Vice President and Branch Manager Kris Marrion highlights the ongoing role of community-based driver education in reducing roadway incidents across the Baltimore and Washington DC region.
ELKRIDGE, MD / ACCESS Newswire / April 20, 2026 / A Program Built on Real Scenarios
Kris Marrion, Vice President and Branch Manager at Erie Insurance Group in Maryland, has spent years working alongside law enforcement to teach new drivers how to make better decisions behind the wheel. Each month, he participates in the Howard County Police Foundation’s Collision Avoidance Training program, known as CAT, alongside police officers who bring practical road experience to the classroom.
The CAT program focuses on applied judgment rather than rule recitation. Participants encounter scenarios that require them to anticipate the behavior of other drivers, adjust their speed and positioning in real time, and understand how decisions made at 40 miles per hour carry different consequences than the same decisions made at a walking pace.
Why Insurance and Road Safety Are Not Separate
For someone in the property and casualty insurance industry, road safety is not a peripheral concern. Vehicle incidents are among the most common triggers for the kind of claims that affect real families in real ways. Marrion has observed this connection throughout his career at Erie Insurance, which spans more than two decades across Maryland and North Carolina.
The insurance industry’s interest in fewer accidents is direct and practical. But Marrion’s involvement in the CAT program predates and extends beyond any corporate calculation. He has described the industry’s relationship to community service as fundamental rather than incidental, part of the identity of an industry that operates where people actually live.
What Drivers Can Do
New drivers and their families can take several concrete steps to improve outcomes on the road. Seeking out supervised practice in low-risk environments before highway driving builds confidence and pattern recognition. Minimizing distractions during the first year of solo driving has a measurable effect on incident rates. Understanding how following distance changes with speed and road conditions is a skill that takes repetition to internalize.
Collision avoidance programs like the one offered through the Howard County Police Foundation are available to Maryland residents. Enrolling in a program that involves active scenario practice, rather than classroom instruction alone, provides a different category of preparation.
About Kris Marrion
Kris Marrion is Vice President and Branch Manager at Erie Insurance Group, based in Silver Spring, Maryland. He has more than 20 years of experience in the property and casualty insurance industry and was recognized as Insurance Professional of the Year by the North Carolina Independent Insurance Association. He is active in community service across the Maryland and Washington DC region and can be found at krismarrion.com.
Media Contact
Kris Marrion
info@krismarrion.com
https://www.krismarrion.com/
SOURCE: Kristopher Marrion
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
Media gallery
