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States
send
mixed
message
on
texting
and
driving
By
ANDREW
DeMILLO
Associated
Press
Writer
Fiddling
with
your
iPhone
behind
the
wheel
can get
you
fined
across
much of
the
nation.
But many
states
are more
than
happy to
tweet
you with
up-to-the-minute
directions
on how
to steer
clear of
a
traffic
jam.
It is a
mixed
signal
that
some
safety
experts
and
politicians
say
could be
dangerous.
At least
22
states
that ban
texting
while
driving
offer
some
type of
service
that
allows
motorists
to get
information
about
traffic
tie-ups,
road
conditions
or
emergencies
via
Twitter.
"You
shouldn't
be
fiddling
around
with any
kind of
electronic
gadget
in your
car
while
driving,"
said
Minnesota
state
Rep.
Frank
Hornstein,
who
helped
write
his
state's
no-texting-while-driving
law.
Nineteen
states
and the
District
of
Columbia
have
banned
all
texting
while
driving,
and
eight
others
prohibit
texting
by
younger
drivers
only,
according
to the
Governors
Highway
Safety
Association.
Many of
these
laws
essentially
bar
people
from
fooling
with
their
smart
phones
in any
way
behind
the
wheel;
in some
cases,
just
reading
from a
mobile
device
is
against
the law.
Some
supporters
of
text-messaging
bans say
that
states
that
provide
traffic
information
via
Twitter
are
undermining
these
laws.
"I would
guess
that the
states
wouldn't
intend
to be
sending
a mixed
message,
but it
sounds
like it
could be
a mixed
message,"
said
Judie
Stone,
president
of the
Washington-based
Advocates
for
Highway
and Auto
Safety.
State
transportation
officials
say they
are not
encouraging
people
to get
online
behind
the
wheel.
They say
drivers
should
read
their
tweets
before
hitting
the
road.
In
Washington
state,
for
example,
where
citizens
and
transportation
officials
can
exchange
messages
about
the
latest
traffic,
the feed
includes
regular
reminders
not to
use the
service
while
driving.
"Know
before
you go,"
said one
feed
this
week.
Drivers
should
"check
our Web
site
before
leaving.
If
you're
at your
office,
before
you
leave
and
there's
an issue
on the
roadway,
it might
alter
your
travel
plans
home,"
said
Randy
Ort,
spokesman
for the
Arkansas
Highway
and
Transportation
Department.
The
Arkansas
ban on
texting
while
driving
goes
into
effect
Oct. 1;
this
week,
the
state
became
the
latest
to
provide
road
conditions
via
Twitter,
the
microblogging
service
that
lets
people
read and
send
messages
of 140
characters
or
fewer.

A bill
board
that
encourages
people
not to
text
while
they
drive is
shown in
the
northside
of
Indianapolis,
Thursday,
Sept.
17,
2009.
Indiana
drivers
under
age 18
are
banned
from
using a
cell
phone
while
driving.
(AP
Photo/Michael
Conroy)
Other
places
offering
traffic
information
via
Twitter
include:
California,
Colorado,
Delaware,
the
District
of
Columbia,
Illinois,
Indiana,
Kansas,
Louisiana,
Maine,
Maryland,
Minnesota,
Mississippi,
Missouri,
Nebraska,
New
York,
North
Carolina,
Oregon,
Tennessee,
Texas,
Utah and
Virginia.
The
apparent
conflict
results
from two
arms of
government
with
seemingly
good
intentions:
transportation
departments
that
want to
help
motorists
cope
with
traffic,
and
legislatures
that are
worried
about
the
deadly
consequences
of
distracted
driving.
While
Washington
state
lets
motorists
tweet
about
traffic
conditions,
in most
states
the flow
of
information
is
one-way
— from
state
officials
to
drivers.
Some
states,
such as
New York
and
Indiana,
send
lots of
up-to-the-minute
information.
Others
just
tweet
intermittently,
or
reserve
Twitter
for
emergencies.
Mississippi,
for
example,
intends
to use
its
service
during
hurricane
evacuations.
Maine
has
employed
Twitter
only to
update
drivers
on an
interstate
highway
project
in the
Portland
area.
Nebraska
plans to
use
Twitter
during
winter
weather
emergencies.
Oregon
officials
notify
drivers
about
emergency
road
closings
only.
"We
don't
want
people
reading
their
tweets
while
they're
driving,"
said
Sally
Ridenour,
spokeswoman
for the
Oregon
Department
of
Transportation.
In
Washington
state,
the
6,200
users
can also
request
estimated
travel
times,
mountain
pass
reports
and
waiting
times at
the
Canadian
border.
Some
users
apparently
just
want to
chat.
"Got
home,
got
changed,
now
heading
back to
seattle
for the
Mariners
game.
Keep the
roads
clear
for me
on I90 (at)WSDOT
:-),"
one user
posted
in late
August.
The
reply
from
transit
officials?
"No
promises,
but we
will do
our best
:) Enjoy
the
game!"

Nineteen
states
and the
District
of
Columbia
have
banned
all
texting
while
driving,
and
eight
others
prohibit
texting
by
younger
drivers
only,
according
to the
Governors
Highway
Safety
Association.
Others
want to
know why
traffic
isn't
moving.
"wsdot
any idea
what's
going on
westbound
on 520?
it's
worse
than
rush
hour..,"
a user
posted.
Within a
few
minutes,
officials
responded:
"Yes!
There is
a
disabled
vehicle
just
east of
Lk Wash
Blvd
blocking
right
lane."
That
kind of
exchange,
if
conducted
by
drivers
behind
the
wheel,
troubles
some
safety
experts.
"If
you're
sitting
there
and
trying
to
update
the
world on
the
congestion
you're
in, you
could be
part of
a
collision,"
said
Fairley
Mahlum,
spokeswoman
for the
AAA
Foundation
for
Traffic
Safety.
"Did it
really
matter
that you
needed
to tell
everyone
and
their
brother
what the
situation
is? It's
just not
really
not
worth
it."
The
dangers
of
texting
and
driving
are well
documented.
The
Virginia
Tech
Transportation
Institute
found in
July
that
when
truck
drivers
texted,
their
risk of
a
collision
was 23
times
greater.
Dialing
a cell
phone
and
using or
reaching
for an
electronic
device
raised
the risk
of
collision
about
six
times in
cars and
trucks.
A
17-year-old
Eureka,
Ill.,
high
school
student
was
killed
in June
when she
drove
off the
road
while
sending
a
message
to
friends.
A train
wreck in
California
last
year
left 25
people
dead,
including
the
train
operator,
who was
texting
at the
time.
Seattle
resident
Aaron
Woo
often
checks
traffic
conditions
on his
phone
using
the
Twitter
feed
from the
state's
transportation
department
—
sometimes,
he said,
while
driving.
"I try
not to
use my
phone at
certain
miles
per
hour,"
the
25-year-old
said. "I
try to
be smart
when I'm
using my
phone
when I'm
driving."
Washington
resident
Eric
Zinn
said he,
too,
checks
the
Twitter
traffic
updates
on his
phone,
though
usually
not when
he is
driving.
Does he
worry
other
people
will be
doing it
behind
the
wheel?
"They're
too busy
eating
doughnuts
and
shaving
their
eyebrows
and
screaming
at their
kids,"
he said.
"There's
plenty
of
things
to keep
you
distracted."
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