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Starting with July 1, minors that drive and use wireless
devices won’t be cool, but subject to a ticket. The new regulations bring California among the
other 15 states that ban minors from using cell phones, PDAs, laptops and
pagers while driving.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the
legislation into law on Thursday. At the bill-signing ceremony held at Sequoia High School
in Redwood City,
the governor explained the decision invoking the supplementary protection that
youngsters should receive: “The simple fact is that teenage drivers are more
easily distracted. They are young, inexperienced and have a slower reaction
time.”
Teens cited under SB33, authored by
state Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto will be spared the first time they are
caught breaking the rules by paying only $20, but the second offense and the
rest will make them take out of their pockets $50. However traffic officers
won’t pull any driver over just for a cell phone infraction and the traffic
safety point system won’t record the violations. An exemption to the law will
constitute emergency calls.
Reported figures also highlight the
legitimacy of the new regulations. A recent survey conducted by AAA and
Seventeen Magazine reveals that about a third of the minors polled recognize
that they are distracted while behind the wheel by text messaging or taking
phone calls. Moreover, a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study
discovered that a growing number of young drivers aged from 16 to 24 used a
handheld phone (although hands-free sets are required!), 8 percent in 2004
compared to 5 percent in 2002 and 3 percent in 2000.
The governor office also pinpointed
that highway crashes account for 44 percent of US teen deaths every year, being
the major death cause among teens between 16 and 20.
Under the new regulations, minors
won’t be allowed to use the hands-free devices while driving, this having been the
requirement of a law passed by Simitian the last year, which will apply only to
the rest of the drivers.
Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, North Carolina,
Rhode Island, Tennessee,
Texas, Virginia
and West Virginia and Washington, D.C.
have similar laws in effect.
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