Driving Teens Ignore Ban, Use Cell Phones
January 7, 2009 by Gary Sides
There’s a state ban on cell phone use for drivers under 18, but they seem to use cell phones with the same frequency as before the ban, a new traffic safety study suggests.
The ban is part of the state’s graduated licensing program, designed to limit distractions and risky behavior that can get young drivers into trouble.
In spring 2007, five months after the law took effect in December 2006, reseachers saw teen drivers talking on their phones at about the same frequency as in fall 2006, before the ban was implemented. Researchers parked outside 25 high schools and watched as teens drove away in the afternoon to see how many were talking on their phones.
It’s not surprising to find that teen drivers haven’t stopped using their cell phones, says Robert D. Foss, a senior research scientist with the Highway Safety Research Center at UNC Chapel Hill. The 2006 law has not been widely publicized. Police enforcement also is sporadic, because officers, like the UNC researchers, can’t be sure whether a cell phone-using driver is 18 or younger.
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