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Popular Threads
10 o'clock on a summer night!? It can take that long for a house to cool below 90 degrees.
Absolutely! And we are all safer because of it.
There is not a right of another I won't trade away for my added security.
Ben Franklin, be damned! We are all in this together.
Fatalities accidents caused by teen drivers increase dramatically after 10:00pm, and 2/3 of the fatalities in those accidents are people other than the teen driver him/herself. Having teens driving around after 10:00pm is dangerous for them, and anyone else on the road
Is this how the administration judges success? Pick a coincidental statistic and claim it as your own?
All of that said, I think what we really need to do to cut donw on Teen auto accidents is raise the minimium age for non-farm drivers license's
Naturally young people wouldn't like curfews. We don't like laws that impede on our movement or make us feel like kids.
What needs to be done is to enlighten people on the benefits and reasoning to curfews. If this was done, then the law wouldn't be questioned as often. Just as we now understand why there is a law against jumping off railroad tressle bridges into the rivers and creeks below, if properly enlightened, teens will understand curfews too.
Additionally, my son was stopped twice last night at the entrance to town and the exit of town that he needs to drive through to get home from his girlfriends's house.
The cops just stop the cars because they know the odds are in their favor that it may be a teen - they don't need any other reason to pull you over.
The early curfew doesn't allow them to go to a late movie, or a drive in during the week.
What's next a law telling them they have to brush their teeth twice a day at certain times?
As a teen, I hated the curfew laws. As an adult and a parent, I recognize they provide an important layer of protection for teens from drunks and drunk drivers, from their own driving limitations, and for everyone from teens who, through no fault of their own (typically), are not yet mature or experienced enough to always make good decisions.
I know many adults for whom this applies as well - but some laws protect their rights to make bad decisions, while others correspondingly deal more harshly with the bad decisions they make. The system isn't perfect - but neither is it random.
GOOD LAW. ENFORCE IT.
Hahahahahahhahahahahahahahahah!!!!!!!!!
No, it's too much, too broad. I'm sure the actuarial tables are right, but so what? There are other laws and other methods to prevent teen drunk driving. Price of liberty and freedom.
Keep it local control and let the cops exercise some good common sense.
An 11 p..m. curfew gives cops in Chicago or East St. Louis or Cicero or Aurora the power to roust a group of kids hanging on the corner, hopefully before there's trouble. You don't need the same law to harass 17-year-old going home after closing up the Dairy Queen in Tampico.
The answers above are also indicative of the kind of society we live in. One of the above answers "If I allow my son to...." seems to be reasonable in this instance, but where does disagreement with a law make something OK? Does it make sense if the behavior in dispute is underage drinking or smoking? One of the side effects of our freedom in this country seems to be electing to violate laws if it is convenient to us at that moment.
This law falls into the bin of unfunded mandates as far as I am concerned. The legislature does not provide any funding for this and allows local police departments to exercise their 'judgement' which opens the door to harassment of young citizens and unequal treatment based on the whim of the local authorities.
You all can go on living and pretending what happenned this weekend didn't...but it did. Oh yes, it did.
Is there a going to/from school exemption?
Teens driving after 11 PM is not inherently dangerous. Drunk kids driving is. Enforce the DUI laws.
When I was 16, I workded at a gas station and often closed it down at midnight. I don't know much about the law but didn't see any work exception referenced in the article. Kids working at most fast food restaurants can often work after 10 PM.
If this is a sound law, then certainly a state law that closes all bars at 1 AM makes great sense. After all, whether your 16 or 25, no good comes from being out after 1 AM.
The statewide curfew laws are really a catch-all for various things...inattentive parents, kids who are suspected of mischief without any overt evidence, etc. The intent is noble, I guess, but the carrying out of curfew laws often lacks fairness or reasonableness as many point out here.
I remember being on my own at age 17, often needing to travel late at night to be at the next day's work location. Fortunately, I was never hassled over it, but I would've been pretty irritated if I was.
Your son is not driving around on an enclosed track. There are other people out on the roads whose lives are statistically proven to be in more danger when teens are out there with them at night. So, no, this isn’t just between you and your son or daughter. It’s a public safety issue, not a family one. I really don’t see why so many people fail to understand that.
--
“Don’t give them driver’s licenses until their 18 if you are just going to legislate their freedom away.â€
Graduated Drivers Licensing (ie, granted limited driving privileges during a probationary period) makes for better drivers than simply handing people keys at a certain age without restrictions. That keeps not only them safer, but everyone else on the roads, too.
Frankfort •Under 16: 9:30 p.m.; 16 to 18: 11 p.m. Sun.-Thurs., midnight Fri.-Sat.
Manhattan •16 & under: 10 p.m. all week
Mokena •Under 17: 9:30 p.m. Sun.-Thurs., midnight Fri.-Sat.
New Lenox •Under 17: 11 p.m. Sun.-Thurs., midnight Fri.-Sat.
Don't let the kids leave home.
Apparently, it will come as a great shock to most people, but we've had the same law on the books for as long as I can remember, all that changed recently was the time (I think).
People don't know about it. Parents don't know about it. Law enforcement doesn't know about it (I asked a high ranking police officer about 10 years ago, he knew of no such law). To the extent that law enforcement does know about it, they rarely enforce it, and when they do they appear to use pretty good judgement and discretion.
I told my youngster about this 15 years ago (age 16), had had driver's ed within the past year, and she didn't know it, and denied that it was true.
Parents, I have told all my kids that there is nothing per se wrong with staying out late, but that if I made a list of (when I was a teenager) all the bad things that occurred after midnight, and all the good things, the bad list would be much, much longer, and that I suspected they would be able to truthfully tell their kids the same thing. Oh, and btw, your car insurance may well not be valid if your kid has an accident. You are allowing a person without a valid driver's license to operate your car.
[/snark]
If they're walking, they're not driving, so they're not impacted.
Would you support it then?
“Grand Old Partisan: I guarantee that it would be statistically proven that if you extended the curfew to age 30 it would also save lives. Would you support it then?â€
My answer: No, because 16-17 year olds are minors and 30 year olds are adults.
Now, let’s reverse the argument. Earlier you said “parents should decide curfew not the government.†I can only assume that you also disagree with laws forbidding teens from drinking, smoking, and purchasing pornography. Why not just leave it up to parents to handle those things, which – unlike driving – have no potential impact on the safety of others?
Both extremes are ridiculous, and (I’m assuming) not supported by anyone here. We’re tinkering around the middle ground. I think that the establishment of a probationary period of restricted driving, such as we have with GDL, is a sensible compromise that respects the teens need to acquire independence (there is this whole thing called the weekend, 2 days and 20-some hours of potential teen drive time!) with public safety (motor vehicle accidents are the #1 killer of teens in America, and 2/3 of people killed in teen-caused crashed are not the teens themselves).
This is the way it is. Curfews are a cornerstone of a safe society because they work in harmony with law enforcement.
It sounds very childish to complain about this law because it inconvenients you. Being a parent or teen means being responsible and sometimes this creates inconvenience - sorry, that's life. If you think curfews are inconvenient, try dealing with teen funerals. We need less of them.
If your kids driver's license is no good, neither is their insurance.
I hope there is an exemption for teens that are married.
If your kids driver's license is no good, neither is their insurance.
I hope there is an exemption for teens that are married.