States Consider Another Ban: Driving While Texting

Mon Mar 26, 2007 9:24PM EDT

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In my very dense state of New Jersey, legislators are considering yet another ban during driving. This time it's not just talking on cell phones, it's texting. And unlike talking on cell phones, which can only be cited by a police officer if he pulls you over for another infraction, officers would be able to pull drivers over specifically for texting if they spot them doing it while driving many miles per hour.

Drivers caught texting would be fined between $100 and $250, according to the bill that has 20 co-sponsors in both parties.

New Jersey is not alone on this one. At least three other states, including Washington, Arizona, and Connecticut, are considering similar legislation. Washington's state House passed a bill after a December pileup on a Seattle highway that police say was caused by a driver texting on a BlackBerry.

I'm sure most of us are guilty of talking on cell phones while driving, even if you live in a state where it is banned. Yet studies show again and again, it's a dangerous thing to do. And there's no difference if you're using a hands-free device; it's the brain activity that counts. Researchers have found talking on the phone while driving cuts the driver's brain activity in half in the areas of the brain needed to notice what's happening around him on the road.

So just imagine what happens to brain activity when a driver is focusing on punching out letters with his thumbs while driving on a highway or local roads. Yikes. I don't think another law is going to dissuade wired drivers from texting, but maybe more stories like the one about a Denver teen who accidentally killed a 63-year bicyclist while texting on his phone will. Patrick Sims, the remorseful high school senior, told CBS News in the fall: "I think about this car accident every single day of my life."

Admit it: Do you text on your cell phones while driving? If so, what will take you to stop—a law, a devastating accident, or, how about this, common sense?

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  • 166 Posted by pbogdansky@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    I ALWAYS know when someone gets/makes a phone call/text on the road - they immediately start braking, weaving, and slowing down. What a bunch of knobs. Most people can't even drive well with both hands on the wheel, no traffic, and no one else in the car. Please take away these clueless 404's toys that make them even more dangerous drivers. Heaven forbid they can't talk to someone for 30 minutes, the sky might fall! Wait til they go to jail for VEHICULAR MANSLAUGHTER, then they'll have all the time in the world to text.

  • 167 Posted by jenhoppin on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with the danger of texting while driving. You're not even looking at the road. I'm not surprised by the study that showed that it is more dangerous than drunk driving. Let's try to be proactive about this one and not wait until people pay for it by getting involved in inevitable accidents before we do anything. The problem is that how will it be monitered? People still talk on the phone in states where it is illegal. I guess the first step is to ban it and at least it is acknowledged as a danger.

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