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No text messages or calls for NJ drivers
#1
By BRAD HAYNES, Associated Press Writer
Sat Mar 1, 8:09 AM ET

For New Jersey drivers, the message is clear: Keep your thumbs on the wheel and off the keypad.

Beginning Saturday, police can slap drivers with a $100 fine for talking or sending a text message on hand-held devices.

New Jersey joins four other states, including neighboring New York, where talking on a hand-held cell phone is reason enough to get pulled over. The Garden State is the first where text-messaging on the road is a primary offense, meaning police need no other reason to pull a driver over, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Pam Fischer, director of New Jersey's Division of Highway Traffic Safety, said officers will be on the lookout for telltale signs of distracted drivers — slow driving and the "cell-phone weave."

Drivers can still use their cell phones to contact police or emergency services, and can talk at any time with a hands-free device. But crash statistics suggest that those headsets and earpieces may not make conversations in the car any safer.

In 2006, nearly half of the 3,580 phone-related crashes in New Jersey involved a hands-free device, according to transportation officials. Five of 11 fatal accidents involving a cell phone that year also involved a hands-free device.

Russ Rader of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said those figures are consistent with recent research showing no difference in crash risk between hand-held and hands-free cell phones.

"The conversation itself is the distraction," Rader said. "You are in another place when you are talking on the phone."

Trucker Lou Cataldo hopes the new law will cut down on the distracted drivers he sees across the state.

"I see a car in the middle lane doing 50 miles per hour, and 99.9 percent of the time it's someone yakking on a cell phone," he said.

But Cataldo questioned how police would spot drivers typing out a message.

"If you're doing 75 miles per hour," he said, "the cop has to be right alongside to see you."

Driving while using a hand-held cell phone has been illegal in New Jersey since 2004, when the state became the second in the nation to pass a ban. However, it was considered a secondary offense — something drivers could be ticketed for if they were pulled over for another reason. Over the past year, state courts have recorded 16,000 tickets issued for the offense.

Fischer predicted that number would rise significantly now that drivers can be pulled over for cell phone use alone.

Twenty-one state legislatures this year are considering some kind of ban on texting while driving.

"It's a popular issue this year," said Matt Sundeen, a transportation analyst with the National Conference of State Legislatures. "We expect to see some movement on this."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080301/ap_o...g528sDW7oF
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#2
We have had this law for a few years, it is a law that I actually agree with, and is a big problem here with people texting and driving, especially the young drivers, these types of accidents are totally avoidable and I don’t see it as a law about control but one of common sense.
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#3
I agree with this also. 

Driving a Car + Texting/talking on a cell phone + using only 3% of the brain = lots of injured and dead people.
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#4
Silly,
When you are a parent to a young adult driving a vehicle that can kill in an instant your ideals change on laws and you certainly take more notice of what is going on, we made our daughter drive ‘stick’ and bought her a manual car, cliff said it would give her more to think about and one less ‘hand’ to change CD’s, text and all that stuff you do when your not thinking about how lethal a car really is.
I personally dislike cell phones altogether, they are actually a real bother to my life, a false sense of connection; I could go on all day about cell phones! But I won’t.
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#5
Astro-

Your plan seems great.  Protect your daughter with all means you have between you and Cliff.  Do whatever it takes to keep her alive.

Guess what the leading cause of death is in the USA for teens?  Motor vehicle accidents.  It's at an incredibly high rate for young teens ( 21.15% ) and older teens ( 39.98% ). 

My husband and I discuss frequently how for young people the fear center of their brain doesn't seem well developed.  I read a study on this somewhere and I guess I could find it again -- but it's something like age 25 before the brain and self preservation skills are fully developed. 

About my cell phone -- if I leave the house in the morning without it, I panic.  I drive a very long distance each day to work with a car that has 184.000 miles on it.  I don't want to get stranded without my phone.  Sure, I could go knocking on doors and ask Norman Bates and/or Annie Wilkes if I can use their phone to call husband to come pick me up (that's a movie ref. -- Psycho/Misery... :-) hehe ...) but I much rather sit in my car and call for help.  I MUST have my cell phone with me -- so I do love them but I just don't speak while I'm driving.  My cell phone stays off and my battery stays good for days and days.

Talking on the cell phone while driving has got to be the dumbest/most dangerous thing one can do -- well, I hope you know what I mean.  And look how it's been commercialized and made so easily available for the general public.  Hmmm.. you think someone is trying to kill the sheeple?

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#6
Silly,
Last night on the news they had a report of the big town near us and the drivers caught in 2007, they went on to list the offences, and the second on the list was texting while driving, for a small population there was a big number. Most of them were aged between 18-21, we can not drive unsupervised until we are 18.
I agree about the fear centre of the brain system for younger people, it is also a fact that they can not relate to the concept of ‘consequence’ that tells you this and that will happen if you do this and that.
The ego dominates the energy field when you are young, therefore you often live for ‘now’ and yesterday and tomorrow really do not make sense to you, and this is generalizing. Sometimes I laugh at my daughter’s friends and how they say they are going to get a big house, plasma etc, oh ok so you are just going to plant a money tree!
I think that cell phones are so readily available to track and monitor, trigger and show how stupid people are because people say stuff they should not. All cell phone companies are hooked up to central computers which are activated by certain words and tell them if you should be watched more carefully etc, so yes bring on the sheepeople.
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