Vijay Dixit still feels the pain from losing his daughter in a crash that involved a distracted driver, and he's been on a mission to make the roads safer ever since.
His latest effort is a 2020 wall calendar that features colorful anti-distracted driving sketches by kids who are many years away from getting a driver's license, yet know the risks motorists face when they drive while using their phones.
The calendar, being released this week, came out of a class called "Drivers in Making," for children ages 6 to 9, that focused on bad things that can happen when drivers are distracted.
Dixit last summer brought in members of Eden Prairie High School's Distraction-Free Driving Club to lead more than 20 kids in an afternoon of games, skits and videos to illustrate how quickly driving can turn dangerous or deadly when motorists use technology. The goal, Dixit said, was to get the youngsters to start adopting safe driving practices long before they get behind the wheel and give them skills and intervention strategies to use when they see other drivers exhibiting unsafe driving habits.
At the end of the day, the high school leaders had the future drivers draw pictures to show what they had learned. It turns out, quite a bit.
"They knew all about distraction, Bluetooth and the hands-free law," Dixit said. "They don't spell well, but they know how to communicate."
He captured the drawings and the young students' messages to create the calendar, which also displays names of victims who have died in crashes attributed to distracted driving. Each month includes statistics on distracted driving from the Minnesota Department of Public Safety.
The calendar comes out as distracted driving continues to be a problem on the roads. Even though the state's hands-free law that prohibits drivers from holding cellphones while behind the wheel went into effect three months ago, many drivers have not complied. In September alone, the State Patrol cited 2,729 drivers, up 18% from August when 2,317 tickets were issued, according to the Department of Public Safety. Data also show that through October, 26 people died in distracted driving-related crashes this year.