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Despite State Texting Bans, More Drivers Messaging At The Wheel

By JOAN LOWY   12/ 8/11 09:37 PM ET   AP

Texting Ban

WASHINGTON -- For all the criticism and new legal bans, texting by drivers just keeps increasing, especially among younger motorists.

About half of American drivers between 21 and 24 say they've thumbed messages or emailed from the driver's seat. And what's more, many drivers don't think it's dangerous when they do it – only when others do.

A national survey, the first government study of its kind on distracted driving, and other data released Thursday by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration underscore the difficulty authorities face in discouraging texting and cellphone talking while driving.

At any given moment last year on America's streets and highways, nearly one in every 100 car drivers was texting, emailing, surfing the Web or otherwise using a hand-held electronic device, the safety administration said. And those activities spiked 50 percent over the previous year, even as states rush to ban the practices.

Last month, Pennsylvania became the 35th state to forbid texting while driving.

In 2010 there were an estimated 3,092 deaths in crashes affected by a wide range of driver distractions, from eating meals to thumbing email, the safety administration said. That number was derived using a new methodology aimed at getting a more precise picture of distracted driving deaths and can't be compared to tallies from previous years, officials said.

The agency also takes an annual snapshot of drivers' behavior behind the wheel by staking out intersections to count people using cellphones and other devices, as well as other distracting behavior.

While electronic gadgets are in ever greater use by drivers, motorists are deeply conflicted about it, a NHTSA survey of over 6,000 drivers found.

Most said they would answer a cellphone call while driving and continue to drive after answering. And nearly two of 10 acknowledged sending texts or emails from behind the wheel. That spiked up to half of drivers 21 to 24 years old.

More than half of drivers said making a cellphone call made no difference to their driving performance, and a quarter said texting or emailing made no difference. But 90 percent said that when they are passengers they feel very unsafe if the driver is texting or emailing.

Indeed, big majorities of drivers surveyed support bans on hand-held cellphone use and texting while driving – 71 percent and 94 percent, respectively. And most said they want people who violate the bans to be punished with fines of $100 or more. Almost a quarter supported fines in the $200 to $499 range.

"Everyone thinks he or she is an above average driver – it's all the nuts out there who need educating," said Russ Rader, a spokesman for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

About twice as many drivers reported answering incoming calls as making calls while driving, 71 percent to 41 percent. And more drivers reported reading than sending texts or emails.

There were very few situations in which drivers said they would never talk on the phone or send texts. Bad weather was the most frequent reason cited. Few drivers said they would never place a call or send a message if they'd seen a police officer, had a child on board or were driving at nighttime or in a marked school zone.

The survey results "help us understand why some people continue to make bad decisions about driving distracted," NHTSA Administrator David Strickland said. "But what's clear from all of the information we have is that driver distraction continues to be a major problem."

The increase in texting while driving came even though many states have banned the practice, and that's alarming, said Jonathan Adkins, a spokesman for the Governors Highway Safety Association.

"It is clear that educational messages alone aren't going to change their behavior," Adkins said. "Rather, good laws with strong enforcement are what is needed. Many drivers won't stop texting until they fear getting a ticket."

The safety administration reported earlier this year that pilot projects in Syracuse, N.Y., and Hartford, Conn., produced significant reductions in distracted driving by combining stepped-up ticketing with high-profile public education campaigns.

Before and after each enforcement wave, NHTSA researchers observed cellphone use by drivers and conducted surveys at drivers' license offices in the two cities. They found that in Syracuse, hand-held cellphone use and texting declined by a third. In Hartford, there was a 57 percent drop in hand-held phone use, and texting behind the wheel dropped by nearly three-quarters.

However, that was with blanket enforcement by police.

"The key measure of all this is, do these restrictions reduce crashes? So far, there is no evidence that crashes are reduced when cellphone and texting restrictions are implemented," Rader said.

But safety advocates are pushing for a national ban on texting while driving. A bill introduced by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., would cut back highway funds to states that fail to enact a ban. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has also advocated a national ban.

Overall, 32,885 people died in traffic crashes in the United States in 2010, a nearly 3 percent drop and the lowest number since 1949. Traffic deaths have been declining for several years. Safety researchers generally attribute the lower deaths to a decline in driving because of the poor economy combined with better designed and equipped cars and stronger safety laws.

Bucking the trend, there were 4,502 motorcycle deaths in 2010, a 0.7 percent increase. That may mean the sudden 16 percent decline in motorcycle deaths in 2009 is beginning to reverse. Overall, motorcycle deaths have doubled since 1995.

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WASHINGTON -- For all the criticism and new legal bans, texting by drivers just keeps increasing, especially among younger motorists. About half of American drivers between 21 and 24 say they've thum...
WASHINGTON -- For all the criticism and new legal bans, texting by drivers just keeps increasing, especially among younger motorists. About half of American drivers between 21 and 24 say they've thum...
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07:32 PM on 12/14/2011
600,000 accidents and 3,000 deaths last year due to people using they phones while driving. Even if all use of devices is banned thru out the country, people will still use them.
02:52 PM on 12/14/2011
I'm a cyclist and I commute on my bicycle to work. I've notice a sharp increase in dangerous drivers who don't see me because their texting on their phones. To stay safe, I've had to make sure I never enter and intersection unless I make eye contact with drivers. It's frustrating and frightening. Please no texting while driving.
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PenguinLinux
got root ?
02:01 PM on 12/12/2011
You do not have the right to drink and drive, text and drive, or perform open heart surgery while driving. Basically, doing ANYTHING other than driving distracts you from driving. You put all of our lives at risk when you are on the road doing those things. Maybe you don't care about yourself and others, but I do. I am on that road. My family is on that road. Knock it the eff off already people.

The human brain does not multi-task, it multi-switches. It does one task at a time and then switches to another. Try and speak to someone at the exact same time you're reading, and your mind isn't focused equally.
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JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:35 AM on 12/12/2011
I see less of it since Ca. law changed, but we're not fooled by drives looking down at stoplights.

Perhaps we need to be like Spain where all kinds of mobile device use is not allowed and they I think have even disallowed satellite navigation...........all that would be fine with me.....too much distraction for drivers and car companies should quit loading all that crap on their cars.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rooster Coburn
Less Gov't + More Responsibility = A Better World
09:06 PM on 12/12/2011
If you are stuck in traffic it makes perfect sense to use the time to text or email someone.
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CraiginPhoenix
11:41 PM on 12/11/2011
Maybe Siri will change this. I don't text while "driving" but I will if I am sitting at a stop light.

But since getting the new iPhone with voice recognition, I dont even worry about that. I can just put it up to my ear and say "text my wife I am on my way home does the baby need diapers" and in a matter of seconds without one additional click, it is done.

Hopefully soon many people won't need to use the keyboard on their cell phone.
05:44 PM on 12/12/2011
I hope that you are joking or talking about using SIRI while pulled over/stopped. If not, the fact that you (and millions of others) think this type of activity is safer is frightening. Study after study shows (despite what legislators would like you to believev) that holding the phone to your ear to talk and talking using a hands-free device carry the same amount of risk. The human brain can only handle so much, and formulating other thoughts and paying attention to responses is not the thing anybody should be doing while operating 3000+ pounds of metal while in the presence of other people. But hey, don't let science and other people's lives get in the way of shaving 30 seconds off of picking up diapers.
05:58 PM on 12/11/2011
I see people texting, talking, and surfing the web all the time while driving, even though it is illegal here in New York State. I feel that you can responsibly send a text message while driving-do it when you are stopped at a red light or in a traffic jam. That's what I do. I fall with the majority I guess, I will answer my phone if it rings while I am driving, but I won't make a call. I will also read a text, but wait until I am stopped to reply. As for surfing the web and sending emails......never. I also don't eat and drive. I got rear ended once, because this lady was eating a Big Mac and fries while talking on her phone while driving. No damage to my car...minimum to her...so we didn't call the police.
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IrieMoon
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.
01:23 PM on 12/12/2011
The problem with people texting at stop lights is that they then hold up traffic because they don't see that the light has changed. Not only that but they think it's ok to text while driving since they text at a stop light.

No texting should be done at all unless the car is in park.
05:46 PM on 12/12/2011
On average, reading a text and processing it takes the human brain about five seconds (or more than a football field at highway speeds). I'm sure nothing could happen in that five seconds.
04:04 PM on 12/11/2011
Jail time for 2nd offence. Harsh? What if one of your loved ones was maimed because you wanted to text "I'll be home soon." In the country of Turkey a DUI gets you life in prison. Guess what doesn't cccur in Turkey?
10:12 AM on 12/11/2011
Might as well make it illegal to scratch yourself while driving. The only way to effectively do this is to make the phones inoperative when the car is moving.
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PenguinLinux
got root ?
01:57 PM on 12/12/2011
I'd love that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charlotte Bonnie
Agnostic. Free thinker. Debater. Independent. Gay.
08:19 AM on 12/11/2011
I used to text a lot while driving, I know it is very dangerous, wrong and plain unnecessary. If there is an important issue, pull up the car to the side and finish your business. Though I didn't cause any accidents, others (all women) who were busy talking on the phone, texting or playing with their Ipods hit my car, doing considerable damage so I say texting while driving should be illegal. The question is, how are they going to spot the texters and how are they going to prove the driver was texting/checking their messages. It is very hard to prove.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
03:56 PM on 12/11/2011
Spotting texters is not overly difficult from the side and can be proven by looking at the phone's records.
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GoDogGo
A fiscally realistic, socially progressive citizen
09:09 PM on 12/10/2011
It's pretty simple, actually: Get caught texting, pay $1500 and lose your license for 90 days MANDATORY. Get caught again, $3000 and lose your driving privilege for one year. Problem solved.

If you, the person reading this, text and drive, I genuinely wish you the unhappy existence you are risking for others (preferably after a nice single car accident). I've seen the outcome of your denial on the road and, let me assure you, the life you take and damage you do is unfathomably awful.
Deftguy
I train people and rehabilitate dogs
01:34 PM on 12/11/2011
GoDog, I am afraid you are right. I communte over the Bay Bridge in San Francisco/Oakland bay area, and people are texting as if there is no law at all. The only way to conquer this, is to make the ticket so expensive that it actually hurts. Other than that, there is no way to curb this activity.
King7David
Hoo Yah!!!!!!!
02:14 PM on 12/11/2011
Excellent point.....I wonder if anybody in Germany Text or talk on a cell phone when driving?

Then again, driving in excess of 140 MPH, I would guess not.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
03:59 PM on 12/11/2011
Generally the speed limits in Germany are 80 MPH or less. There are some sections of Autobahn which are unlimited, but those are only sections and generally people stay well below 100 MPH.
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bubbatech
07:40 PM on 12/10/2011
Manually texting while driving is, in my opinion, insane. I text using Siri and also have it read texts to me. Solves the problem.
11:41 AM on 12/11/2011
Yeah...not so sure that's whole lot safer. You're STILL distracted from the task at hand.

I'm not a very litigious person, but if someone using a cellphone hits me, I'll sue them for everything they have.
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jflorish
05:46 PM on 12/10/2011
I do it when stopped at street lights. But I have a rule of never hitting more then 2 chars without glancing up. I have never once been honked at while a light sat green, the problem is too many have their head buried down when it should be up, and definitely can't be doing that while moving in traffic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ichigo Kurosaki
Why do Republicans hate America so much?
02:01 PM on 12/10/2011
If you text while driving, you should have your license REVOKED. You are not fit to be on the same that I am on. People like that are the reason my insurance costs keep going up every six months. I have a clean driving record.
01:39 PM on 12/10/2011
I honestly can’t believe the self-centeredness of some people on this board. They think their texting is more important than driving in a safe manner. People who do this are simply putting their own lives and the lives of everyone around them at risk. They should be fined and have the drivers licence suspended for three months. It’s a culture that can be stopped.

If you need to talk on your phone while driving, use a Bluetooth unit. If you feel you need to text, use siri or the android version or simply pull over and park.
05:52 PM on 12/12/2011
Actually, if they want to talk, they should pull over. No study has shown that hands-free devices are significantly any safer than holding the phone (except during the dialing phase). Talking (whether to a person on the phone, in the car, or a device that is trying to interpret what you are saying) significantly reduces the amount of processing the spacial part of your brain can do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fredimessina
01:28 PM on 12/10/2011
It's a pointless ban that nobody enforces until after the fact. I see countless people on their phone driving every single day. They need to install cameras that take pictures of offenders and just send the tickets to their homes. It would be quite profitable for the states and people would take it seriously.
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AZLibDem
If you're speeding, you're an "illegal"
09:03 AM on 12/11/2011
We used to have the cameras here; they worked well, but people screamed that they were unfair, unjust, and "big brother government". Once Governor Brewer and the GOP got a stranglehold on the state, they got rid of them.

Of course, pretty much the same people who said they were unfair were the ones saying "illegal is illegal" and "what part of illegal don't they understand" about the immigrants.