December 01 2009
Simulator Shows Teens Hazards Of Distracted Driving
Tagged Under : car accident, cell phone, distracted driving, Jefferson County, kentucky, text messaging, texting, texting and driving
We all know that the dangers of texting and driving. It is obvious. In Kentucky we now have a simulator which demonstrates the dangers of texting and driving. The simulator can be requested from the Office of Highway Safety and is free to the schools. It has not been used in Jefferson County but I hope our schools will take advantage of the program. This new program has been developed to demonstrate the problems and many dangers of texting and driving to high school students. This is presented for no charge by the Kentucky office of Highway Safety.
Individuals are strapped into an arcade-type racing game. The simulator has a seat equipped with a seatbelt, a gas pedal and a brake pedal. There is also a steering wheel and a gearshift. You have three screens in front of you that gives the operator an 180?degree view of a roadway. The driver is requested to operate or drive normally. They are then handed a cell phone and asked to send a text message while they can continue to drive the simulator.
When they are handed the cell phone it usually sends the car swerving into another lane. Drivers are allowed to watch a replay of their simulation. When students are shown the simulation replay they see themselves swerving when they thought they were actually driving okay. Distracted driving has become the leading cause of crashes among 16 to 21 years old. Texting and driving is a big, big part of this.
The US Department of Transportation has banned all federal employees from texting and driving on federal-issued or personal phones while in vehicles owned by the federal government or in vehicles being used on federal business. This includes the military. Although the federal government may be the most recent, the National Safety Council indicates that hundreds of private companies and organizations have banned the use of cell phones while driving to reduce accidents at work.
This needs to be the law in Kentucky and should be the number one priority at the next Kentucky legislative session. The word is getting out in Kentucky partly thanks to Nicole Meredith, who is a teen. She wrecked her car on the Gene Snyder last summer when she was texting a friend. As she was texting she went off the road and totaled her car. Miraculously she walked away from the crash without injuries. Meredith has told her story in Frankfort to help kickoff the Transportation Department’s distracted driving campaign. Hopefully there will be more than just a campaign and soon no text messaging behind the wheel will be the law in Kentucky.
The statistics are one of the many compelling reasons to make this ban the law in Kentucky. Some of these statistics are:
· Distraction from the use of a cell phone while driving delays driver-reaction time
· Use of cell phone reduces brain activity associated with driving by 37 percent.
· 80 percent of all crashes are related to driver inattention. The use of a handheld device increases the likelihood of a crash four times.
· In 2008 nearly 6,000 people died in crashes involving an inattentive or distracted driver.
· Research shows that the youth are the worst offenders.
Believe it or not there were 53,000 distracted driving-related crashes last year in Kentucky. Link Kentucky kicks off campaign to cut down on distracted driving. Governor Steve Beshear is considering a policy that would limit distracted driving for all state employees. Do we really need to have to tell them that it’s time to make this the law? I hope Kentucky follows suit with Colorado. Their new law dictating how you use your cell phone while driving takes effect December 1, 2009. After this date no one under the age of 18 will be allowed to talk on a phone while driving. Everyone will be banned from texting while driving.
Let’s hope Kentucky is next and a ban on text messaging while driving will be law in Kentucky in the near future. This will help to precent car accidents on our Kentucky roads.



