The new Washington state law against driving while using a cellphone goes into effect on Thursday. You can now be pulled over for talking on your mobile. It’s apparently fine to browse CHS Tweets, however, and to talk on speaker phone. Here are the details from the DOL:
Washington’s new cell phone law takes effect this summer
If you’re driving on the freeway, you can travel more than the length of a football field in the time it takes to read a short text message.
For the past few years, if police pulled you over for a traffic infraction, they also could ticket you if you were holding your cell phone and talking. Now, talking on your cell phone could be the violation that gets you pulled over to begin with.
Starting on June 10, 2010, talking or sending text messages while holding a wireless device will carry a $124 fine, after legislation signed by Gov. Chris Gregoire that changes the current cell phone law into a primary traffic offense.
Type of driver New requirements All drivers Must use hands-free devices, except in emergencies. New drivers with instruction permits or intermediate licenses Not permitted to use wireless devices at all, except in emergencies. Since 2007, holding a cell phone while operating a moving vehicle has been a secondary offense, meaning that officers could only ticket drivers pulled over for another violation. The new law adds hands-on cell phone use as a violation that officers can treat as a primary offense.
Quick facts about cell phone use while driving
- A driver talking on a cell phone is as impaired as a driver with a .08 blood-alcohol level.
- A driver who is texting is as impaired as a driver with a .16 blood-alcohol level. That’s double the legal limit.
- Drivers talking on cell phones are half a second slower to hit the brakes in emergencies and miss more than half the visual cues seen by attentive drivers.
More information
For full detail on new cell phone law, see the Final Bill Report.
I’ll believe it when I see it.
Considering how many people are on their phones and texting driving past my house right now, I doubt many will flat out stop when the law is passed. I hope the cops sped at least a week busting person after person and maybe the word will get out.
Put down the phone and drive, people.
And get the headphones out of your ears and the dog off your lap.