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Laws restricting cell phone use while driving appear to
be for anyone else but teenagers although they were specially intended for them,
a new report by an insurance industry group revealed. According to governmental
estimates, auto crashes are the leading cause of death for teenagers, who are
involved in three times as many fatal accidents as all other drivers.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety report discovered
that, some five months after the North Carolina law banning cell phones use
while driving went into effect in November 2006, nearly 12 percent of teen
drivers were observed using cell phones compared to 11 percent observed prior
to the ban. In fact, teenagers completely disregarded the law, continuing talking
on the phone, thus endangering their own lives and the others'.
What exactly is the reason behind these results? Seventy-one
percent of teens and 60 percent of parents involved in the study reported that
enforcement of the laws were rare or nonexistent.
Laws forbidding teenagers using cell phones while driving
were adopted by 17 states and the District
of Columbia, according to the American Automobile
Association. Moreover, six states and the District forbid all drivers from
using hand-held cell phone.
According to a University of Utah study, using cell phones can
slow down traffic.The study found the drivers were distracted by the phone
conversation and made fewer lane changes, and drove 2 to 3
percent more slowly in medium and highly congested traffic. Of course, the study did not look at the serious repercussions of
using cell phones in traffic like deadly car crashes. Moreover, the study said hands-free
phones are as dangerous as the hand-held phones, as they diminish drivers’ skills
and attention.
What’s there to be done? Maybe teenagers should also take
classes on risks they are exposing themselves while combining talking on cell phones
with driving besides lessons teaching them how to drive.
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