Driving in Minnesota has gotten so wild that irate strangers are reaching out to Pete Hosmer's driving school to complain.
"They're calling our office saying this car of yours is driving 'too slow' – so get off the road," said Hosmer, who owns A+ Driving School in White Bear Lake.
Beyond speeding, Hosmer said he has seen far more impatient, aggressive and dangerous driving — tailgating, drivers blowing through red lights — in the last couple of years than in any time in his 17 years as a driving instructor.
That speed has had deadly consequences across Minnesota. Speed-related traffic deaths last year surged 45%, pushing overall traffic deaths to a level not seen in the state since 2007.
Minnesota joins states across the country experiencing a massive rise in traffic fatalities despite better seatbelt usage and cars brimming with new safety technology. Motorists surveyed say they are speeding more than ever, at the same time many law enforcement agencies are scaling back or even eliminating speed enforcement as they shift diminished staffs to more pressing law enforcement work.
"Drivers are driving like crazy and it's literally killing people," said Jonathan Adkins, executive director of the Governors Highway Safety Association, a nonprofit that represents state highway safety agencies across the country.
'A big change has been the lack of enforcement'
Back at the start of the pandemic lockdown in 2020, Col. Matt Langer and others at the State Patrol imagined a different trend emerging.