Just about every week, AARP offers classes for older drivers to keep them safe on the roads. Few are taking them.
Minnesota has more than 1.5 million drivers age 55 and older — accounting for more than 20% of all licensed drivers in the state in 2020 — yet only a quarter of them have taken a class, which comes with a state-mandated 10% reduction in car insurance rates annually.
"Some don't drive, but others don't want to bother," said Alan Ainsworth, deputy state coordinator for Minnesota AARP Driver Safety and a volunteer instructor. "We talked to a few hundred people at the State Fair and most didn't know about it."
Ainsworth said he is hoping to raise awareness of AARP's Smart Driver courses and similar education offered by the Minnesota Safety Council and AAA during National Older Driver Safety Awareness Week, which starts Monday and runs through Friday.
From 2011 to 2019 in Minnesota, crashes involving drivers age 60 and older rose from 13% of all crashes to 16%, injuries resulting from motor vehicle wrecks jumped from 8% to 20% and deaths increased from 21% to 30%, according to data from the Minnesota Department of Public Safety.
The numbers led the Minnesota Department of Transportation to add an "Older Drivers" category to its 2020-2024 Strategic Highway Safety Plan, which provides direction for future safety strategies in the areas of enforcement, education, engineering and emergency medical services and trauma systems.
Classes for first-time participants run eight hours, often split over two days, Ainsworth said. Refresher courses required every three years to keep the insurance discount run only four hours. To make it easier to participate, AARP and AAA also offer online courses.
Courses cover everything from defensive driving to current rules of the road to risks associated with driving in bad weather. Of course, some topics raise questions and lots of discussion, such as how to navigate roundabouts, Ainsworth said. The newer J-Turns — intersections where drivers are forced to make a right turn, go down several hundred feet to an opening in the median and make a U-turn before returning to the original intersection to complete their movement — spark discussion, too.