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Originally Posted by: AcornsConsult Originally Posted by: johnmurray https://trl.co.uk/sites/default/files/PPR592_secure.pdf
My personal observation is that an organisation dealing in safety and welfare, having an argument that effectively implies that distractions while driving are not that bad, is a bit unseemly.....if you look for the research, you will find it.
In any case, being prosecuted for use of a handheld device while driving will land you with a £200 fine and 6 points, at the least. If you kill someone while driving, and the proven cause is distraction due to use of a mobile, you are almost certain to be locked-up (and banned, the period of the ban starts from your release date)
I’ll go out on a limb here and say the final argument is flawed and a red herring on the issue - the EXACT same argument given about use of mobile and having a serious incident applies equally to other distraction such as setting Satnav, smoking, packing a pipe, ref-filling a gap, reading a paper, etc, etc could result in a not in proper control/ due care or dang driving offence. Not so easy to prove but that is another debate.
On a slightly different note and looking at those with a no see company policy- what is the consequence for breaching that policy?any takers on if that is included in the policy?
I'm afraid the argument here is flawed. It is true that drivers engage in all sorts of other distractions, so why pick on the use of phones? The answer is that all of these other things should also be discouraged; several wrongs don't make a right. In the days when I drove south regularly, when the traffic slowed on the M1 somewhere near Watford, out would come the Financial Times in many cars around me. Are they really going to stop reading an article just because the traffic has started moving again?
Perhaps I have a different perspective than most. On a motorcycle, you don't generally have the option to engage in such distracting activities, the majority of them are simply not available, or practicable to try. Yes, there are headsets to use inside a helmet that enable you to converse with others, but the wind noise and interference from other sources renders these unusable most of the time. You can only focus on riding the bike, and need to every second, which is how it should be. Cars have become too easy to drive, allowing people's attention to wander and providing the temptation to do other things at the same time.
Perhaps it is about educating drivers, but if there was a will to do this, the IAM and RoSPA would be getting a lot more customers for advanced driving courses (which I think should be made mandatory at an early stage of driving activities).
We could use the law to try and stop it, but as we all know, there aren't the police resources to enforce it. However, legislation is a blunt instrument, but sometimes it plays a part.
Perhaps the govenment should target the phone companies, where technology could be used or developed to control the issue, but then money talks, as does vested interest.
Increasing the penalties for causing death by dangerous/careless driving would be a start, if only to satisfy the demands of justice.
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1 user thanked biker1 for this useful post.
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