R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Drivers ignoring mobile phone laws

Tougher penalties not working

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com 01 Feb 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

The Local Authority Road Safety Officers' Association claims that drivers are largely ignoring tough new penalties for using a mobile phone while driving.

Penalties for talking on a non-hands-free mobile phone were increased in January from £30 to £60 with an additional three penalty points.

While every member of the Association thought this was a good idea, three quarters said it was ineffective.

Malcolm Burns, chairmen of the Association, said: "The message here is that the tougher penalties are clearly not having the intended effect. Our members are continuing to see people flaunting the law by using mobile phones while driving.

"Using a hand-held phone behind the wheel means that you are not concentrating 100 per cent on driving and that is putting your own life at risk and the lives of other road users.

"Even using a phone with a hands-free kit means you are not paying full attention and we urge drivers to take advantage of voicemail systems and switch their phone off before starting any journey."

Around 85 per cent of the Association's members thought that mobile phones were the most dangerous distraction for drivers, worse than smoking or listening to music. Over 90 per cent called for the police to be much tougher in enforcing the law.

David Frost, press and PR spokesman for the Association, said: "At the moment a significant number of drivers are choosing to ignore the ban as they consider there isn't a big enough chance of them being caught.

"We know that the police are working hard to enforce the legislation where they can, but we believe that the government needs to provide more resources to allow the law to be enforced."

See also:

Strong home sales predicted for China's 3G standard  10 Jan 2008
Silicon Valley geek led astray  04 Jan 2008
Mobile-using driverIt's good to talk, but not when you're driving  02 Jan 2008
Using a sat-nav, phone or MP3 player could lead to prison sentence  20 Dec 2007
With great power comes great responsibility ...  05 Dec 2007

All Mobile Communications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
London, United Kingdom | London School of Economics
  IT Services -Systems Specialist  (Business Continuity), Salary: £38,212 - £44,264 p.a. 2 years fixed-term LSE is a cosmopolitan community in the centre of London focusing on the study of the social sciences. IT Services ... more >
United Kingdom | S4C
  Datblygydd Delphi - Oracle - Delphi - Oracle Developer Datblygydd Delphi - Oracle Mae S4C yn gwahodd ceisiadau ar gyfer y swydd uchod a leolir o fewn y Gyfarwyddiaeth Darlledu a Dosbarthu. Dylai fod ... more >
London, United Kingdom | Mulvaney Capital Management Limited
     Senior SQL Developer - Hedge Fund - London, Competitive Experienced SQL based database developer sought to join systematic trading group. The role will focus initially on all aspects of market  data collection and database design, programming ... more >
Hove, United Kingdom | Brighton & Hove City Council
 Assistant Director / Head of ICT, c£75k plus relocation, Hove  Technology has a huge part to play in people's lives. It empowers them, supports them, sets them free and makes their lives easier in a million ... more >
More job opportunities