Author Topic: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel  (Read 764 times)

Dos Equis

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Disagree.  Although I would be a much safer driver if they did this.   :-\

Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jan 15, 2009

Study after study for more than a decade has concluded that talking on a cell phone while driving is dangerous, even if the phone is hands-free. As the number of cell-phone users has grown, no state has enacted a ban on talking on both hands-free and handheld phones while behind the wheel. A new report by the National Safety Council should prompt legislatures across the country into taking action.
Six states and the District of Columbia now ban the use of handheld cell phones while driving, and 17 states and D.C. restrict or ban cell phone calls by novice drivers. Hawaii's Legislature has balked several times, and City Councilman Charles Djou is proposing to ban text messaging and playing video games while driving on Oahu.

Those laws are premised on the assumption that the distraction caused by use of the devices is physical. In fact, as studies have shown, the distraction is cognitive. "It's not just what you're doing with your hands," says Janet Froetscher, the council's president and chief executive. "It's that your head is in the conversation and so your eyes are not on the road."

Most drivers know as much by mere observation but seem to tolerate inattention by drivers as a new fact of modern-day life. Studies have kept track of the consequences:

» Eighty percent of traffic accidents are related to driver inattention, and the No. 1 source of driver inattention is cell phones, according to a 2001 study by Virginia Tech Transportation Institute for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

» The annual cost of crashes caused by cell phone use is $43 billion, according to the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.

» A study published 12 years ago in the New England Journal of Medicine found that the risk of a collision while using a cell phone quadrupled, about the same as for legal intoxication.

"When our friends have been drinking, we take the car keys away," says Froetscher. "It's time to take the cell phone away."

In September, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a law that bans motorists from sending, writing or reading messages on electronic devices. A California law that went into effect last July bans holding a cell phone while driving.

While Schwarzenegger says his state's law "will keep drivers' hands on the wheel and their eyes on the road," he misses the point. An ideal law should result in the driver's mind - not just hands and eyes - concentrating on the road.

Study after study for more than a decade has concluded that talking on a cell phone while driving is dangerous, even if the phone is hands-free. As the number of cell-phone users has grown, no state has enacted a ban on talking on both hands-free and handheld phones while behind the wheel. A new report by the National Safety Council should prompt legislatures across the country into taking action.

Six states and the District of Columbia now ban the use of handheld cell phones while driving, and 17 states and D.C. restrict or ban cell phone calls by novice drivers. Hawaii's Legislature has balked several times, and City Councilman Charles Djou is proposing to ban text messaging and playing video games while driving on Oahu.

Those laws are premised on the assumption that the distraction caused by use of the devices is physical. In fact, as studies have shown, the distraction is cognitive. "It's not just what you're doing with your hands," says Janet Froetscher, the council's president and chief executive. "It's that your head is in the conversation and so your eyes are not on the road."

Most drivers know as much by mere observation but seem to tolerate inattention by drivers as a new fact of modern-day life. Studies have kept track of the consequences:

» Eighty percent of traffic accidents are related to driver inattention, and the No. 1 source of driver inattention is cell phones, according to a 2001 study by Virginia Tech Transportation Institute for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

» The annual cost of crashes caused by cell phone use is $43 billion, according to the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis.

» A study published 12 years ago in the New England Journal of Medicine found that the risk of a collision while using a cell phone quadrupled, about the same as for legal intoxication.

"When our friends have been drinking, we take the car keys away," says Froetscher. "It's time to take the cell phone away."

In September, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a law that bans motorists from sending, writing or reading messages on electronic devices. A California law that went into effect last July bans holding a cell phone while driving.

While Schwarzenegger says his state's law "will keep drivers' hands on the wheel and their eyes on the road," he misses the point. An ideal law should result in the driver's mind - not just hands and eyes - concentrating on the road.

http://www.starbulletin.com/editorials/20090115_Ban_all_cell_phones_even_hands-free_while_behind_wheel.html

w8tlftr

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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2009, 03:11:42 PM »
Maybe the government should just wrap us all in bubble wrap since we're too stupid to keep out of harms way?  ::)


Eyeball Chambers

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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2009, 03:13:05 PM »
Maybe the government should just wrap us all in bubble wrap since we're too stupid to keep out of harms way?  ::)



Exactly  ::)
S

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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2009, 05:15:05 PM »
you look around in traffic lately? 

every other car has some dipshit 19-year old texting as he/she drives.

You just want to pull them outta their car at a red light and put their head under the tire.  I'd almost rather a person drive drunk than distracted.  At least their eyes are ON THE ROAD.

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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #4 on: January 15, 2009, 05:28:04 PM »
I don't think hands free is a problem, but nobody abides by the rules of the road.  They just need t make cradles that you have on the dash so you can't touch the phone while driving.  Bummer when you have to regulate things this much because people are stupid.  On a positive note, if officers actually enforce the current laws then states can generate revenue.  California should just increase the fine to 300 dollars, enforce it more and they'd be rolling in the dough. 
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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #5 on: January 15, 2009, 05:46:17 PM »
they're already "banned" here in ny...if u get caught=instant fine

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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #6 on: January 15, 2009, 06:16:06 PM »
they're already "banned" here in ny...if u get caught=instant fine
Most places I have seen the ban require a hands free headset and CA has banned texting.  The fines should be really stiff in order to be effective.
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Re: Editorial: Ban all cell phones, even hands-free, while behind wheel
« Reply #7 on: January 15, 2009, 06:42:12 PM »
Most places I have seen the ban require a hands free headset and CA has banned texting.  The fines should be really stiff in order to be effective.

oh..i dunno about the hands free set, but a few of my buddies got the hammer for using the phone