Letters would be sent to the parents of teen drivers who receive traffic citations or warnings from Georgia troopers under a new program Gov. Sonny Perdue announced.
The letters would include the date and reason the teenager was stopped, whether a citation was issued and traffic safety facts.
The program is meant to increase the dialogue between parents and their teenage children, Perdue said.
“Parents often never know when their child has received a traffic citation until insurance premiums increase, or when their child’s driver’s license has been suspended,” he said.
The program would require no additional staff to implement, Perdue’s campaign said.
“The goal of the program is to increase parental involvement during the early years of the teenagers’ driving experience,” said Bill Hitchens, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Safety and colonel of the Georgia State Patrol.
Perdue, a Republican, is running for re-election in November against Democratic Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor.
Topics Georgia
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
First Brands Hit by $286 Million Claim for Alleged Tariffs Fraud
AI Savings Misses ‘Should Be Making Executives Uncomfortable,’ Bain Says
Comulate Loses Appeal for Injunction Against Applied Systems
Acrisure to Cut 2,250 Employees, Citing Advances in Technology and AI 

