This may come as a shocker to many Californians, but fewer motorists appear to
be using hand-held cellphones as they drive along state highways and city
streets.In a survey released Wednesday by the Office of Traffic Safety, the
percentage of drivers using GT-I9300
cellphones -- hand-held or hands free -- has fallen from 10.8
percent in 2012 to 7.4 percent this year. The largest drop, 33 percent, was from
those holding a cellphone to their ear in violation of state law.
But at
the same time, the number of motorists who take their eyes off the road when
texting rose to 2.5 percent from 1.7 percent. While that may not seem like a
lot, safety officials warn it is a troubling trend especially since it is harder
to detect a texting driver who often will hold their phone in their lap and out
of sight. "It's discouraging to see that texting is still significantly higher
than in 2011," said OTS spokesman Chris Cochran.
The Highway Patrol and
250 police departments across the state issued 57,000 GT-I9500
cellphone tickets in April during the annual monthly crackdown.
That GT-I9300 is the same number as a year ago and 21,000 more than the 36,000
issued in a typical month.ds2wfdD2
The survey involved sending teams of
watchers to highway offramps and intersections in 17 counties from February
through April. They observed 6,099 drivers and attempted to judge their GT-I9500
cellphone use.The study admits the results are likely the low-end indicators
because of the short, limited view observers had of whether a driver was using a
phone, especially for texting.
"Based on our experiences with the
high-visibility enforcement model being employed in California, we'd expect
hand-held use to be declining. ... But just as we saw with seat belts and drunk
driving, it will take some time for a broad cultural change to occur in which
using a cellphone while driving is rarely seen." Walter Brem, of El Cerrito,
says he sees fewer people using their cellphones but isn't ready to say the
problem has greatly eased.
"I see a lot of people in my rearview mirror
and in front of me with their heads down," he said. "Now what can that
suggest?"And Keith Thompson, of Newark, when asked if he thought fewer people
were distracted by their cellphones replied emphatically: "No!"
"For many
people the cellphone becomes the center of their attention," he added. "Not good
while driving a car." Alameda County Sgt. Tom Rodrigues issued top 10 cell
phones cellphone tickets on Tuesday and two more on Wednesday --
one to a woman who was arguing with her husband via texts."People are not
getting the clue," Rodrigues said. "Both GT-I9300 cellphone use and texting are
still a big problem. Even with all the (citations) written, people still don't
get it. This is in epidemic proportion as of late. People are still talking and
texting, like never before."
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