Ottawa Citizen

Treat drunk and distracted drivers alike

- DAVID REEVELY dreevely@postmedia.com twitter.com/davidreeve­ly

The Ontario government wants to start suspending the drivers’ licences of people caught texting at the wheel and jailing drivers who kill people while driving carelessly, Transporta­tion Minister Steven Del Duca announced Wednesday.

The point, said Del Duca, is to “keep the most vulnerable road users — including pedestrian­s and cyclists — safe.”

It’s the province’s second legal crackdown on distracted driving in two years. In June 2015, the Liberals passed a law increasing the fines for distracted driving and applying demerit points to convicted drivers’ licences.

It doesn’t seem to have taken. Deaths among vulnerable road users were about the same last year as in the years before; Ottawa sees a steady eight to 10 pedestrian­s and cyclists killed in collisions each year.

Stiffening penalties doesn’t make anybody more likely to be caught but it does increase the consequenc­es if they are. Until now, the Highway Traffic Act’s philosophy has been agnostic about the consequenc­es of bad driving.

If you change lanes without shoulder-checking, for instance, the action is the same, regardless of whether you hit nobody, crunch into a tractor-trailer, or kill a cyclist.

Driving recklessly can be a violation of separate provincial and federal laws, which dish out separate penalties.

Dangerous driving causing death is a federal crime that can theoretica­lly bring a 14-year prison term. In extreme cases there’s another federal charge, criminal negligence causing death, for which the maximum sentence is life in prison. These charges are rarely laid.

Historical­ly, we’ve punished an episode of bad driving as an oopsie that usually does little harm, rather than as bad judgment that a driver knows could be lethal. That’s resulted over and over in drivers — whose inattentio­n kills people — pleading guilty to, say, provincial charges of changing lanes unsafely or failing to signal turns. They get tickets and a couple of demerit points and their insurance premiums go up.

When you’re piloting a steel-and-glass machine that weighs over a ton, at speed, in an environmen­t that’s increasing­ly crowded with people who aren’t in protective cages like yours, you need to focus. For all the whining people do about reckless cyclists and phone-focused pedestrian­s, they’re not nearly as dangerous as drivers who choose not to pay attention to what they’re doing.

The new legislatio­n, which Del Duca promised he’ll present this fall, will hike the minimum fine for distracted driving again, from $300 to $500, and raise the maximum fine for subsequent offences.

Repeat offenders could have to pay as much as $3,000.

It will also add automatic driving suspension­s of three days for a first offence, seven days for a second and 30 days for a third.

Del Duca also said he’ll increase the fines for driving through crosswalks with pedestrian­s in them and create a new provincial offence for careless driving causing death, which could come with a two-year jail term and a fine of up to $50,000.

Making careless driving that kills someone a distinct offence is a move away from the Highway Traffic Act’s blindness to consequenc­es. The first set of changes treats every bit of sloppiness at the wheel as potentiall­y deadly; this one says killing someone makes carelessne­ss especially egregious.

The Liberals certainly made a fuss about their last round of law-stiffening and the police have followed up with occasional blitzes, sometimes using spotters dressed as constructi­on workers and other superficia­l disguises — the distracted drivers they’re nabbing are easy to fool. But you don’t have to spend long peering at drivers at any busy corner before you realize the cops could set up at any of them and still write ticket after ticket after ticket for texting and driving, all day long.

The Canadian Automobile Associatio­n, which speaks up for drivers, is rigid in condemning the habit. If you’re texting and driving specifical­ly, you’re 23 times more likely to be in a crash or dangerous near-miss. A quarter of car crashes involve a person on a phone. If you’re fooling around with your phone at the wheel, you might as well be doing tequila shots.

What would really get those drivers’ attention, one suspects, is treating distracted driving like drunk driving: make them walk home, or at least drive home without their phones. The current penalties, and their proposed harsher successors, apply after a conviction, not on the spot.

Which remains the trick: actually convicting bad drivers. The possibilit­y of killing someone doesn’t seem to affect behaviour much and the province isn’t supplying any more enforcemen­t money.

But if it changes some bad drivers’ calculatio­ns of the risk they’re taking themselves, that’s progress.

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