Showing posts with label texting while driving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label texting while driving. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2010 Posted by Wumbus Corporation | 4:17 PM - 0 comments

Texting Bans May Increase Crash Risk

Texting bans were put into place to prevent more traffic accidents from happening. In a new study it was found that texting may actually increase traffic accidents. Nowadays, mobile phones, most namely smart phones, are practically another appendage. Americans especially are so used to having the technology around, that without it most don't know what to do with themselves. This is one of the reasons why having a ban on using a cell phone while in the car is such a difficult law to enforce, especially when a majority of Americans spend upwards of 3 hours a day in their vehicles. This approximation takes into account commuting to work, taking kids to school and extracurricular activity, as well as running errands. On top of that, many cities in America aren't small enough for the necessities to be within walking distance. Taking into account all of these daily life activities, no wonder people are not following the law.

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NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Laws against using mobile devices to send and receive text messages while driving don't reduce crashes, according to a new study by the Highway Loss Data Institute.

In fact, not only do bans fail to decrease crashes, they may slightly increase crash risk, the Institute said.

Texting bans may only encourage drivers to hold the phone down low in the car, an HLDI spokeswoman said, making the behavior even riskier.

"Texting bans haven't reduced crashes at all. In a perverse twist, crashes increased in 3 of the 4 states we studied after bans were enacted," said Adrian Lund, president of both HLDI and the related Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Both groups are funded by the insurance industry.

Researchers compared insurance claims data in the months before and after texting bans were enacted in California, Louisiana, Minnesota and Washington state. They also compared that information to data from neighboring states in which no such bans were ever enacted.

Institute statisticians considered other unrelated factors that could have caused the increase in crashes, including ordinary month-to-month fluctuations. None accounted for the increases, the Institute said.

"We were as surprised as anybody to find this out." said HLDI spokeswoman Anne Fleming.

The federal government's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, part of the Department of Transportation, criticized the Institute's study.

Transportation secretary Ray LaHood called the study misleading

"Distracted driving-related crashes killed nearly 5,500 people in 2009 and injured almost half a million more," LaHood said in a prepared statement. "Lives are at stake, and all the reputable research we have says that tough laws, good enforcement and increased public awareness will help put a stop to the deadly epidemic of distracted driving on our roads."

The HLDI and NHTSA have been sparring in recent weeks with the privately funded Institute accusing NHTSA of devoting too much time and resources to the issue of texting while driving while not focusing enough on factors like drunk driving and speeding that cause far more deaths.

The new study doesn't mean that texting while driving is safe, Institute spokeswoman Fleming said, only that current legislation isn't an effective way to deal with the problem.

"We know this is a hazard," said Fleming. "It's just that, so far, the laws are not working."

In an earlier study, Institute researchers found that laws banning hand-held phone use, likewise don't reduce crashes. Those laws didn't increase crash rates, though.

Other laws governing what drivers do inside their cars, such as laws requiring seatbelt use, have proven to be effective, Fleming said, so researchers initially expected texting bans to be at least somewhat effective, too. But seatbelt use is easier to enforce because a shoulder belt can be seen from outside the car.

A driver who is texting while driving in violation of a law may simply hold the phone down low and out of sight, Fleming said, making the behavior even riskier.

Technology may hold some answers to the problem of texting while driving, Fleming said. Software programs can restrict the use of texting features while a car is in motion. Also, some cars allow text messages to be read aloud and even allow drivers to compose or select text responses using their voice. That way, their eyes are at least on the road ahead.

Voice texting may not be entirely effective, however, Fleming said. Research has found that voice calls, for example, are just as distracting even when a hands-free device is used.

Reposted from CNN.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010 Posted by Wumbus Corporation | 6:29 PM - 0 comments

The Feds Will Come After You Too...

Distracted Driving can be just as bad, if not worse, than driving while under the influence. Texting and talking on the phone also distracts the part of your brain that is crucial for operating a vehicle.













WASHINGTON — Uncle Sam is taking an even harder line on texting while driving as the 2010 national distracted driving summit gets underway here. Employers are now under pressure to ban "any work policy or practice that requires or encourages workers to text while driving," according to a statement issued on Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Labor.

The new policy widens an earlier order by President Obama that prohibits federal employees from texting while driving. This new twist to the crackdown is somewhat curious — and redundant, given that many states already have banned texting while driving this year. But it's clear that the government wants to root out any institutional or workplace basis for the practice.

"It is imperative that employers eliminate financial and other incentives that encourage workers to text while driving," said U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis in a statement.

The feds, under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration, will begin issuing citations and unspecified penalties "where necessary to end the practice when OSHA receives a credible complaint that an employer requires texting while driving," the statement said.

Yesterday, U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said that "distracted driving remains an epidemic in America."

LaHood said that distracted-driving-related crashes claimed 5,474 lives and led to 448,000 traffic injuries across the U.S. in 2009. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said distraction-related fatalities represented 16 percent of overall traffic fatalities in 2009.

Inside Line says: It's not just the cops who will be coming after you and your employer for texting while driving — it's also the feds. — Anita Lienert, Correspondent

Just the Facts:

  • Employers are now under pressure to ban any work policy or practice that requires or encourages workers to text while driving.
  • New policy widens an earlier order by President Obama that prohibits federal employees from texting while driving.
  • Distracted-driving-related crashes claimed 5,474 lives and led to 448,000 traffic injuries across the U.S. in 2009.
Original Article can be found here.


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