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Originally Posted by: Stern  Originally Posted by: stonecold  Originally Posted by: Stern  Originally Posted by: Xavier123  Was aiming for rhetorical reasonably practicable insertion as opposed to laying down a challenge. ;)For some, the demonstrable increase in risk from non-talking hands-free may be too much. For others, not so much.Tis a mildly curious policy. On one hand, accepting hands-free is acceptable. On the other, suggesting you could be prosecuted if you use it post accident, and finding as many ways of reducing its use as possible.I'm not saying I've got a better one of course...just that there is a seeming contradiction. I personally think there is a valid point made around other equivalent distraction events whilst driving so such a contradiction is probably unavoidable given the variety of opinion demonstrated here alone combined with the lack of clear guidance/steer from our overlords. You probably don't have an equivalent policy making passengers responsible for changing radio stations...no-one does!
Just musing to myself, there is a legal point here though is there not? If taking a personal call or turning on the radio, then this is not a work-related activity. Nor part of a business' undertaking. If taking a work call etc., then it is. Work activities will be responsible for the distraction, regardless of the level or impact of that distraction.So whilst some distractions may be equal in impact...theirorigin may not be, legally speaking, if examined after an incident. The 'incident' probably won't be great either way for all involved...
I don't think our policy is contradictory or curious at all. In fact, thinking back to the original thread which was closed, others had very similar policies. It is a policy which i have inherited and which i also worked under at my previous emplpoyer so not that uncommon.
We are not " sugegesting" to our staff that they could be prosecuted for using handsfree, we are telling our staff that you could. We all know that ifa court of law deems you were distracted when you crashed then you could be prosecutedfor careless or dangerous driving. This distraction could be anything from talking to a passenger, changing the radio station, adjusting the AC or using handsfree. All perfectly legal on their own but, if they were found to be the cause of an accident, then they would be used against you.My point is, and always has been, that why is handsfree being singled out when it is, in reality, extremely safe and useful when there are other distractions out there which present a similar degree of risk yetoffer no benefit to a business, such as car radios and CD players?
Having a two way conversation is a lot different to twiddling a nob on a cd player. Cant really compare the two. The thought process is totally different and holding down a conversation has more of a potential to be dangerously distracting.Also I beleive your policy is very contradictory. On one hand, throughout these postings you say handsfree is safe, but on the other hand you have a control measure in your policy advising a reductionin hands free use?If you truly beleive it to be safe surely you wouldnt require such a control measure/ recommendation as the risk would be considered trivial?
I've never once said that using handsfree is completely safe. Nor is changing the radio station, altering the AC or adjusting your seat whilst driving.
What i have said is that talking on an integrated handsfree system which does not require the user to remove their hands from the wheel or take their eyes off the road does not pose enough of a risk to warrant a full ban in the workplace (a decision based on real world studies and accident statistics).
Instead, we ensure that our staff have access to integrated handsfree (not third party aftermarket bolt-on types which require much more manual input to operate), that they only use them for essential business calls and that they are fully aware of the laws surrounding their use. Personally i think that approach is sensible given the level of risk and not at all contradictory. "Having a two way conversation is a lot different to twiddling a nob on a cd player. Cant really compare the two. The thought process is totally different and holding down a conversation has more of a potential to be dangerously distracting."
I agree. Although a quick google search throws up just as many examples of crashes cuased by people changing the radio than using handsfree. And in reality, whilst it's easy to prove someone was on the phone after an accident (phone records rarely lie). it's very difficult to prove that someone was changing the radio station when they crashed so the number of radio related crashes is, i'm sure, much higher than the stats suggest.People are calling for a ban on hands free becuase a person has been killed by someone using it. Now i'm not trying to trivialise this as any loss of life is tragic. However, i have posted links to stories of eight people who have been recently been killed by people fiddling with radios/music players at the wheel yet this seems acceptable?
Yes you did....you said it was safe in post #64, hence my question re your policy. Thanks. Edited by user 24 April 2017 17:56:11(UTC)
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