USA TODAY US Edition

Monitoring devices help teens drive safer

Parents use Gps-based devices to put the brakes on risky driving behaviors such as speeding, fast braking and running red lights

- Larry Copeland @Bylarrycop­eland USA TODAY

Those with monitors take fewer risks, study finds.

When Rich Pilat’s daughter, Jennifer, was 16 and just starting to drive on her own, he wanted to install a device in her car that would monitor her driving activity and allow him to track where she went — along with whether she had done any sudden braking or had been speeding.

It was a tough sell, says Pilat, 47, an independen­t insurance agent in the Cleveland area. “At first, she was absolutely against the idea,” he says.

Then he told her that the insurance-company-provided device — designed to track the mileage of lowmileage customers, who pay lower rates — would mean a sharp reduction in her share of the monthly premiums.

“I told her, ‘Imagine cutting your share in half. I’ll give you the whole discount,’ ” Pilat says. “That was enough motivation for her to say OK.”

He says he thinks the device helped make Jennifer a safer, more responsibl­e driver; she has had no wrecks or citations since the device was installed two years ago.

wide variety of GPS-based vehicle monitoring options is available to parents of teen drivers. They range from smartphone apps that alert parents when their children are driving faster than a preset speed to devices such as the one used by Pilat. They either plug into the vehicle’s onboard diagnostic computer or are hardwired in the automobile by a profession­al.

A 2009 Insurance Institute for Highway Safety study of 84 16- and 17year-old drivers in the Washington, D.C., area found that teens in vehicles equipped with these types of monitoring devices drove differentl­y, taking fewer risks behind the wheel than unsupervis­ed teens.

Many insurance carriers, including Travelers that Pilat uses, offer discounts for consumers with permanentl­y installed devices.

“It’s a terrific method to help parents have good and effective coaching with their teenagers around safe driving,” says Greg Toczydlows­ki, president of Travelers Personal Insurance.

Travelers’ mileage-based discount program, called IntelliDri­ve, uses a palm-size device that fits into a diagnostic port, usually under the steering wheel in vehicles made since 1996. The program, which features a secure website where parents can view driving data and history, is currently available in Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Ohio, Oregon and Virginia, Toczydlows­ki says.

AT&T is developing Driving Safety, a plug-in device that monitors driving behavior such as speeding, braking and red-light running and remotely provides real-time informatio­n to parents on a vehicle’s diagnostic­s — such as tire pressure or when the engine light comes on — and allows them to restrict a driver’s cellphone use.

“AT&T is working across environmen­ts and devices to create holistic, cloud-based services that deliver the next generation of connected features,” says Mazin Gilbert, associate vice president for technical research at AT&T Labs.

Woodrow Hartzog, a privacy expert and assistant professor of law at Cumberland School of Law at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala., says parents considerin­g using such technology should make their decision “deliberate­ly rather than haphazardl­y.”

“I tend to draw comparison­s between the parental use of monitoring technology for driving with the parental monitoring of their children’s use of social networking,” Hartzog says. “Young adults are notoriousl­y protective of their privacy. I think the best way to approach the situation is to have a conversati­on with them if you want to use the technology. It would set a dangerous precedent to employ this technology without letting the children know.”

Hartzog says he has several concerns when the devices are used in conjunctio­n with an insurer, or when the informatio­n collected is stored.

“Is it going to negatively affect my rates?” Hartzog says. “How else is the informatio­n going to be used? Who else is going to have access to this informatio­n?

“That also applies if you are using an Internet service. Is the informatio­n being stored in the cloud somewhere?”

Pilat says that no privacy concerns arose with Jennifer. He says he was initially drawn to IntelliDri­ve because of the savings — about 25% annually. “I was interested in the discount,” he says. “I told her, ‘I don’t intend to be watching you. I’m not a helicopter parent. If I didn’t trust you, you wouldn’t have my car.’ ”

He says that the device did spark some precaution­ary conversati­ons with Jennifer after he and his wife, Diane, noted instances where Jennifer’s maximum speed was getting a little faster on a few trips. “It brought us together to have the conversati­on about it, so I could say, ‘I notice your top speed is creeping up a little bit. You should probably watch your step a little bit.’ ”

Pilat says he thinks the device helped Jennifer mature as a driver, especially when she had other teens in the car. “She would always tell us if her plans were changing because she knew we would be able to tell if the car strayed from where she was supposed to be,” he says.

 ?? TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY ??
TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY
 ?? PHOTOS BY TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY ?? Jennifer Pilat, 18, agreed to dad Rich’s proposal two years ago to use an insurance-company-provided device as a way to cut her share of the monthly premiums. It also gave Rich Pilat peace of mind.
PHOTOS BY TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY Jennifer Pilat, 18, agreed to dad Rich’s proposal two years ago to use an insurance-company-provided device as a way to cut her share of the monthly premiums. It also gave Rich Pilat peace of mind.
 ?? TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY ?? Jennifer Pilat points to her car’s IntelliDri­ve system. Dad Rich Pilat says it helped her become a safer driver.
TIM HARRISON FOR USA TODAY Jennifer Pilat points to her car’s IntelliDri­ve system. Dad Rich Pilat says it helped her become a safer driver.

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