Northern Virginia Criminal Justice Training Academy (NVCJTA) Exam 2 Practice

Session length

1 / 20

In the Highway Transportation System Triad, what does the 'environment' component refer to?

The vehicle's engine and brakes

The driver's personal characteristics

Traffic laws and regulations

External conditions such as road design, weather, and visibility

In the Highway Transportation System, the environment component covers external conditions that affect driving but are outside the vehicle and the driver’s control. It includes road design and maintenance (curve shapes, lane width, shoulder availability, signage, intersections), weather conditions (rain, snow, ice, wind), and visibility factors (fog, glare, low light, construction zones). These elements influence how you perceive hazards, how far you can see, and what speeds and following distances are safe, requiring adjustments that aren’t about the vehicle’s mechanics or the driver’s personal characteristics.

The engine and brakes belong to the vehicle itself, the driver’s personal characteristics relate to the person behind the wheel, and laws and regulations govern behavior but aren’t the environmental conditions you encounter while driving.

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