FEATURES
We need to get smarter about tackling driving whilst talking on a
mobile, not just increase the penalties, writes Alistair
Carmichael.
When Barbara Castle introduced the breathalyser
for testing drink drivers in 1967, she did so in the teeth of fierce opposition.
Drinking and driving was considered acceptable. Today it is regarded as one of
the most dangerously self-indulgent and socially unacceptable activities.
A similar change now needs to happen in the way we think about the use
of mobile phones when driving. The facts are simple. If you use a hand-held
mobile while driving, you are four times more likely to crash.
In 2005,
12 people were killed and 452 people injured in road accidents where a police
officer attended the scene and "driver using mobile phone" was reported as a
contributory factor.
Yet we regard this menace as just another peril of
modern living. Confession time: I have been as guilty as anyone of this, but
now, like a growing number of people and road safety groups, I believe the time
has come to clamp down and to hammer home the message that behaviour has to
change.
Research by the Transport Research Laboratory and the insurer
Direct Line compared the use of a mobile phone while at the wheel with driving
when just over the drink-drive limit. They found reaction times were slower for
drivers using phones, compared with those who had consumed alcohol. The drunk
drivers missed fewer warning signs than drivers using a mobile phone, who were
more likely to respond to the wrong warning signs. A sobering thought and not
only for the drunks.
Since December 2003 it has been illegal in the UK to
use a hand-held mobile phone when driving. In 2004, some 74,000 drivers were
caught on British roads and fined for breaking that law. However, in a recent
survey, 21 per cent of drivers interviewed admitted to using a mobile phone
while driving. This means that only 1 per cent of offenders are being caught and
fined.
The punishment? An average fine of £69. Deterrent? I don't think
so.
For a government keen to dominate the agenda on crime and anti-social
behaviour, it is a less than impressive achievement. So much so, in fact, that
it has now been forced to act and, from 27 February, those caught using a
hand-held mobile phone while behind the wheel will have three penalty points
endorsed on their licence. Any driver with 12 points over a three-year period
becomes liable for a six-month disqualification.
Two cheers, then. For
increasing the penalty will do little to improve detection. We need more traffic
police. But their numbers, in England and Wales, have declined by 5 per cent
since 2000 as ever-greater reliance is placed on speed cameras and other
automated systems. For the Government, the attractions are obvious. Speed
cameras don't need salaries and pensions. But they should never be used as an
alternative to a well trained cadre of traffic police
officers.
Ultimately, the answer lies with us. Just how important is that
call? Is it worth risking your life for? Is it worth risking someone else's
life?
Alistair Carmichael is Liberal Democrat Shadow
Transport Secretary. This article originally appeared in The Independent on 30th
January 2007.




















