Entries Tagged 'Car insurance' ↓

Avoid distraction

The problem can be stated simply. If you take your eyes off the road, you will not see the other vehicle coming toward you. This makes you a danger to other road users. The group most likely to fall into this trap are young drivers. Not only are they the least experienced behind the wheel. They are also the ones with the most peer pressure to reply to the text message or answer the cell phone call immediately. The evidence cannot be more clear. Looking at all the different ways in which teens die through disease and accidents, crashes in motor-vehicles are the leading cause of death. The government estimates that, in 2009, about 5,500 people were killed and more than half-a-million injured because one of the drivers was distracted.

In a perfect world, this would be resolved by a discussion at home. As a parent, you would sit down with your children and explain the risks. The statistics are available on the internet to back up your warnings. Your children would nod their heads wisely and swear by all they hold holy not to continue this dangerous practice. Except this would not work in most families. What teens say to their parents is not how they act when they are outside the home. So now comes the hard choice. Do you sit back and rely on prayer every time they drive off into the wild blue yonder, or do you take positive steps? First, a little law: it’s a criminal offense to operate any transmitter that will block or jam wireless communications. So you would face big fines if you were found jamming mobile phone signals. But it’s probably not an offense if you instal equipment in your vehicle that acts as a passive block to the signal. The reason for the distinction is that if you created a cone of silence around your vehicle by transmitting a signal to jam all the cell towers, you would cut off all the other users in your area. While this might make the roads safer, it would seriously inconvenience everyone else. More importantly, it might interfere with emergency calls for the police and ambulance. So passive shielding is probably legal because it does not interfere with any other vehicle or person on the sidewalk. Taking this simple step means you no longer have trust issues with your teen (until he or she works out how to turn it off or get round the shielding, e.g. by putting an antenna outside the vehicle). Continue reading →

Afford Car Insurance Premiums: 5 Tips

It’s not always easy to pay insurance premiums. There are always more expenses and never enough money. Use these hints to squeeze extra cash from your budget and afford premiums. Even if one tip alone doesn’t generate the savings, several combined will.

#1 Carpool to work and to do shopping

Gasoline costs most households nearly $1500 a year. Monthly, there is a national average of $368 spent on gas. If you reduce your gas use by even a third, you will have saved a big portion of your premiums.

The easiest way to do that is to share the commute to work and/or do your grocery shopping with a friend or neighbor. Two commuters halves the price you pay for a ride to work. Three commuters means you only pay a third. Load up those vehicles to really save on money.

The less you drive, the less you pay in premiums. If by carpooling you reduce your annual mileage significantly, you could really reduce your premium levels.

Find carpool partners online using these nonaffiliated sites:

  • GoLoco (the Facebook of carpooling)
  • Craigslist
  • eRideShare

You can also just post something on the boards at work.

#2 Cut back on luxury expenses

By luxury, we don’t mean beach resort vacations or diamond rings, although you could definitely cut back if you are buying that stuff willynilly! What we are talking about are non-essential purchases.

For instance, rather than going to see a movie on a Friday night, have a night in with family and friends. Play a board game or tell stories. To save money, make it a potluck dinner, rather than paying for it all yourself.

Are you a big coffee drinker? Maybe you don’t need to drink so much. In fact, green tea can be cheaper than coffee and better for your digestion and blood pressure as well. If you usually hit Starbucks at some point in the day, bring your coffee from home in a thermos instead.

You can definitely eat in more, and get more calories from nutrient-dense staple foods, such as brown rice or whole grain bread and pasta.

#3 Part Time Work

Extra income never hurts, and it doesn’t even have to mean taking on a shift at the local fast-food restaurant or anything. Some people make a lot of money by picking things from garage sales or thrift stores and reselling them online for more. You’d be surprised by the quality of things that people get rid of and how much it can go for on eBay! Continue reading →

Television in your car

You might think this is another of these articles rambling on about distractions while driving. Yes, there are manufacturers who build in technology to watch TV or play DVDs. Most people in the back seat might think this a good idea but, from the driver’s point of view, driving gets more exciting when you have to turn around to catch the replays. But, as it happens, this is about something completely different. Do you remember the reality show called Motormouth? This was one of these “play-a-trick-on-your-best-friend” shows in which unsuspecting drivers would be encouraged to sing while navigating local streets. The results would then be viewed by a panel consisting of the show’s producer and friends. A winner was then declared and embarrassed by being shown up as the person least likely to succeed on American Idol (even with Jennifer Lopez as a judge who can’t say no). Well, here comes a real-world version designed to impact driving standards on your local streets.

One of the most unnerving of all moments for a parent is when their teen gets a driving license and then demands the keys to the family car. The statistics all suddenly leap into focus. Tens of thousands of teens are killed and injured on our roads every month. When you hand over the keys, you are praying your teen will not end up a statistic on a local hospital gurney. Yet, there has been a quiet experiment going on in Wisconsin since 2007. It’s called the Teen Safe Driver Program, run by American Family, a local insurer. The company offers parents a discount on the policy for their teen if the company is allowed to instal cameras inside each vehicle.

The way the package works is simple. One camera watches the road. The other captures the expression and body language of the driver. This is a realtime stream. If there’s a dramatic event, brakes are suddenly slammed on or there’s a violent swerve, the package saves the images for the twenty second before the event and notifies the parents. Everyone can then view what happened before, during and immediately after the event. Yes, there’s a remote website where authorized people can access the recordings and see exactly what the driver was doing. Mostly, it’s just the parents who see how badly their teens are driving. But obviously, the insurance company, police and other authority figures also have a interest in a factual record of what happened to decide who was at fault in any accident. Continue reading →