The free 20-minute check that could change how you drive


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • CarFit offers free 20-minute sessions to help Utah drivers adjust their vehicle settings.
  • Instructors like Paulette Welch ensure drivers know their car's safety features.
  • CarFit, by AARP and AOTA, is open to all drivers for safety checks.

SALT LAKE CITY — Most of us buckle up and hit the road without a second thought. But are you actually fit for your car? There's a free program helping Utah drivers find out, and the answers might surprise you.

It's called CarFit. Instructors walk people through small adjustments that can mean the difference between walking away from a crash or not.

Paulette Welch has been helping drivers get safer behind the wheel since 2010. She's a CarFit instructor, trained to walk drivers through their own vehicle and make sure everything is adjusted to actually protect them in a crash.

"Basically, I have seen people that have no idea how their equipment works. They don't know where their emergency flashers are," said Welch. "They don't know how to adjust their seat mount for their seat belt at an angle."

One of the most common issues is drivers sitting too low, unable to see clearly over the steering wheel, and side mirrors set so you can only see your own car, creating a blind spot for everything else around you.

"So, the reality is that all cars do not fit all people, just as all couches don't fit all body types. So, it's really important to know what kind of a vehicle and what you need before purchasing a new car," said Welch.

CarFit is a partnership between AARP and the American Occupational Therapy Association. It's free, takes about 20 minutes and is open to any driver, any age.

Check out AARP.org to find an event.

"It's sort of the practical aspect of the driver safety course," said Welch. "It actually takes you in your vehicle and makes sure that your safety equipment is going to do its job in the event of a crash."

Welch said she's had driver safety instructors, people who have been teaching for 15 years, come through with their mirrors set wrong. The bottom line: It never hurts to check.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Tamara Vaifanua
Tamara Vaifanua joined KSL Today as a reporter in June 2021. She is a familiar face to Utah viewers. For more than 11 years, she was an anchor and reporter for a Salt Lake City TV station. Her work highlights issues facing underrepresented communities. Vaifanua’s notable stories focused on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women, Covid-19 relief efforts among Pacific Islanders and the Navajo Nation, educational equity, and school to prison pipeline. Vaifanua previously worked in newsrooms in Laughlin, Nevada (KLBC), San Diego, California (KUSI), Las Vegas, Nevada (KTNV) and St. George, Utah (KCSG). Born in southern California, and raised in Taylorsville Utah, Vaifanua graduated from Southern Utah University in communications and political science. Her parents are from Samoa, and she is proud to be the first TV news anchor of Samoan heritage in Utah.

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