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Before They Hit The Road Presented by Eric S. Poe, Esq., CPA Chief Operating Officer
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Page 1: Before They Hit the Road

Before They Hit The Road

Presented by Eric S. Poe, Esq., CPA

Chief Operating Officer

Page 2: Before They Hit the Road

Teenage Driving

• Part I: Statistics That Tell A Grim Story

• Part II: What You Can Do To Make Sure Your Child is Not a Statistic

• Part III: How to Manage Your Car Insurance Costs When Your Child Gets Their License

Page 3: Before They Hit the Road

Teenage Driving Statistics: Fatal Injuries per 1,000 Drivers by Age

Page 4: Before They Hit the Road

Traffic Tickets per 100 drivers

Page 5: Before They Hit the Road

DWI accident incident rate by age

Page 6: Before They Hit the Road

The Common Tickets for Teens

Page 7: Before They Hit the Road

What Causes Teen Crashes?

Page 8: Before They Hit the Road

Key Teen Driving Statistics

• 16 year-olds have higher crash rates than drivers of any other age.

• 31% of teen drivers killed in 2006 had been drinking, according to NHTSA. 25 percent had a blood alcohol concentration of .08 or higher.

Page 9: Before They Hit the Road

What you should know about your teenager before they hit the road

• Studies have shown that teenagers learn from consequences NOT lectures / warnings

• Studies show that teenagers need to be provided warning of loss of privileges and enforcement of those consequences

• 2005 study by Temple University indicates that the frontal lobe of the brain leads to inability assess risks until 25 years of age

• Catch 22 as a parent: Discourage Drinking? or Acknowledge Drinking and Open Doors to Alternatives to Driving?

Page 10: Before They Hit the Road

Part III: How to Manage Your Car Insurance Costs When Your Child Gets Their License

• Learn how an auto insurance policies determine your rates, because your costs may depend on the company, not just the age of your newly licensed teen.

• Purchase a car for your teenager • At all costs: know what courts consider

insurance fraud and what the consequences of failing to disclose your teenager to your auto insurer.

Page 11: Before They Hit the Road

Basic Changes in NJ Since 2003

• Use of credit scores were permitted –92% of auto insurers nationally use credit scores to determine your rates

• Only two notable insurers decide NOT to use credit scores – CURE / NJ Manufacturers

• Use of Education and Occupation utilized by GEICO to determine eligibility into preferred company with lower rates

• January 1, 2009 introduced new territory rating factors and new criteria for acceptance (Take All Comers phased out)

Page 12: Before They Hit the Road

New ways for auto insurance carriers to rate you

• Credit score• Educational Attainment (Liberty, GEICO,

Skylands, Progressive)• Occupation – white/blue collar GEICO• Home ownership (Allstate)• Prior Insurance in drivers’ name• Lapse in coverage• Years with the prior insurance company

Page 13: Before They Hit the Road

3 Simple Ways to Save Money

• If you are gainfully employed full time with health insurance – choose the Health PIP Option savings can range $25-$50 per car/yr

• Buy a older car for your child to drive • Increase your deductibles for collision

coverage – remember it primarily only covers the physical damage to your car as a result of an accident that is YOUR FAULT

Page 14: Before They Hit the Road

Example of cost savings

• Husband and Wife both 40 years old with a newly licensed 17 year old female daughter living in Princeton, NJ both insuring 2005 Honda Accord LX, with $850 deductibles for COMP/COLL, no tickets/accidents in 3 years, Basic Policy:

CURE Annual Premium BEFORE child “hits the road” $1,717

With 2 cars and 3 drivers (AFTER):Annual Premium with CURE $3,211 annually

With 3 cars and 3 drivers (AFTER) with 2000 Honda with NO physical damages:

Annual Premium with CURE $2,548 annually

Page 15: Before They Hit the Road

Summary

• Price for car insurance is not everything• Open discussions with your child – you should

always be an alternative to drinking and driving • DO NOT COMMITT FRAUD – Reinforced in Palisades

v. Bastien (Supreme Court Case) defines threshold of fraud sufficient to “void ab initio” - which cited Mass Mut. V. Manzo (1991) explaining that a a misrepresentation is material if it “naturally and reasonably influences[s] the judgment of the underwriter in making the contract at all, or in estimating the degree or character of the risk, or in fixing the rate of premiums"