Just because a student completes driver’s education does not mean lessons in safe driving end.
Students learned that Saturday afternoon at the Driving Skills for Life program at EastSide Centre.
The program is sponsored by the Tazewell County Sheriff’s Office and the Tazewell County Health Department with assistance from the Illinois State Police.
Deputy sheriff Chuck Linton said this is the first time for the program in East Peoria. Last spring, the sheriff’s department received a grant from the Ford Motor Co. Fund to buy a trailer, three go karts and accessories for the program.
Driving Skills for Life teaches youth driving skills in a classroom setting and with hands-on experience on go karts.
Linton said 60 percent of teen crashes are caused by speed or space management and hazard recognition/vehicle handling issues.
A course set up with cones on the parking lot at EastSide had one long lane that divided into three at the end. Students drove at top speed (about 20 mph) until they approached the lane divisions.
At that time, one of three red lights would signal which lane they needed to take. At the last minute, the student driver would have to let off the gas, make sure the kart leveled, steer to the lane and make a sharp left turn, all in a matter of seconds.
Linton said last minute decisions like this can arise from a number of things on the road, such as an animal running out in front of the car.
“We teach them to release the accelerator, let the car level, then make the decision instead of jerking the wheel,” he said.
Linton held his hand out flat and said the rubber of a tire is no wider than the width of his hand. If a driver jerks the wheel of a car while turning, the weight is not balanced on all four tires, which could cause a spin out or a flip.
“People panic because they don’t train. They don’t teach that in driver’s education,” Linton said.
Eleven East Peoria Community High School students spent their Saturday afternoon learning and practicing this lesson.
Another lesson they learned dealt with eye-hand coordination.
“Your eyes are hard wired to your hands. Where you look, your hands will steer you unconsciously,” Linton said. “We make (students) aware of it.”
“Unfortunately, our parents who are teaching the teens to drive haven’t been taught that,” Linton added.