Have you had to drive your car with a couple of missing pieces? Dennis and Judi were discussing the things you've had go missing on your car and driven without.
How safe of a driver are you? Now, you have a chance to prove it and earn a discount on your car insurance at the same time. Allstate New Jersey has introduced a usage-based product called Drive Wise® which measures information like mileage, braking, speed and time of day when a customer is driving. Using that data, the company calculates a discount for each customer using its telematics techno
Moving through the legislative process in Trenton is a bill that would establish a “Yellow Dot Program” within the state Motor Vehicle Commission (MVC). The program would provide first responders with vital health information about drivers who elect to participate, so that the on-scene medical help can better tailor their treatments when the patients are unable to speak or are otherwise unresponsi
We've all seen it and almost nothing is more infuriating on our roadways; drivers going less than the speed limit and refusing to move to the right and get out of our way. It's already against the law if motorists fail to stay right unless passing, but few get tickets for it and the fines aren't that steep anyway.
On New Jersey roads you have to worry about idiots everywhere. Sometimes, you have to worry about some idiot driving with a dog on his lap. Will you have to eventually worry about the dog itself driving the car? Check out the video below. It's a video of how they trained a dog through rewards and commands and lots of practice to drive a car on a closed track...
Hundreds of people are killed each a year when drivers turn the wrong-way into the face of oncoming traffic on high-speed highways, and a majority of the crashes involves drivers with blood alcohol levels more than twice the legal limit, a federal accident researcher said Tuesday.
Law enforcement officials will be cracking down on drunk drivers as part of the annual holiday season "Drive Sober, Or Get Pulled Over" statewide drunk driving enforcement campaign.
Women have passed men on the nation's roads. More women than men now have driver's licenses, a reversal of a longtime gender gap behind the wheel that transportation researchers say is likely to have safety and economic implications.