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Safe Teen Driving Challenge a chance for young drivers to practice good habits and possibly earn cash

The registration window is now open for young drivers in Kentucky to sign up for the second Safe Teen Driving Challenge.

“Like last year’s challenge, teens ages 15 to 19 with a learner’s permit or a driver’s license are eligible to sign up and to participate, and thanks to program sponsors we’ll be awarding $10,000 in cash prizes to the safest teen drivers,” said Governor Andy Beshear during Thursday’s Team Kentucky Update.

Teens can register for the challenge at www.kentuckyhighwaysafety.com now through Thursday, April 16. Participants will then download the DriveWell Go app, which will use smartphone sensor data to track risky driving behaviors such as speeding, hard braking, harsh acceleration, cornering, and phone use. The challenge runs April 17 through July 17, after which the top five drivers will receive cash prizes, with the winner receiving $3,000.

The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet says over the past three years more than 49,000 crashes involving teen drivers have resulted in more than 13,000 injuries and 197 deaths. Beshear says the challenge is an opportunity for teenagers to learn about their driving habits so they can become safer drivers, something he says is especially important to him as the father of two teenagers.

“Our statistics on fatalities for teen drivers is way too high in Kentucky,” Beshear said. “It’s something I now think about every single day. This is one way, if we can get a whole lot of teens signed up, that we can encourage the type of good habits that can help reduce those statistics and make sure everybody’s kids get home for dinner, that everybody’s kids get home safely.”

Visit www.kentuckyhighwaysafety.com for more information and to register for the challenge.

NWS Louisville looking for volunteer storm spotters

With spring being a prime time for thunderstorms in Kentucky, you can assist the National Weather Service in Louisville by completing training to become a SKYWARN Spotter.

According to the NWS, SKYWARN is a volunteer program in which trained severe weather spotters help keep their local communities safe by providing timely and accurate reports of severe weather to the NWS. Since the program was introduced in the 1970s, the information provided by spotters combined with improved satellite and radar technology has enabled the NWS to issue more timely and accurate warnings for tornadoes, severe thunderstorms, and flash floods.

The NWS offers free online training sessions with NWS meteorologists for anybody interested in volunteering their time as a spotter. The training sessions typically last one to two hours and contain information on identifying and reporting severe weather, severe weather safety, severe weather climatology, and thunderstorm types and threats.

A schedule of online webinar events, including those being hosted March 24 and 25, is available on the NWS Louisville website. The NWS Louisville office also has introduced a four-part online training program consisting of four modules and quizzes. Upon completion, volunteers will receive a link to register in the spotter database.

Additional online courses and resource information is available after completion of the SKYWARN program to supplement training. Visit the NWS Louisville website for more information.

One dead after Dixie Highway crash in Muldraugh

The Kentucky State Police is investigating a fatal collision on Dixie Highway Saturday.

According to KSP Post Four, the single-vehicle collision occurred at approximately 9:50 a.m. on March 21 on U.S. 31W within Muldraugh city limits.

The KSP says the preliminary investigation indicates 34-year-old Dennis J. Perry of Louisville was operating a vehicle heading north on U.S. 31W when for unknown reasons the vehicle left the roadway and struck the end of a guardrail. The collision caused the vehicle to overturn, coming to rest on the driver’s side on the outside shoulder of the roadway.

Perry was pronounced dead at the scene by the Meade County Coroner’s Office.  The KSP’s investigation of the collision is ongoing.