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Should cell phone drivers be singled out?

3688 messages, Last post on Oct 27, 2009 at 11:39 AM
You are in the Automotive News & Views Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & claires
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"A survey just released by mobile application vendor Vlingo says 26 percent of mobile phone users questioned admit to DWT, or driving while texting. The highest number of offenders are in Tennessee, with 42 percent of people saying they text behind the wheel, while Arizona drivers came in lowest at 18.8 percent." Survey: 26 percent admit to texting while driving (CNET) |
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"Ashey told Newschannel 7 on the scene the reason for his accident—was his cell phone. Ashey said he was plugging it into his charger, when he drove his hummer off the road." Hummer plunges down embankment, driver okay (KTVB)
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Replying to: steve_ (May 22, 2009 8:56 pm) According to KTVB article, Ashey also said that cell phones in cars should be banned. Guess it takes a crash to get religion. Thankfully, Ashey simply ran off the road and is ok. But, what if instead of going off road he would have head-on an Aveo, or Mini. Maybe he is reflecting on that now. That would have been manslaughter.. |
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Check out Carlisimo's comment - talented younger sister he has. Thoughts from the Curb: Where Can I Text While Driving? (Edmunds Daily) |
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In August, 2009 issue of Car and Driver, David E Davis Jr said the following: "Cell phone use should be limited to passengers in motor vehicles. A driver who needs to make or accept a call should simply stop at the first opportunity and chat for as long as he or she wishes. Cell phone use accounts for some of the most flagrant bad driving on our roads today." Would be nice if prominent people in our nation would make similar statements in public. Perhaps baseball, football and basketball players. Also, entertainers. The public sheep believe these types of people. Just think if Michael Jackson had come out some years ago and made public statements on the dangers of drivers using cell phones. |
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"The highway safety researchers estimated that cellphone use by drivers caused around 955 fatalities and 240,000 accidents over all in 2002." U.S. withheld data on risks of distracted driving (NY Times via MSNBC)
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Replying to: steve_ (Jul 21, 2009 1:50 pm) Seems like time is way overdue to get legislation and technology together to design vehicles and/or cell devices to be inoperable while vehicle is moving. In a "real" emergency, such as witnessing a traffic accident, one can always find a safe spot to pull over, stop and call 911. Except for younger drivers today, those of us a little older Somehow managed our affairs and business without having cell phones to use in our moving vehicles. Just how did we ever get through those difficult times. No cell phones. The hardships we endured. Had to look for pay phone whether for mundane calls or real emergencies. NY Times article mentioned an OKLA politician talking continuously while driving from office to home. This and similar "stupid" and "dangerous" practice needs to stop. A moving vehicle is not the place to conduct business, do idle chatter, etc. An alternative to laws or technolgy cutting off cell phones in moving vehicles is too bill cost per minute at say $2-$5. 911 calls would be exempted. Cell towers that handle cell calls already "know" if cell device is moving. The towers need to know this in order to be able to "pass" the call to the next geographic tower that is in the direction of the cell phone movement. What is needed is legislation requiring high per minute rate when cell phone is moving and cell providers to get hardware/software developed and implemented to enable high rate. This would be good revenue for providers and stimulus to equipment/software manufacturers and would be incentive for drivers to NOT use cell phone while driving. |
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| http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/07/19/technology/20090719-driving-game.h- tml | |
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Note: foxnews is only reporting on the story... http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,535021,00.html?test=latestnews |
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Time Magazine August 24 issue page 45, 46, has an article on texting, cell phone use by drivers. Article says that Prof Strayer at Univ of Utah conducted tests and found that DUI drivers at .08 level had better reaction time than a sober driver on a cell phone. Article also said that Steven Yantis, Prof of psychological and brain sciences at John Hopkins said: When a cell phone driver is listening to cell conversation, they are slower to respond to things they are looking at. It requires the driver to select one thing at the cost of being less able to respond to other things. Article also said the Center for Auto Safety (CAS) recently uncovered a buried NHTSA Study in 2003 that identified cell phone use by drivers as serious safety hazard. CAS is filing a petition that would require all new vehicles to only allow cell calls with the transmission in Park mode. Emergency calls would be allowed while moving. Mr Ditlow, executive director of CAS, said his org's goal is to make cell phone talking and driving as socially unacceptable as drinking and driving.
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