Sunderland Echo

AA backs restrictio­ns on Britain’s young drivers

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Limiting what new drivers can do on the road will cut "needless deaths", ministers have been told.

The AA said motorists should be prevented from carrying passengers of a similar age for at least six months after passing their test.

It also called for new drivers to be required to keep a record showing they have driven on all types of roads.

These limitation­s would form part of graduated driving licences, which place restrictio­ns on drivers for a set period after they pass their test.

They are used in several countries including the

US, Canada, Australia and Sweden.

The Department for Transport (DfT) announced in July 2019 it was considerin­g introducin­g the licences in England.

But the assessment was halted in autumn 2020, partly due to the potential impact on young people's employment.

AA president Edmund King said: "One of the major issues that needs to be addressed is the needless deaths of young drivers, their passengers and others caught up in these crashes.

"Each year nearly 5,000 people are killed or seriously injured in crashes involving at least one young driver.

"One in five young drivers crash within a year of passing their test.

"Most people don't realise, until it is too late, that road traffic injuries are the leading cause of death for children and young adults.

"We owe it to the next generation to introduce positive measures that will help give them healthy and prosperous lives."

Sharron Huddleston, whose 18-year-old daughter Caitlin died as a passenger in a car crash in Cumbria in 2017, is one of the cofounders of Forget-menot Families Uniting, the campaign group for people who have lost loved ones in road collisions.

She said:

"My daughter Caitlin would be alive today if action had been taken when the concept of graduated licences was floated years ago."

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