Talking while driving a hazard to all
A bill to end the threat should become law
It’s an all too common sight on Iowa roads: a driver with a phone pressed to their ear, chatting away while their vehicle weaves in and out of its lane.
Such action could be the beginning of a crash and, in a worst case scenario, a tragedy.
Just how bad is this kind of distracted driving situation? The Iowa Department of Transportation recently preliminary numbers for 2021 that answer that question.
According to those statistics, there were 1,084 crashes in Iowa that year caused by people distracted by an electronic device. Those crashes killed 11 people and injured at least 469 others.
For three years now, state Rep. Ann Meyer, R-Fort Dodge, has introduced a bill intended to help stop that carnage. Her proposal would prohibit talking on a handheld phone while driving or using any other electronic device while behind the wheel unless it is in a hands-free or voice activated mode. Meyer introduced that bill again this year.
Unfortunately, her common sense legislation has once again ground to a halt in the House of Representatives.
The good news is that a very similar bill gained traction and is advancing in the state Senate.
We think it’s past time for it to be approved.
We urge the Legislature to pass this potentially life-saving bill this year and we call on Gov. Kim Reynolds to sign it into law.
We realize that drivers who are on a hands-free or voice activated phone can become so distracted that they could end up crashing. But we believe people looking at their phones, driving with just one hand on the steering wheel, or worse, neither hand on the wheel, is a far greater hazard. This bill would address that hazard, so it should become the law of Iowa.
