Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: March 19, 2025 - 13:00
Aggressive driving, it’s all the rage!
March 19, 2025
Aggressive driving is high-risk behaviour that is a significant factor in fatal and major injuries in Ottawa. You can play a role in reducing aggressive driving.
Feature story
You’ve had a bad day, but it’s finally time to head home. You get behind the wheel and traffic’s a nightmare. No one will let you merge into the lane you need. The driver behind you is right on your bumper. Someone honks at you to move the instant the light changes. And when the light does change, the car beside you seems to go from zero to light speed in nothing flat. The signs of aggressive driving are everywhere. In Ottawa, 61 per cent of fatal and major injury collisions between 2019 and 2023 were due to high-risk driving.
What is aggressive driving
This scenario depicts just a few examples of what is considered aggressive driving. According to the Province of Ontario, aggressive driving includes:
- Speeding
- Tailgating or following too closely
- Cutting off other drivers, or cutting in front and then slowing down
- Refusing to yield the right of way
- Honking repeatedly, or for no reason
- Running red lights
- Excessive lane changes or weaving through traffic
- Passing too close to cyclists
- Stopping on a pedestrian crosswalk at an intersection
- Stay Calm Behind the Wheel
- Plan ahead. Allow yourself enough travel time to prevent a time crunch.
- Obey the speed limit. Obeying the speed limit will ensure proper traffic flow.
- Identify alternate routes. Try to find routes that will enable you to avoid traffic congestion on busier roads.
- Just be late. Being late for work or an appointment is better than endangering your life or the life of someone else.
- Drive sober. Absolutely never drink and drive.
- Keep the kids content. With young children, take regular stops and bring plenty of items to keep them occupied.
- Don’t let traffic congestion get to you. Keep in mind that traffic congestion is often a regular part of driving and is best handled with a calm attitude.
- Stay Alert Behind the Wheel
- Sleep. Make sure you get enough sleep before your drive.
- Pull Over. If you’re feeling tired while driving, pull over to a safe place and take a nap or perhaps spend the night in a hotel. There is no better cure for tiredness than sleep.
- Be cautious. If you suspect someone else is driving drowsy on the road, keep alert, drive courteously and don’t get angry.
- Protect Yourself from Aggressive Drivers
- Don’t take it personally. Be polite, even if the other driver is not. If another driver challenges you, take a deep breath and move out of the way.
- Keep your eyes on the road. Don’t provoke an aggressive driver further by making negative eye contact or gesturing. Show them they can’t distract you from driving safely.
- Always be a courteous driver. Set an example for other drivers by always being courteous and driving defensively.
- Take all safety measures. The number one passenger safety precaution is to make sure everyone is properly buckled up.
- Incident: date, time, location, direction of travel.
- Driver Information: driver description (male/female, age, hair etc).
- Vehicle Information: licence Plate (number, province), vehicle (year, make, model, colour, car/truck/bicycle/ any other features (trailer hitch, modified parts etc).
- Details of the incident
- Your information: name, address, phone (home, business, mobile), date of birth.
Canadian Shaedon Sharpe's 36-point performance led the Portland Trail Blazers past the Toronto Raptors 112-103 on Thursday.
April 3, 2025 - 21:58 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Ottawa
The Ottawa Senators took another small step toward booking a ticket to the National Hockey League’s spring dance. Read More
April 3, 2025 - 21:49 | Bruce Garrioch | Ottawa Citizen
The overdose death of an 18-year-old student in residence at the University of Victoria was likely preventable, and university officials fumbled the response during the medical emergency and in the days and months afterward, a new report has found.Sidney McIntyre-Starko died after ingesting a mixture of cocaine and fentanyl with two other young women in a campus residence bathroom on Jan. 23, 2024. The three friends did not know what was in the vial of white-grey powder they had obtained but divided the contents into three lines and snorted it, knocking two of them unconscious.The 123-...
April 3, 2025 - 21:25 | Justine Hunter | The Globe and Mail
Comments
Be the first to comment