Regina Leader-Post

The top five reasons people fail a driving test

Safety and confidence best assets

- LORRAINE SOMMERFELD Twitter: @TweeetLorr­aine contact@lorraineon­line.ca www.lorraineon­line.ca

Giving your kid tips on passing a driving test? Why not start with the top reasons they might fail?

Parallel parking: Eavesdrop on a roomful of 18-yearolds discussing their final road test, and you’ll hear a lot of talk about parallel parking. This was the bugaboo when I was getting my test; surely it’s a myth?

“No, you mess up the parallel parking badly enough, you’ll flunk your test,” says Tim Danter, who owns the DriveWise school in Oakville, Ont. and has prepared thousands of teenagers for their roadway rite of passage.

“It’s about positionin­g, but it’s also about jumping the curb or not having control of the vehicle as you back up.”

Dangerous action: “If the examiner has to take physical or verbal control of the car, that’s a fail,” Danter says. If you’ve pulled out in front of a car or made a dangerous lane change, you’ll be rebooking another test. Surefire way to know if you’ve screwed up? “If you get honked at; getting honked at is not a good sign.”

Lack of confidence: Danter says many learning drivers think by driving under the speed limit or hesitating too long at intersecti­ons, they’ll be exhibiting a caution that will be rewarded. They’re wrong.

“They’re not showing true mastery of the skills. They’ll lose points, and operating the vehicle that way doesn’t reflect real-life applicatio­ns,” he says.

This is all before the problem with impeding the flow of traffic is taken into considerat­ion.

Collision: “The test is over. Doesn’t matter who caused the crash, protocol is that the test is stopped.”

I asked if fault is determined by an examiner, and the impact that might have on future tests.

“If the applicant isn’t at fault, they simply rebook the test. If they are at fault, they will be charged by police under the Highway Traffic Act,” he says, losing demerit points and/or getting a fine before you even get your final licence in the mail. Bummer.

Too many errors: This is the most common reason of all. Break the law, you’ve failed. Yes, that means even a little bit of speeding. If you take a look at the list of ways you can mess up, you will notice a lot of little boxes waiting to be ticked on that long piece of paper on the examiner’s clipboard.

Here in Ontario, for example, a lane change is broken down into eight movements — eight different chances to earn a tick on one exercise. You not only have to complete 10 sections (with 24 subsection­s), you have to do it safely and with confidence. You need to master the skills, not just know them.

I asked Danter about people driving to rural communitie­s to take their final tests, circumvent­ing crowded city streets and things such as cyclists and pedestrian­s.

“People do it; technicall­y, a DriveTest facility is the same anywhere, but it’s absolutely different in smaller communitie­s.”

It’s not a myth. Some driving instructio­n places advertise their high pass rates — achieved by ferrying students (for a fee) to more remote testing areas. If you’ve ever wondered how some people manage to get licensed, part of your answer might be here.

Experience is a good thing behind the wheel, but the actions of seasoned drivers can be the reverse of the beginners: no more nerves, but not enough caution.

It can be nerve-racking for parents as the new drivers in the house are learning. I’ve driven with people who are instinctiv­ely good drivers at a young age; I’ve driven with many who, with experience, drive well. And I’ve driven with people who have no business being behind the wheel, either at all or any longer.

Instead of allowing wannabe drivers to go fishing for easier places to take their test, it should be harder to get licensed, period. We should be retesting far sooner than the 80-year-old cut off in many places, as Danter’s corporate reassessme­nts show.

Car fatalities are falling because of the safer car surroundin­g the driver, not because of a better driver behind the wheel.

Recently, a video of a 92-year-old Wisconsin man hitting nine cars in a parking lot in about a minute went viral. He drove off and No charges were laid.

Too bad it’s only the kids who are so nervous about driving well.

 ?? GETTY CREATIVE IMAGE ?? Young or old, examiners are masters of observatio­n.
GETTY CREATIVE IMAGE Young or old, examiners are masters of observatio­n.

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