Pennsylvania Anti-Texting Law Begins March 8



We fail so much at not texting while driving that we need a law to remind us to drive while they're driving

Pennsylvania Anti-Texting Law Begins March 8Texting drivers, take note: in the very near future, your haphazard multitasking of texting while driving will land you a $50 fine should you get caught doing it in Pennsylvania. A new law prohibiting text-based communication while driving in the Keystone State will go into effect exactly one minute after the stroke of midnight, 12:01 AM, March 8.
“Your most important job when behind the wheel is to focus only on driving. Most people would never close their eyes for five seconds while driving, but that’s how long you take your eyes of the road, or even longer, every time you send or read a text message,” Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Secretary Barry J. Schoch said. “It’s not just your own life you’re risking; it’s the lives and safety of every motorist around you.”
The law, while targeting the reckless habit of texting from behind the wheel, doesn’t exclude other smartphone-equipped services like checking your email or even browsing the internet. The new law specifically does the following:


  • Makes it a primary offense to use an Interactive Wireless Communication Device (IWCD) to send, read or write a text-based message.





  • Defines an IWCD as a wireless phone, personal digital assistant, smartphone, portable or mobile computer or similar devices that can be used for texting, instant messaging, emailing or browsing the Internet.





  • Defines a text-based message as a text message, instant message, email or other written communication composed or received on an IWCD.





  • Institutes a $50 fine for convictions.





  • Makes clear that this law supersedes and preempts any local ordinances restricting the use of interactive wireless devices by drivers.



  • According to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation’s website, the penalty for breaking the anti-texting law is a summary offense but obstinate text-and-drivers will at least get one break should they get caught: the police won’t seize your phone.
    Additionally, the law will not prohibit the use of GPS devices.
    “This is a serious problem and we are hoping that we can educate citizens on the dangers of texting while driving and prevent future accidents,” said State Police Commissioner Frank Noonan. “Our troopers will attempt to use observations of the driver while the vehicle is in motion to determine if traffic stops are warranted. An example might be the motorist continues to manipulate the device over an extended distance with no apparent voice communication.
    “Ultimately, we hope that our enforcement efforts will create voluntary compliance by the majority of motorists,” Noonan said.
    In 2010, there were nearly 14,000 crashes in Pennsylvania where distracted driving played a role, with 68 people dying in those crashes.
    As if to pronounce the texting-while-driving epidemic, the phenomenon has its own Wikipedia page replete with a list of laws by location around the world. In other words, we officially lose at driving.