Enforcement of Texting While Driving Ban

Lawmakers are now questioning all enforcement after New York’s new texting-while-driving ban.

Consequences could be fatal if police officials don’t take action soon, as there are so many distracted drivers currently on the road each day. 50 percent of individuals driving are distracted on the roads. Lawmakers responded a couple of years back by banning texting while driving, but making it a secondary offense rather than a primary offense. Primary offenses allow police to pull over individuals with probable cause. Secondary offenses allow police to only ticket individuals for the offense as long as they’ve been pulled over first for another reason, like speeding.

A review of traffic tickets from the Journal’s Albany bureau shows that those who were ticketed for texting and driving while already being pulled over were only a fraction of the number in comparison to those who were talking on a cell phone without the use of a hands-free device, which is currently a primary offense. The Albany bureau found nearly 332,000 tickets being issued statewide in 2010 for cell phone usage behind the wheel of a car. 3,200 tickets were issued for texting while driving in the first year the law took place.

The new law now states that texting while driving is now considered a primary offense and the fine is now set at $150 and the state will now require a distracted-driving curriculum for those seeking their driver’s license.

A Federal Highway Administration study now shows that drivers who were texting while driving were 23 times more likely to get in a car accident. It also says each year thousands of people are killed in car crashes caused from distracted driving. Young drivers under the age of 20 are at the highest risk for distracted drivers being involved in fatal crashes.

Tougher Law Enforcement Would Cut Driving Distractions

Despite Delaware’s strict laws against texting and driving with a car in motion, the roadways are still dangerous and action needs to be enforced.

Delaware police have issued more than 5,000 tickets to motorists since the law went into effect on the first of January.

A person can easily go out to the highway and get into a crash every day from distracted drivers either texting or talking on their cell phones.

State police say on Sunday a truck driver that was hauling potatoes missed a warning sign because he was talking on his phone.

A train had hit his truck and his potatoes were spilled all across the U.S. 113.

No one was hurt, luckily. But Distracted driving accidents are only increasing every day.

The U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood says distracted driving is currently the nation’s top driving priority.

Monday revealed new research that plans to step up all warnings and advertisements with law enforcement and hopefully cut driving accidents by a small percentage.

A brief test in Syracuse proved that both handheld cell phone use and texting behind the wheel had decline by one-third. Usages of cell phones and texting behind the wheel dropped by 57 percent in Hartford.

This was all conducted through many complains and education seminars by safety agencies, insurance companies, and law enforcement.