reflect mental and emotional maturity.
CONCENTRATION
Concentration is one of the most important elements of safe driving. The
driver’s seat is no place for daydreaming, mental napping, window shopping,
scenic viewing, or distracting conversation. Lack of concentration can dull
a person’s powers of observation and cause an accident that could have been
avoided. Driving an automobile is a full-time job. There have been too many
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crashes, after which crashes, after which the driver who survived said, “I don’t
know what happened.”
CELLULAR PHONE USAGE:
When using your cellular phone while driving, always remember your No. 1
responsibility is driving. If you do use a cell phone, use following precautions:
Always assess traffic conditions before calling. • Be familiar with the telephone key-
pad – use speed dial, if possible. • Place calls when stopped or have a passenger call. •
Ensure phone is within easy reach. • Use speaker phone/hands-free device. • Avoid
intense, emotional or complicated conversations. • Avoid talking on phone in con-
gested traffic or bad weather. • Pull off the road to dial or complete a conversation.
TEXTING WHILE DRIVING
Alabama’s new law prohibits using a wireless device to write, send or read a text
message, instant message or e-mail while operating a motor vehicle.
The fine for violating the law is $25 for a first-time offense, $50 for a second
offense and $75 for a third or subsequent offense. Also, for each offense, a two-
point violation will be placed on the offender’s driving record.
HIGHWAY HYPNOSIS AND FATIGUE
Stop driving when you feel drowsy. Don’t try to fight it. Pull off the highway
at the first rest stop or service area. If you are getting tired, a cup of coffee and a
bit of stretching may be enough to wake you. If you are really sleepy, get off the
highway and take a nap. Drowsiness is one of the greatest dangers in interstate
highway driving. Don’t rely on “stay-awake drugs”. They are likely to make your
driving even more hazardous.
It is advisable to take regular breaks every 100 miles or every two hours. Get
out of the car and walk around stretch your legs and relax.
For long trips, it is a good idea to take a pre-trip nap. On the road, exercise
your eyes. Expressway drivers are subject to “highway hypnosis”- a condition of
drowsiness or unawareness brought on by monotony: the sound of the wind, the
tires on the pavement, and the steady hum of the engine. Shift your eyes from
one area of roadway to another and focus them on various objects near and far,
left and right. Reading highway signs also may keep you alert.
MEDICAL ASPECTS OF DRIVING
Physical condition has an important bearing on one’s driving ability. Alcohol,
drugs, illness, or disability, are factors which may cause or contribute to traffic
crashes.
DRINKING AND DRIVING
RELATIONSHIP OF ALCOHOL TO TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
Driving after drinking is a wide-spread practice. The consumption of
alcohol by drivers is a major contributing factor in traffic crashes. Reliable
research studies show that a blood alcohol concentration of .05 percent
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impairs the driving ability of most individuals to some degree. Greater
impairment results as the blood alcohol concentration increases. At .08 per-
cent all individuals are definitely impaired. Under Alabama law, it is unlawful
to drive with a concentration of .08 percent or more alcohol in the blood,
or while under the influence of alcohol. Special studies show that FATAL
accident involvement of drinking drivers is as high as 50 percent - a fact not
recognized by people who drink and drive. The amount of alcohol in one
bottle of beer is about equal to that in an average “shot of whiskey or a glass
of wine.” The effect on the average driver is the same.
THE EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL
• Alcohol is a depressant, not a stimulant.
• Consuming alcohol causes drowsiness, blurred vision, and slowed
reflexes.
• Consuming alcohol affects judgment and coordination.
• Impairment can occur before legal intoxication is attained.
• Alcohol related crashes have killed more people than all the U. S. soldiers
killed in war.
DRIVING WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE
Each year, approximately 50 percent of all FATAL crashes involve drivers
who have been drinking. Under state law, it is unlawful for any of the follow-
ing persons to operate or be in actual physical control of a vehicle:
• A person who is under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
• A person who is under the influence of a drug to a degree which renders
him incapable of safely operating a motor vehicle.
• A person whose blood contains .08 percent or more concentration of
alcohol.
• A person under the combined influence of alcohol and a drug to a degree
which renders him incapable of safely driving.
• Commercial vehicle operators whose blood alcohol content is .04% or
more.
• Persons under 21 years of age whose blood alcohol content is .02% or
more.
• School bus and daycare drivers whose blood alcohol content is .02% or
more.
Penalty for a first conviction is a fine of $600 to $2,100, up to one year in
jail or by both fine and imprisonment. In addition, the driver license will be
suspended for 90 days. For a second conviction in 10 years the fine ranges from
$1,100 to $5,100, a jail sentence of up to one year, or both fine and imprison-
ment. A mandatory 48 hours jail or 20 days community service and one-year
revocation of driver license is required after a second conviction.
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For a third conviction, the fine ranges from $2,100 to $10,100, and the driv-
er license will be revoked for three years. In addition to the fine, the offender
may be sentenced up to one year with a mandatory minimum sentence of 60
days in jail, which may not be probated or suspended.
A fourth conviction or subsequent conviction is a Class C felony. Fines
range from $4,100 to $10,100, with a five-year revocation of driver license.
Additionally, the offender may be imprisoned for not less than one year and
one day or more than 10 years.
IMPLIED CONSENT LAW
Any person who operates a motor vehicle upon the public highways of this
state shall be deemed to have given his consent to a chemical test or tests of his
blood, breath, or urine to determine blood alcohol content.
A driver under arrest for Driving Under the Influence, who refuses to sub-
mit to chemical breath tests when directed by an officer, shall have his driver
license suspended.
There are several things you should remember about alcohol:
• Alcohol is a depressant, not a stimulant. It slows normal reflexes, interferes
with judgment, reduces alertness, and impairs observation. If some people
feel stimulated after drinking, it is simply that their inhibitions are low-
ered, causing loss of caution and self-control.
• It doesn’t matter whether you are drinking beer, wine, or whiskey - it’s the
amount of alcohol which enters the blood that counts.
• Alcohol can affect you differently at different times. A small amount will
affect you more on an empty stomach than it usually would if you have
food in your stomach.
• While alcohol is absorbed rapidly into the system, it takes its time about
leaving the body and the brain. Black coffee, food, or a cold shower might
wake you, but they will not sober you. Once alcohol is in the blood stream,
it must be broken down by the liver and oxidized; that is, turned into water
and carbon dioxide and eliminated from the body through the kidneys and
lungs. This process takes time.
WHY NOT DRINK AND DRIVE?
• Alcohol retards judgment.
• Alcohol slows down reflexes.
• Alcohol impairs vision.
• Alcohol causes loss in coordination.
• Alcohol destroys inhibitions.
• Alcohol promotes over-confidence.
• Alcohol prevents concentration.
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DRUGS
There are many drugs, which interfere with a person’s ability to drive safely.
These may be contained in prescriptions written by your doctor, or may be
found in some of the remedies which you can buy without prescription. Here
are a few things you should remember.
• When taking prescription medicine, it is important to ask your doctor
about any possible side effects that relate to driving.
• Drugs, including some allergy remedies and cold pills that you can buy
without prescription, may contain codeine, alcohol, antihistamines, or
bromides. Each of these ingredients can affect your driving.
• Antihistamines are drugs used for relief of nasal congestion due to colds,
to combat allergies, and for other purposes. They may cause side effects
such as inattention, confusion, and drowsiness. Some are used as an aid to
sleep.
• Barbiturates are sedatives used primarily for sleep. They include
Phenobarbital, Sleep-Eze, and other preparations: Excessive use of these
can produce symptoms similar to alcoholic intoxication - drowsiness, con-
fusion, and lack of coordination. A user may experience tremor of hands,
lips, and tongue, and have difficulty in thinking or talking clearly. A person
so affected is unfit to drive.
• The most dangerous types of drugs can be obtained only illegally. LSD
and heroin are examples. They have the power to make users completely
unaware of or indifferent to their surroundings. Anyone under the influ-
ence of such drugs must not try to operate a motor vehicle.
• Marijuana: Studies show that users of marijuana have more arrests for traf-
fic violations than other drivers. Many ignore traffic citations and continue
to drive despite suspension or revocation of their driver licenses. Because
little is actually known about the drug, many people feel that it is harmless,
but experts agree that, for safety’s sake, it should not be used when driv-
ing.
• The drug-alcohol mix: Many times worse than alcohol or drugs used
alone is the use of alcohol and drugs together. The use of these two drugs
together produces serious effects on the mind and body and often death.
According to some beliefs, if, for example, a “pop” pill gets you high, a
drink with it will get you twice as high. WRONG! It doesn’t just double
the effect; it multiplies and, when overdone, has caused death. If you are
using drugs for medicinal purposes, don’t use alcohol at the same time.
CHRONIC ILLNESS OR IMPAIRMENT
In cases of chronic illness or physical impairment, the physician has the
responsibility to inform his patient of any driving limitation that may be
appropriate.
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HOW TO AVOID REAR END COLLISIONS
Most rear-end collisions are caused by following too closely. The space easi-
est to control is the space ahead of your vehicle. This space cushion is called
“following distance.” You must consider the speed of the traffic, the condition
of the highway and allow yourself enough following distance to stop if neces-
sary.
For years, the rule-of-thumb formula for following distance was one car
length for every ten miles per hour. Recently, a new formula was introduced
which is even more positive and easier to apply, the “two-second rule.”
The following chart illustrates why the two-second rule is more readily
adaptable for today's drivers and allows for a safer following distance.
To use the two-second rule, choose a fixed object on the road ahead (such
as a sign post, tree, overpass, bridge abutment, etc.). When the vehicle ahead
passes that object, begin to count “One thousand one, one thousand two.” If
you reach the same object before you finish saying “one thousand two,” you are
following too closely and should gradually slow down until you’ve reached the
safe following distance.
The two-second rule applies to good and bad weather conditions. If the
road and weather conditions are not good, increase your following distance to
a four or five second count. The increased following limit also applies if you are
driving vehicles with longer lengths than cars.
You must also watch for brake lights on the vehicle ahead and be alert for
diminishing distances between your car and the one ahead. If you see brake
lights or notice the following distance getting less, shift your foot to the brake
pedal promptly so you are ready to stop if necessary.
STOPPING DISTANCE
The distance required to stop your car is important in determining a safe
driving speed. The chart below may be used as a guide, but actual stopping
distances depend upon many factors.
• Mental and physical reaction time of the driver.
• Type and condition of the pavement. There is a great difference between
rough, dry concrete and slippery brick or smooth asphalt.
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• The type and condition of tires - radial, bias ply, regular tread, snow tires,
the amount of tread - all determine the traction you will have for stop-
ping. The proper size tire for your vehicle is important; large, wide tires
may help stop quicker on smooth, dry surfaces, but will skid or hydro-
plane easier on slippery or wet surfaces. Conversely, small narrow tires
may “cut through” standing water but lose stopping power overall because
of less rubber on the road and poorer traction. Consult your owner’s
manual or with a car dealer for proper tire size for the vehicle you drive.
• Chassis design, weight distribution, suspension, and shock absorbers.
• Type of brakes, condition of brakes, and brake balance. In an emergency
situation you can be in serious trouble if one or more of the brakes lock
the wheels before the others fully take hold.
• Wind direction and velocity. Drivers may not realize the difference a
strong tail wind can make when trying to stop suddenly at high speed.
WHAT TO DO IF YOU HAVE A CRASH
If you are involved in a traffic crash, you must stop at once and aid any
injured persons. Call for medical assistance if necessary. Before the police
arrive, use whatever means available to warn other traffic (flags, flares, etc).
It is dangerous to move injured persons. You should avoid moving the
injured unless it is absolutely necessary to remove them from areas threatened
by fire or other dangers common to a crash scene. Keep the injured lying or
sitting down until competent medical aid arrives.
Apply first aid to the injured, making the persons as comfortable as pos-
sible. Treat for shock. Remember that a layman can give “too much first aid.”
It is wise for every motorist to become familiar with first aid treatment by
enrolling in Red Cross sponsored courses or other training courses offered by
groups and organizations. You may not only save another person’s life with
your knowledge, but it will also make you a more safety-conscious individual.
Remember - you must STOP whenever you are involved in a crash. Give
your name, address, and registration number and show your driver license to
other persons involved. This applies to any type of accident.
STOPPING DISTANCE: From eye to brain to foot to wheel to road
25
MPH
27ft 34.7ft 61.7ft
35 38ft 68ft 106ft
45 49ft 112.5ft 161.5ft
55 60ft 168ft 228ft
65 71ft 234.7ft 305.7ft
THINKING
DISTANCE
BRAKING
DISTANCE
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REPORT ALL TRAFFIC MISHAPS
Any injury of fatal crash must, by the quickest means of communication,
be reported to the local police if it occurs within a municipality or to the
State Troopers if it happens on a state highway.
In case of injury, a fatality, or if damage to any vehicle or property in the
crash amount to $500 or more, a written (Form SR-31) must be sent within
30 days, by the driver involved if the “at fault’’ party was not insured at time
of mishap. (If both parties were insured at time of accident then neither
has to submit the SR-31 form). All correspondence should be mailed to:
Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, Safety Responsibility Unit, P.O. Box
1471, Montgomery, AL 36102-1471. SR-31 forms may also be submitted
online at www.AlabamaDL.alea.gov.
WHEN INVOLVED IN A CRASH
Secure the names and addresses of persons involved and any witnesses.
Note other important relative factors. At the scene of the accident, driv-
ers involved should, if requested by any person who is also involved in the
accident, give the name and address of the insurance company providing the
automobile liability insurance coverage and the name of the local insurance
agent. If unable to furnish such information at the scene of the accident, the
driver should do so later.
If your vehicle hits an unattended vehicle, either notify the police, make an
attempt to locate the owner of the parked vehicle, or leave a written notice in
a conspicuous place on the unattended vehicle, giving your name and address.
If a mishap damages any other type of property, notify the property owner.
CRASH REPORTS HELP THE ALABAMA LAW ENFORCEMENT
AGENCY AND HIGHWAY TRAFFIC OFFICIALS EVALUATE TRAFFIC
CRASHES SO THEY CAN IMPROVE HIGHWAY AND TRAFFIC
CONDITIONS.
IF YOU WITNESS A TRAFFIC MISHAP OR CRASH
When reporting a crash and requesting aid, be sure to give the exact
location, if the road is blocked and the probable damage as well as injuries.
Accuracy helps police respond quickly to the scene. In the best interest of
traffic safety and enforcement, all crashes should be reported to the law
enforcement agency that has jurisdiction.
RAILROAD CROSSINGS –ADVANCED WARNINGS
Railroad crossings are marked with one or more
of the following devices:
• The round railroad warning sign: It is yellow
with a black X and the letters RR. It means a
highway railroad crossing is ahead and is placed
750 feet before the track.
• Pavement markings: In front of a railroad
crossing, the pavement may be marked with a
large X and two RR’s. A yellow line in advance
of the crossing means no passing. White lines
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on each side of the track show motorists where to stop when a train is
approaching.
• Flashing light signal: When lights begin to flash,
you must always stop until it is safe to proceed.
• Gates: When gates are being lowered the red
flashing lights will warn you to stop. Remain
stopped until the gates are raised and lights are no
longer flashing. If a railroad crossing has no warn-
ing device, slow down, look and listen for trains
before proceeding.
• Railroad Crossbuck: These signs are found at
most crossings. The driver should slow down and
be prepared to stop upon sighting a train. If there
is more than one track, a sign below the crossbuck
indicates the number of tracks.
STOPPING FOR RAILROAD CROSSINGS
The vehicles listed below are required to stop before crossing any railroad
crossing:
• School bus, church bus, or any passenger bus.
• Trucks transporting flammables, explosives or other hazardous material.
When approaching a railroad crossing. You must stop within 15 to 50 ft.
The driver needs to slow down to allow himself enough time to be certain that
he/she can stop when a train can first be seen. Railroad crossings protected by
electric or mechanical signal devices require the operator to bring his/her vehi-
cle to a complete stop. If there is more than one track, make certain all tracks