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The AutoGuide News Blog is your source for breaking stories from the auto industry. Delivering news immediately, the AutoGuide Blog is constantly updated with the latest information, photos and video from manufacturers, auto shows, the aftermarket and professional racing.

02/12/2011 | By: Luke Vandezande

The old saying “stay off the sidewalks, my kid just got a license” may be losing its punch but “Grandpa, don’t drive on the curb” might be replacing it.

A new study released yesterday by the University of Michigan found that fewer young people are dashing out to get a driver’s licence than in the early 80′s. The same report found that while young drivers are waning, seniors account for the fastest growing group of licensed drivers.

The numbers essentially boil down to this: as a general rule since 1983 the proportion of people under 30 who have licenses has steadily decreased. At the same time, that proportion seems to shrink with age. Essentially, the older you get, the more likely you are from a statistical point of view to get a driver’s license.

That idea extends farther than you might guess, as the report also showed that people are driving later in their lives than ever before. The number of drivers retaining their license between the age of 65 and 69 increased 15 percent between 1983 and 2008. Adding to that data, drivers over 70 composed the largest proportional group at more than 10 percent.

So why the change? Modern medicine advancements surely have something to do with people being able to drive longer. As a population we are living longer and in better health than our grandparents, so it stands to reason more people would continue daily activities into their sunset years.

Statistics show that by 2030 there will be an estimated 57 million elderly drivers, compared to the 30 million there are today.

The real humdinger is why young people don’t seem to be crowding the early morning lines at the DMV. Automakers are concerned that electronic interaction is replacing personal contact among young people, making them less likely to feel the need to drive.

It’s also harder than ever for a young American to lay hands on a license. It used to be that a permit was available as a 16-year-old or even earlier and that after a number of hours driving with a parent, that kid could take a simple road test and be fully licensed. Those days are gone.

Now more states are adopting graduated licensing systems forcing new drivers through hoops meant to reduce the number of unsafe drivers on the road.

“Studies have shown for teen drivers the crash risk increases exponentially for each additional passenger, but parents seem unaware of the dangers associated with passengers and nighttime driving,” said Michael L. Prince, Michigan’s Office of Highway Safety Planning director in an interview with the Detroit News.

[Source: Detroit News]

22/11/2011 | By: Luke Vandezande

The California Department of Motor Vehicles slapped Chrysler this month to the tune of $955,000 in fines.

“We hope other manufacturers will see what happened in this case and think twice about doing something similar,” said Brian Moss, director of government affairs for the California New Car Dealers Association, in an interview with Automotive News.

The DMV enforced penalties against Chrysler after they opened Motor Village, a downtown Los Angeles showroom. Local dealers complained, saying it was unfair for a manufacturer-owned store to be located less than 10 miles from new car showrooms selling the same vehicles. The California New Car Dealers Association filed the complaint with the DMV in March and after the better part of a year, the issue is settled.

Motor Village, which was a multi-million dollar effort by Chrysler to improve its market share in California, was sold to New Century Automotive Group of Los Angeles at the end of last month.

The high-profile 189,000-square-foot dealership opened last January with space divided into two stores: one for Fiat and the other to be shared between Dodge, Jeep and Chrysler.

It isn’t entirely clear what the future of the dealership will be, but Peter Grady, Chrysler vice president of network development and fleet, said in a statement that they ”were looking for a dealer who would carry on our vision of Motor Village as a showcase for our brands and a dealer committed to experimenting with new retail techniques and heightened levels of customer care.”

[Source: Automotive News]

15/10/2010 | By: Derek Kreindler

What better way is there to celebrate your freshly minted driver’s license than to crash your car through the DMV?

According to the Associated Press, the new driver had just finished dropping his examiner off when the driver burst through the office. Apparently, he thought the car was in Park, but was mistaken. Unfortunately, DMV officials were unable to revoke his passing grade.

Hit the jump to watch a new driver crash through the DMV

[Source: Associated Press]

Continue Reading…

09/07/2010 | By: Colum Wood

Hybrid cars are a huge hit in California and for a number of reasons. The first reason you might think of is the that citizens of the fine state are concerned about the environment. And while that might be true, there’s also a more self-serving reason, namely, that the California DMV issues 85,000 “Clean Air Vehicle” stickers to hybrid cars owners allowing them to drive in the HOV (high occupancy vehicle) or carpool lanes.

According to spokesman Steve Haskins, the DMV has now received as many request as it can fill and so no more passes will be given out.

As a result, those looking to purchase a hybrid like the Toyota Prius or Honda Insight to avoid rush hour chaos are now out of luck.

Instead those folks will now be heading over to Nissan to pick up a Leaf, as a new California Bill allows EVs and cars running on compressed natural gas to drive in the carpool lanes – at lest until 2015.

[Source: HybridCars.com]

[Photo Credit: EVNut]