LOUISIANA HAS HIGHEST INSURANCE AND WORST DRIVERS!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
LOUISIANA HAS HIGHEST INSURANCE AND
WORST DRIVERS!
The results are in for 2015, and it comes as no surprise that
Louisiana continues to lead the nation in having the highest automobile
insurance rates. A new study, just
released by the Bankrate Group “ranked all 50 States according to a number of
factors that determined where it’s the worst state to drive a car.” The analysis
concluded that Louisiana is the worst state for drivers due “in large part because
of the nation’s highest car insurance costs and above average fatal crash
rate.”
The results are even more startling when compared to surrounding
southern states. Louisiana comes in at
an average insurance rate of $1,279.42.
Mississippi’s average rate is significantly lower at $898.48, with
Arkansas weighing in at $820.00. Highly
industrialized Texas is still $260.00 lower at $1013.83. As Vehicles Insurance Magazine observed:
“There are a lot of reasons Louisiana is a great place to live, but cheap car
insurance isn’t one of them.”
There are a number of factors regularly cited for Louisiana’s high
auto insurance costs. Poor roads, car
thefts, repair expenses, litigation, a dysfunctional regulatory system, no
consumer affairs office to speak up for policyholders; but a major factor is
the drivers themselves. How can we put
this diplomatically? Many Louisianans
are right down lousy drivers.
Drunk driving continues to be rampant all over Louisiana. I made a special effort to read area
newspapers for reports of DWI arrests in the past two months, and the news was
startling. Third offense drunk driving
arrests were often the norm. In Metairie just two weeks ago, a hit and run
driver was booked for his 7th DWI.
An Abita Springs man was booked recently for his 8th DWI
after a hit and run. In Baton Rouge just
this week, as local driver was busted for a 7th DWI. And 6 hours after being released from jail, a
Duson man got back in his car while drunk again and killed the driver of
another car.
Here’s
the question. Why were drivers with so
many DWIs allowed to be on the road in the first place? Actually, Louisiana has
some of the toughest DWI laws in the country. For a third offense DWI,
there is no discretion for judges. An offender with three convictions
faces a mandatory sentence of two years in jail. And get this – the party
convicted is supposed to have their car seized and sold out from under
them. But the strong drunk driving laws on the books are often not being
implemented.
The problem is one of enforcement. Many
judges and prosecutors ignore the law. Often the DWI charge is reduced to
careless and reckless driving. And compounding this problem is that
computer information systems in one parish are unable to communicate with
systems in another parish, so a prosecutor is not aware of previous
convictions.
Besides
drunk drivers, highway fatalities are directly related to speed. If you want to see how it feels to drive at
the Daytona 500, just head on down I-10 to New Orleans from Baton Rouge in the
morning or late afternoons. As a test,
in my trips along that route, I often set my cruse control on 74 miles’ an
hour. The speed limit is 70. Then I
count the number of cars that wiz past me, often traveling in excess of 80
mph. I generally quite counting after
100 cars pass me within the first 30 miles of my trip. The same can be said for drivers on I-12, and
I-49.
There
have been a number of recent complaints about speed traps along I-49 in the
towns of Woodworth and Washington. The
speed limit is 75 miles an hour, but numerous grumblings, including some by
legislators, charge that these towns are writing speeding tickets as a way of
financing the town’s budget. So I called
my old friend David Butler, the Mayor of Woodworth. He gave me some good advice.
“Jim,
here’s the secret to avoiding any so called speed trap,” the Mayor confided.
“Are you ready? The speed limit is 75 miles an hour. Don’t go any faster.” Can’t argue with that.
Speeding
and drunk driving are key factors in why Louisiana has such high insurance
rates. It comes down to driver
responsibility and enforcing the laws on the books. The honor of having the nation’s worst
drivers is an award the state can do without.
********
“Do you know what happens when you give a procrastinator a good
idea? Nothing.”
Donald Gardner
Peace
and Justice
Jim
Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column
appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites
worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates
at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also hear Jim’s
nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am,
central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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