This substance impairs thinking, reasoning, and muscle coordination.
What is Alcohol?
This type of roadway user has their own lane on some roads because they are an example of a Vulnerable Roadway User.
What is a Cyclist?
The acronym SIM stands for these three words.
What is Search, Identify, Manage?
In order to avoid a skid, doing this will almost always work.
What is Reducing Your Speed?
This everyday item is often used to assess a cars tire tread depth.
What is a Penny?
This "type of driving" is caused by anything that diverts the drivers attention away from the road.
What is Distracted Driving?
This vehicle is an example of a vulnerable roadway user but also must follow the same traffic laws as cars.
What is a Motorcycle?
This number of seconds behind a car is considered the "point of no return", in which a driver while not be able to react in time to stop a collision.
What is two seconds?
When driving on a freeway, the left lane is for this purpose.
What is Passing?
Many things can cause your insurance rate to increase, including receiving one of these when stopped by a police officer.
What is a DUI? What is a Speeding Ticket?
This substance impairs motor skills, lane tracking, and cognitive functions, as well as delaying your reactions to sights and sounds, judging distances, timing, multi-tasking, and coordination.
What is Cannabis?
This law requires vehicles to switch to a non-adjacent lane to a stopped vehicle, especially police vehicles, when approaching the vehicle on a roadway.
What is the Move Over Law?
An open space requires this many seconds of visibility while driving.
What is fifteen seconds?
When navigating a curve with oncoming traffic present, use this lane position.
What is Lane Position One?
Anyone fifteen years old or older can sign up to be this type of donor at the DMV.
What is an Organ Donor?
This "type of driving" impairs your driving performance as much as alcohol.
What is Drowsy Driving?
Trucks have four large blind spots that are often called this.
What is a No-Zone?
A space is closed if there is a path restriction in that direction within this many seconds of the vehicle.
What is four seconds?
Driving at night is much riskier because the perception of these three things are significantly hindered.
What is Space, Speed, and Distance?
This is the most important behavior needed to avoid or minimize risk when responding to emergencies or malfunctions.
What is Remaining Calm?
This law states that anyone who receives a driver license automatically consents to be tested for blood alcohol content and other drugs if they are stopped for suspicion of drug or alcohol use while driving.
What is the Implied Consent Law?
When a school bus is stopped with it's red lights flashing, you must stop on both sides of the road unless there is one of these dividing the roadway, in which case you only have to stop on the same side of the road as the bus.
What is an Unpaved Median Strip or Barrier?
These three types of vision are used to manage space and judge time while driving.
What is Central, Peripheral, and Fringe?
When passing a vehicle, make sure you can see this in your inside rear view mirror before moving back into your lane.
What are Both of the Passed Vehicles Headlights?
This type of automobile insurance pays for injuries to others for which you are partially or entirely responsible and cover your legal fees whether or not you were at fault.
What is Liability Bodily Insurance?