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Does Traffic Survival School Dismiss the Cost of your Ticket?
      NO.   Unfortunately Arrowhead Dear Valley Traffic Survival School does not dismiss the cost of your ticket. This is a mandatory class that is required by the Arizona Courts and DMV. You are only allowed to take this class once every 3 years. So drive safe!

The successful completion of our course may or may not prevent violations from damaging your driving record. While in some cases a course just might get a traffic ticket dismissed, attending traffic school can also enhance your driving knowledge and skill level, and it may increase your overall safety awareness so that you, your family, and other drivers can be safer on the roads.

Traffic tickets are any form of citation that you get for violating traffic laws. It may seem like most traffic laws travel unchanged from state to state, but there are actually subtle differences.

For that reason, it is important to familiarize yourself with the rules of the road, particularly variable rules like maximum speed limits, before heading out onto Arizona's highways.

      In 2002, as many as 207,000 crashes, 178,000 injuries and 921 fatalities in the U.S. were attributed to red light running. Between 1992 and 2000, fatal motor crashes at traffic signals increased 19 percent, out pacing the rise in all other fatal crashes. Public costs exceed $14 billion per year. More than half of the deaths in red light running crashes are other motorists and pedestrians, so there is no debate that red light runners are dangerous drivers who irresponsibly put others at risk.

The problem in America's cities is even greater, as red light running is the leading cause of urban automobile crashes. In many cities, the yellow light has come to symbolize "hurry up" instead of "slow down."

As a result of countless crashes and tragedies, the American public is deeply concerned with the recent increase in red light running. Most Americans (96 percent) are afraid of being hit by a red light runner, but nearly one in five admit to running a red light in the last ten intersections. The leading excuse given for red light running was neither frustration nor road rage, it was "being in a hurry." Read More