Thursday, September 10, 2009

NTSB Practices What It Preaches About Cellphones and Driving


The National Transportation Safety Board has just become the first and only federal agency to ban employees from texting and talking on cellphones while driving on government business. A 3-year-old recommendation to ban cellphone use by school bus and motorcoach drivers has not yet been implemented. No states completely ban cellphone use by drivers.
The federal safety agency that investigates transportation accidents is banning texting and talking on cellphones by its employees while driving on government business.
National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman said Tuesday she's adopting the policy because she wants her agency to follow the same safety practices it recommends for others.
Officials at the board said they were unaware of another federal agency with a similar policy.
Hersman told several hundred employees and guests at a ceremony at which she was sworn in as chairman that she was as hooked on her BlackBerry as the next person.
Nevertheless, she said the "risk of catastrophic consequences is too great" to use wireless devices while driving.
No Ban for School Bus Drivers
Hersman has been a member of the board for five years and was nominated for the chairmanship by President Barack Obama.
The NTSB's 400 employees will no longer be able to text or talk on cellphones while driving during work hours nor while driving during their off-hours if they're using a government-issued wireless device. The policy will apply to board members as well.
The board three years ago recommended that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration prohibit cellphone use by motorcoach and school bus drivers.
The motor carrier agency is still working on implementing the recommendation, according to NTSB's Web site.
Officials for the motor carrier administration didn't return a phone call Tuesday seeking comment.
Summit Scheduled
In 2003, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration recommended that states enact laws prohibiting drivers with learner's permits and intermediate licenses from using cellphones or other texting devices while driving.
Nineteen states have adopted the prohibitions, and six states and the District of Columbia have partial prohibitions.
There are no states that completely ban cellphone use by drivers.
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is scheduled to hold a summit on Sept. 30 of experts to figure out what to do about driver cellphone use and texting, practices that studies -- and a growing number of accidents -- show can be deadly.

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