July 5. Police want texting ban
POLICE ARE horrified at the number of people who drive and text at the same time.
Police see it daily – drivers trying to steer while texting with their BlackBerries or cellphones.
"It's just absolutely crazy," says RCMP E Division Traffic Services Supt. Norm Gaumont. "When you're texting, your eyes aren't even on the road at all."
The senior traffic enforcement Mountie hopes any provincial government law to ban cellphone calls while driving extends to texting and the use of other devices.
"We're hoping that government moves forward with banning all personal electronic devices," Gaumont said, adding that should include cellphones, Blackberries, personal video players and computers.
"I've seen people actually playing computer games while driving," said Gaumont, who is convinced such gadgets distract drivers and contribute to crashes in B.C.
Solicitor General Kash Heed has called for public input by Aug. 7 on possible restrictions on cellphone use.
The province wants to know what devices people think should be restricted, whether hands-free use should be allowed and how high the penalties should be.
Also up for debate is whether such a law should target all drivers or specific groups, such as new drivers.
A possible exemption for professional drivers or emergency responders is also being mulled.
Gaumont argues no one should be exempted.
"I don't believe any emergency personnel should be driving with their Blackberry and texting or have their phones in their ear."
He doesn't see any problem enforcing a law that would cover all hand-held devices.
Hands-free cellphone use would be much harder to enforce, Gaumont said, although he considers it just as dangerous.
The new B.C. government discussion paper backs that up, citing evidence from multiple studies across the world.
"There is no difference between the cognitive diversion associated with hands-free and hand-held cellphone use," it says.
Drivers fail to mentally process roughly half of what they see when they're talking on a phone, regardless of the technology.
Their slowed reaction times contribute to crashes and near misses, says the report.
Driver distraction is blamed for about 25 per cent of crashes, the report says, translating into 117 deaths and 1,400 injuries requiring hospitalization in B.C. each year, along with direct financial costs of $1 billion annually.
The use of cellphones and other wireless electronic devices are "the number one cause of distraction", the report says, along with other distractions like eating while driving and personal grooming.
Talking to a passenger doesn't cause the same degree of distraction as a mobile phone conversation, it says.
Nor is listening to radio, music or a book on tape a concern.
U.S. research has concluded cellphone calls put a driver at a four times greater risk of crashing, and that cellphone use while driving is responsible for six per cent of all crashes.
A 2006 Utah study cited in the discussion paper found "the impairments associated with using a cellphone while driving can be as profound as those associated with driving while drunk."
But Mike Cain, a researcher with the group SENSE (Safety by Enforcement Not Speed Enforcement), calls such statistics "garbage."
Accident rates have fallen in recent years despite the rapid growth in cellphone use, he says.
"Those findings are not borne out by the real world experience," he said.
SENSE argues police should use existing laws and charge motorists who don't use wireless devices safely with driving without due care and attention.
Cain said a ban on cellphone use may lead motorists whose phones ring to unsafely pull off the highway in order to legally answer them.
"The unintended consequence is going to be merging accidents on highways and even on residential streets where there's insufficient space for people to pull off safely," he said.
"That's going to cause far more crashes than this law will ever prevent," he said.
Calls to pry cellphones out of the hands of drivers have grown in recent years.
Recent polls peg support for cellphone restrictions at 85 per cent in B.C.
Most of Canada ahead of B.C. on phone ban
B.C. will soon be in a shrinking minority of Canadian provinces with no rules limiting the use of cellphones while driving.
Quebec, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador ban hand-held cellphone use by all drivers.
Alberta, Ontario and Manitoba have either proposed or are drafting similar legislation.
Ontario's ban is to take effect this fall, fining violators up to $500 if they use hand-held communication devices, portable video games, MP3 players or DVD players while driving.
Prince Edward Island prohibits new drivers from using cellphones or any hand-held electronic device while driving. At least a dozen U.S. states have a similar new driver restriction.
And just across the border, Washington State has banned the use of phones held to the driver's ear – allowing hands-free and loudspeaker settings – as well as any electronic device to read or send text messages.
The B.C. government's discussion paper warns laws that allow hands-free wireless conversations may actually be dangerous, creating a false sense of security that hands-free is okay when most evidence indicates it is no less distracting than hand-held use.
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