U.S. Cities with the worst drivers vol. No surprise who's #1

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The 10 U.S. cities with the worst drivers tilt towards the coasts

By Justin Hyde | Motoramic – 22 hours ago


Across the nation, the typical American driver should expect to suffer some kind of car accident once every 10 years, according to the insurance companies which have to cut checks for those crashes. Yet that figure varies widely based on where you live, and by Allstate Insurance's tally, the city with America's worst drivers get into accidents twice as often as the national average -- and in the worst 10 U.S. cities, geography plays a big role in making driving more dangerous.

In its eighth annual report on traffic accidents, Allstate analyzed its claims data for 195 cities filed between January 2009 and December 2010 to determine how likely it was for a driver in those cities to get into a fender bender. For the fifth time, Sioux Falls, S.D. ranked as the city with the best drivers, who are 27.6 percent less likely to get into a crash than the national average. Close behind: Boise, Idaho; Fort Collins, Colo.; Madison, Wisc., and Lincoln, Neb.

While it would seem logical for smaller cities to have safer roads, and crash rates are generally worse in more populated areas, there are a few large cities -- namely Phoenix, Tucson and Indianapolis -- whose drivers outperform the national average. Philadelphia, Miami and San Francisco crack the list of 10 cities with the worst drivers, but are outpaced in wretched wheeling by several smaller towns.


Top 10 Cities With America's Worst Drivers

2012 Ranking :Chance of accident vs. nat. avg.

1. Washington, D.C. 112%
2. Baltimore 88%
3. Providence, R.I. 81%
4. Hialeah, Fla. 78%
5. Glendale, Calif. 76%
6. Philadelphia 64%
7. Alexandria, Va. 63%
8. Newark, N.J. 59%
9. Miami 58%
10. San Francisco 55%

The real secret to having the worst drivers lies in geography. I live outside Washington, D.C., the city Allstate has identified as the home of the worst drivers in America for seven of the past eight years. It should be among the safest; the city has thousands of speed cameras, well-funded traffic police and has banned any use of hand-held cellphones while driving. But Washington's street layout creates dozens of six-way intersections featuring one road crossing at an unusual angle, turning below-average skills or aggressive drivers into a clear and present danger. According to Allstate, Washington drivers get into a wreck once every 4.7 years on average.

Of the remaining nine cities with the worst drivers, five are East Coast towns whose streets were originally laid out for horse-drawn wagons rather than rip tides of two-ton SUVs traveling 50 mph. Even though California tops the Atlantic seaboard for traffic tie ups, only Glendale, Calif., and San Francisco crack the 10-worst list for accidents. Miami and its suburb of Hialeah, Fla., round out the list -- another example where drivers unfamiliar with roads play a starring role, although the average age of the people behind the wheel factor in as well.

It doesn't take a weatherman to know which way the wind blows, and it doesn't take a database of insurance claims to know bad drivers fill American roads every day. You can't control what other people do, but you can control what you do -- driving a little slower, being more careful, even extending some courtesy on the road. Or you could just move to Sioux Falls.

Photo: IntangibleArts via Flickr

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I've lived in northern VA all my life so I assumed we would be on this list just by personal experience.

People in this area can't drive worth ****! I've been saying this for the longest.

:smh:

Link

http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motoramic/10-u-cities-worst-drivers-tilt-towards-coasts-161143248.html
 
Newark is terrible cause they get into accidents on purpose to run up on you :lol: :smh: I'm amazed NY isn't on there
 
As soon as you pass Fredericksburg on 95 N.......you enter the danger zone and all hell breaks loose. DMV is turrrrible. Richmond and Norfolk/VA Beach were far better.
 
NoVA drivers are too damn distracted behind the wheel. those lower speed limits in VA cause them to play with their phones, radios, and other things. I can always tell I'm coming up on a Virginian on the beltway (besides the tags) by how slow they are moving or if they drift a bit in their lane.

MD drivers are somewhat fast/aggressive but they do it in the far left lanes. they only get on you if you are doing 65 or under all the way to the left.

i try not to drive in the District at all.
 
sf is a pain in the *** to drive & a lil shocked that Providence, R.I is on the list maybe cuz im not aware of it being a big city
 
Not surprised Texas isn't on the list. :pimp:

Surprised there's only two California cities though, If you know what I mean. :wink: :nerd:
 
Not surprised Texas isn't on the list.
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Surprised there's only two California cities though, If you know what I mean.
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Surprised ATL didn't make it

The traffic is so bad in LA that most of the time you can't even go fast enough to get in a real accident...semi srs
 
How the hell is Houston not on here, the most idiotic, tailgating, go faster it rains mutha- in the world
 
Not surprised by my city being in the top 10 :lol:

But Hialeah in the top 3? :wow: I went to high school up there and the drivers are just terrible, but damn top 3. That list is telling the truth :smh:
 
5. Glendale, Calif. 76% ?

How Glendale can be worse than Monterey Park & San Gabriel is simply mind blowing
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Actually surprised nyc isn't on the list. them canarsie drivers are the worst.
 
Da Bricks at #8, damn! There's a deep seeded history of stolen cars there which is a big problem. Not the chop shop or shipping container type of thefts, but more "let's make the cops chase us" types of theft. It's gotten better tho over the past 20 yrs. but you can still find donut tracks without looking for 'em. 
 
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