Safety Board Urges Banning Cellphone Use by Truckers, Bus Drivers

Federal safety authorities are dialing up efforts to eliminate cellphone use by truckers and other commercial drivers.

The National Transportation Safety Board unanimously recommended on Tuesday banning the nation’s 3.7 million commercial drivers from using cellphones on the road, except in emergency situations.

As The Associated Press reports, the recommendation was approved shortly after the safety board ruled, during a hearing, that a March, 2010 crash in Kentucky that killed 11 people probably was caused by a distracted truck driver who was on his cellphone. The safety board, in a news release, said that the driver used his cell 69 times while driving in the previous 24 hours, and made four calls within minutes of the crash, including one as the accident occurred.

The recommendation by the safety board, which is an advisory body, was sent to federal and state agencies in the hope of spurring action. The proposed rule, an expansion of a previous recommendation by the safety board, would apply not only to hand-held cellphones but also to hands-free devices –  a provision that the trucking industry opposes. Researchers have come to contradictory conclusions about whether hands-free cellphones provide a significant safety advantage.

The U.S. Transportation Department already is considering a proposed ban on the use of hand-held cellphones by interstate truckers and bus drivers.

“Distracted driving is becoming increasingly prevalent, exacerbating the danger we encounter daily on our roadways,” said Deborah Hersman, who heads the safety board. “It can be especially lethal when the distracted driver is at the wheel of a vehicle that weighs 40 tons and travels at highway speeds.”

TIMOTHY BELLA

Related Posts:
Distracted Driving Leads to 25% of Car Crashes, Report Says
Facebooking and Driving Don’t Mix, LaHood Tells Automakers
Driving Distractions Figure in Nearly 5,500 Traffic Deaths

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One comment to “Safety Board Urges Banning Cellphone Use by Truckers, Bus Drivers”

  1. Hamby Hutcheson

    Using such an extreme ‘User Case’ as the basis for a total ban on cell phone use that includes “hands-free” technologies is foolhardy and overreaching to say the least.

    This driver was totally immersed in an overpowering and distracting personal issue and did not need a cell phone to be the ignition point. It could have been just as fatal if it had been an argument with a passenger or co-driver.

    Most Telematics practitioners support 100% any ban on the use of any “hand-held” device/object (phones, make-up, coffee, newspapers, burgers, etc., etc.) in the cabin of a moving vehicle by the driver that causes his hands to be moved from the steering wheel … just as most supported the ban on “suicide knobs” in Commercial Vehicles many years ago.

    This proposal establishes a precedent with far reaching implications. Are company radios next? How about CB radios? Hell, this even sneaks into my private vehicle.

    Proponents of this of ban are pressing forward with highly flawed & questionable data developed by the National Safety Board and promoted by U.S. DOT Secretary Ray LaHood … data which have been proven faulty by numerous studies.

    Respectfully,

    Hamby Hutcheson
    Telematics Expert

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