North Carolina Has Some Of The Worst Drivers In The Country, Says New Study
Did those instructional PowerPoint videos at the DMV teach us nothing? Apparently not, because a new study has found that North Carolina ranks among the top five states with the worst drivers in America.
The study, ranks North Carolina as the fifth worst state for drivers. The data, gathered by Charlotte-based insurance company LendingTree, revealed that an average of 32.44 “driving incidents” occur with every 1,000 drivers in the Tarheel state.
The four other states ranked worse overall than North Carolina include District of Columbia, California, Maine, and Rhode Island.
But which driving incidents are they talking about? The study lists the following as examples that were analyzed:
- Accidents
- DUIs
- Speeding-related incidents
- Citations
Unfortunately what really did North Carolina in was the DUI category. The state is ranked #2 for the amount of DUIs in the last year (3.22 per 1,000 drivers). That’s just straight up scary to think about.
North Carolina continued to score fairly high amongst the other categories as well. It was ranked #5 for number of accidents, #17 for speeding incidents, and #18 for citation rates.
Citation examples include careless driving, improper lane usage, failure to yield, safety violations, failure to signal, hit-and-runs, and using defective equipment.
I gotta say, this is all pretty surprising information to learn. I’ve lived in North Carolina for nearly my entire life, and besides a few crazies on the roads in Raleigh in Charlotte I’ve never witnessed egregiously bad driving behavior.
I also realize that my firsthand accounting is purely anecdotal and the numbers speak for themselves. For now, let’s all try to focus on adopting better driving skills for the new year. Moving forward I personally pledge to always drive the exact speed limit (or 5 mph over, tops), use my turn signals when turning or merging (unless I forget), and never take my eyes off the road (unless it’s to rubberneck at something cool like a deer licking a traffic cone).