The Department of Transportation recently launched a national campaign to stop texting while driving and other distracted driving hazards.
OSHA recommends employers send a clear message to workers and supervisors that the employer neither requires nor condones texting while driving by:
- Prohibiting texting while driving — declare vehicles “text-free zones” and emphasize that commitment to their workers, customers, and communities
- Establishing work procedures and rules that do not make it necessary for workers to text while driving in order to carry out their duties
- Setting up clear procedures, times, and places for drivers’ safe use of texting and other technologies for communicating with managers, customers, and others
- Incorporating safe communications practices into worker orientation and training
- Eliminating financial and other incentive systems that encourage workers to text while driving
OSHA provides some startling statistics regarding distracted driving:
- Distracted driving crashes killed more than 3,000 people and injured 416,000 in 2010
- Reaction time is delayed for a driver talking on a cell phone as much as it is for a driver who is legally drunk
- More texting leads to more crashes — with each additional 1 million text messages, fatalities from distracted driving rose more than 75%
- People under the age of 20 are involved in more fatal crashes due to distractions than any other age group
- Studies show that drivers who send or receive text messages focus their attention away from the road for an average of 4.6 seconds – at 55 mph, this is equivalent to driving the length of a football field blindfolded
As of May 2014, the Insurance Institute For Highway Safety reports that:
- Talking on a hand-held cellphone while driving is banned in 12 states (California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington, and West Virginia) and the District of Columbia
- The use of all cellphones by novice drivers is restricted in 37 states and the District of Columbia
- Text messaging is banned for all drivers in 43 states and the District of Columbia. In addition, novice drivers are banned from texting in 4 states (Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas)
Be safe!
Additional Resources: OSHA, Distracted Driving: No Texting; U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety & Health Administration, Distracted Driving; Insurance Institute For Highway Safety, Distracted Driving (Summary of State Laws)
Photo: Mike Kline – Creative Commons