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Category Archive: Texting

Allstate Joins the Anti-texting Crusade

comedy guys defensive driving has been urging drivers not to text while driving for years“Texting while driving makes you 23 times
more likely to have an accident.”

- one of the facts available at allstate.com

Ah, but it is really an “accident” if you were texting before it happened? Isn’t more like a negative event resulting from doing something foolish?

Anyway, Allstate Insurance has become one more of a large number of companies and organizations to begin campaigning against people sending text messages while driving. As we’ve pointed out before, texting is one of the most distracting things that a driver can do, making them every bit as dangerous on the road as a drunk driver.

At Allstate’s landing page dedicated to distracted driving, you can get important facts, find the applicable laws for your state, and get information about stopping this dangerous practice in your area, your workplace, and your own family.

For years now, Comedy Guys Defensive Driving has been talking about the dangers of driving while distracted, and we welcome a company as well known and respected as Allstate Insurance to the fight.

Michigan banning Texting while Driving

Michigan is quickly becoming one more state to ban texting while driving. Legislation originally passed by the Michigan Senate was approved by the House also on April 20th, with a vote of 74 to 33.

The ban, which could take effect as soon as July 1, makes texting while driving a primary offense, empowering police officers to pull drivers over for that reason alone.  Offenders could face first-time fines of $100 and subsequent penalties of $200.

The move has so far been applauded by citizens groups and police departments across Michigan.

The dangers of texting and all other forms of distracted driving are a big part of our classes at Comedy Guys Defensive Driving. We are dedicated to making Texas a safer place to drive by making a safer driver out of everyone who takes our class either online or at one of our over 30 class locations.

Oprah Takes the Pledge: Texting and Driving “Absolutely Stupid”

You know an issue is gaining traction when the daytime TV queen gets involved.

On the heels of a Virginia Tech study on cell phone use and driving distraction showing that truckers are 23 times more likely to be involved in a crash or close call while texting, Oprah has taken the issue head-on. She committed a full show on January 18 to the issue, comparing texting to driving after four drinks, and declaring the practice “absolutely stupid.”

According to the print arm of Winfrey’s empire, O Magazine, the problem is science, not personality.

“Despite employing 100 billion neurons to process information at rates as high as 1,000 times a second,” Marois says, “the human brain has a crippling inability to do two tasks at once.” Small wonder that the American College of Emergency Physicians reports a rise in texting-related emergency room visits. A new British study has found that texting while driving slows reaction time more than being drunk or high. The results can be deadly, as with the California train wreck in September that involved a texting engineer.

Social experts also warn about an eerie disconnect when we’re out with our BFFs while texting friends, family, and the office. “There is a certain degree of ‘absent presence’ associated with the use of mobile phones and other personal media in the presence of others,” notes researcher Scott Campbell, PhD, assistant professor of communication studies at the University of Michigan. “People disengage, or pay more attention to the person on the phone than to the people who are physically present.”

In other words, we’re hardwired to focus on single duty at a time. Multitasking is largely a (potentially dangerous) myth.

The result? More and more states (19 so far with total bans) have already been cracking down on distraction and implementing new laws about texting, including legislation in Texas last September. Now, Capitol Hill is joining the campaign.

According to the Washington Post,

On Tuesday, the federal government formally barred truckers and bus drivers from sending text messages while behind the wheel, putting its imprimatur on a prohibition embraced by many large trucking and transportation companies.

“We want the drivers of big rigs and buses and those who share the roads with them to be safe,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. “This is an important safety step, and we will be taking more to eliminate the threat of distracted driving.” …

In announcing the ban, LaHood mentioned data compiled last year by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. The agency said that texting drivers take their eyes off the road for an average of 4.6 out of every six seconds. At 55 mph, he said, that means a texting driver travels the length of a football field, including the end zones, without looking at the road.”

Texting and driving is an oft-discussed issue at Comedy Guys Defensive Driving. We’ll keep you updated on all the latest laws and developments (and, of course, your options concerning defensive driving if you get caught).

Drive now. Text later.

CNBC’s Phil LeBeau has also been talking about the dangers of texting while driving, including this article from Car and Driver magazine.

Here he is discussing the Car and Driver study on the Today Show on MSNBC. The evidence is clearly presented and really frightening.

In this still from that Today Show story, you can see four results for the same car driven by the same driver. But look at how the stopping distance is affected by alcohol or distractions like email and texting.

It ought to be common sense: pay attention to the road ahead and the traffic around you.

Anything that distracts you while driving makes you more dangerous.

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