Distracted Driving 2021-08-16T15:44:51+00:00

 

DISTRACTED DRIVING

TAKE ACTION: SUPPORT HB 283! CONTACT YOUR LEGISLATOR TODAY!

The Case for a Hands-Free Ohio

Despite increased public awareness and education efforts, distracted driving continues to needlessly injure and claim the lives of thousands of Americans every year. Ohio trails the majority of states in enacting primary enforcement hands-free laws and must address this growing concern.

Read the Distracted Driving Case Statement

Fatalities in Ohio have risen six of the past seven years, and overall crashes in Ohio remain persistently high at a time when vehicles themselves are getting safer. In 2020, travel in Ohio was down about 17% and traffic deaths rose 7% compared to 2019. Ohio ended 2020 with 1,237 traffic deaths—82 more than the 1,155 reported in 2019. This rise is directly correlated to more people now having smartphones, leading to an increase in active distraction while behind the wheel. Reducing this active distraction will help save lives.

In an effort to help combat the dangers of distracted driving, FOR Ohio is supporting Governor Mike DeWine’s “Hands-Free Ohio” bill, which is included in House Bill 74 (as introduced), the state’s 2022-23 transportation budget. With limited exceptions, this legislation would make driving while handling any electronic wireless device a primary offense. This includes, but is not limited to, writing, sending, or reading text-based communications; watching or recording videos; taking photos or looking at images; livestreaming; using apps; entering information into GPS navigation programs; dialing phone numbers; or holding a device for a phone call. It would also increase fines for drivers with multiple distracted driving offenses. In cases where a driver using a device causes serious injury or death, the penalties will mirror those for drunken driving.

Read the Official Bill

Vast majority of Ohio drivers favor new statewide hands-free law

2/26/2021 – New public opinion research finds that an overwhelming majority of Ohio drivers (78%) favor a new, statewide hands-free law that prohibits drivers from holding their phone to talk or enter data while driving, but would allow drivers to use voice commands to answer calls and respond to communications.

February 2021 Survey – Summary Memo

February 2021 Survey – Full Presentation

Watch Gov. Mike DeWine’s 2020 Press Event

DISTRACTED DRIVING RESOURCES