Hang up and Drive
On Tuesday December 13, 2011, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended a nationwide ban on all portable electronic devices (PED’s) for all motorists.
The NTSB came to its recommendation after investigating a multi-vehicle crash in Gray Summit, MO that involved a driver who was texting. The crash, which occurred on Aug. 5, 2010, killed two people and injured 38 including children in two school buses. The National Safety Council (NSC) made this recommendation many months ago and was quick to endorse this NTSB vote.
It is clear that drivers are frequently distracted by electronic devices. Naturally this creates a safety concern not just for the distracted driver, but for everyone else on the road, in cross walks, and in construction work zones. The NSC estimates 1.3 million crashes, or 23 percent of all crashes, involve distracted drivers using cell phones. “Quantifying crashes and fatalities involving cell phone use while driving is challenging due to several factors such as a driver’s unwillingness to admit the behavior and lack of witnesses. Additionally, cell phone use currently is not consistently captured on police reports. We are able to develop an estimate of crashes based on risk and exposure, but the problem could be much larger than we estimate,” says Janet Froetscher, NSC President and CEO.
The links below offer the latest information concerning this topic. If your employees drive as part of their work routine, then it is time to review your fleet plan and consider eliminating this risk.
National Transportation Safety Board Press Release
National Safety Council
U.S. Safety Board Urges Cellphone Ban for Drivers