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Popular Threads
1) Smokers
2) Pedophiles
3) People who use cell phones while driving
4) Drunk drivers
5) People who don't wear seat belts
6) Toll scofflaws
Political career need a boost? Put your boot to the throat of one of the unprotected classes listed above and ride the popularity wave.
I just wish politicians would admit it and not act like they are "getting tough".
I also think that insurance companies should crack down on this by refusing to cover accidents that involve a cell phone talker.
The National Safety Council wants to ban use of hands-free cell phones in cars. They say talking on the phone while driving 'increases accident risk by four times.
I believe it. I won't talk on the phone when driving. Like Jim Morrison said, "keep you eyes on the road, your hands upon the wheel...the future's uncertain and the end is always near."
Let it roll, baby, roll!
9-40-260 Use of mobile telephones.
(a) Except as provided by subsection (b) of this section, no person shall drive a motor vehicle while using a mobile, cellular, analog wireless or digital telephone.
(b) The provisions of the ordinance shall not apply to:
(1) Law enforcement officers and operators of emergency vehicles, when on duty and acting in their official capabilities*.
(2) Persons using a telephone with a “hands free†device allowing the driver to talk into and listen to the other party without the use of hands.
(3) Persons using a telephone to call 911 telephone numbers or other emergency telephone numbers to contact public safety forces.
(4) Person using a telephone while maintaining a motor vehicle in a stationary parked position, and not in gear.
(c) Any person who violates subsection (a) of this section shall be subject to a fine of $75.00, provided however, that if a violation occurs at the time of a traffic accident, the driver may be subject to an additional fine not to exceed $200.00.
but, the story would be best with statistics to convince. Just as the pre seat belt level of deaths and injuries was a convincing factor for mandatory seat legislation, more stats and less emotion and revenue raising gambits would be appreciated.
not just a nanny state, but a fact based safety state, please.
This is a pointless half-measure that - even if vigilantly enforced - would not save any lives. Whether intentionally or no, it serves no purpose beyond generating revenue for the city.
All night long!
I know, everyone needs to now drive vehicles with only one seat - for the driver only. Car pools will be outlawed! My goodness, can you imagine what might happen if someone was talking to three or more people! It would be carnage on the highways and byways!
from the Sun-Times today, per the Nation Traffic Safety Council:
"Drivers using cell phones are four times more likely to get into accidents.
Roughly 2,600 people a year die in car wrecks involving cell phones.
And there is no difference between talking on a cell phone or going hands-free."
By encouraging drivers to switch to hands-free and promoting it as a "safe" alternative, Alderman Vi Daley's ordinance flies in the face of the most current research.
Dumb, dumber, and dumbest.
I'd love to have some panoramic footage of just ONE city council meeting, showing all of the activities that Vi Daley and other Aldermen engage in while voting on critical legislation, including talking on their cell phones during debate and surfing the internet.
Talk about endangering the public. Now THERE'S a cell phone ban I could support.
I assume the city does not have the power to tax or levy a fee on commuters, or it would have been enacted many years ago. The closest it could get (as far as I can remember) is to issue parking tickets to randomly-chosen license plate numbers, which might explain why so many downstate motorists used to be shaken down by the city.
(1) Law enforcement officers and operators of emergency vehicles, when on duty and acting in their official capabilities*.
Law enforcement is also allowed to break the "normal" speed limits in hot pursuit (hopefully not getting into or causing a crash along the way), ambulances likewise are allowed to get a critical patient to a medical facility. It's a societal tradeoff.
What's funny is that, somewhat hypocritically, I use my iPhone as my sound system while driving. The actions to use the iPod function aren't really any different from the actions to use the phone function - I'm just pushing adjacent controls on the same device. Yet, one is illegal and the other is legal. It really makes no sense to ban one and not the other.
Vi had four challengers in 2007. That caused a run-off. She won the runoff. But her run-off challenger ran against Vi's candidate (her chief of staff Chuck Eastwood) and lost. So Vi knows she will have challengers again in 2011 and she knows her "guy", a proven loser, won't likely win her seat if he is appointed to replace her. SO, Vi has to look like she is doing something for a change in order to tell her constituents she is working for them.
Now to this ordinance. It does not address any of the real concerns of the 43rd ward. Those concerns would be enforcement of all of the laws regarding creating drunks (overserving/licensing additional bars in the ward) and enforcing laws against public drunkeness and the crimes yuppie drunks commit nearly every night from midnight on.
VI's chief of staff LOST the committeeman's race and her run-off challenger won.
My research on this is continuing, but so far I have determined that Bright Shiny Objects cause distractions that lead to many, many accidents (or near-misses) each and every single day.
Now is the time to ban bright shiny objects. Our safety depends on it!
1. It is already covered by laws against negligent driving, and adding one more category does not do anything to advance the cause; and
2. This should be done at the state, and not the city, level.
I don't understand why a driver who hit a small child would make an alderman (or any elected) squirm, was she in the car or a friend or what? How is it her responsibility? You are dreaming about how you are represented.
The aldermen/women are compelled to 'do something' abut stuff.
Another tax which will hurt the poor more than the rich
Incidentally, when cell phones first came out I used to argue with my brother-in-law who constantly was on his cell phone talking when driving or doing just about anything. I told him that he was highly likely to cause an automobile accident and kill himself (or somebody else). I also told him that some scientists had a theory that constant cell phone use might cause brain cancer. He just shook his head and ridiculed me for my concerns.
Incidentally, I attended my brother-in-law's funeral last month. He died from brain cancer. Was there a "cause & effect" relationship due to his constant cell phone usage? I don't know. I can only say that for my wife and myself, we will make our cell phone calls "pithy" and infrequent in the future.