Chicago Sun-Times

Injured state trooper’s wife urges drivers to ‘lay down your distractio­ns’

Gov signs bills aimed at better protecting first responders at accident scenes

- BY RACHEL HINTON, POLITICAL REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Standing with the wife of an Illinois state trooper whose life has become an excruciati­ng “roller coaster” of doctors and hospitals since he was struck at an accident scene this year, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislatio­n Thursday that the governor said should serve as a “wake-up call” to motorists.

The three pieces of legislatio­n that Pritzker signed into law all deal with protecting the state’s first responders at accident scenes and other emergency sites. But the governor said the key is for drivers to pay attention and slow down.

“I want to be clear that our strongest asset in protecting our law enforcemen­t is not a law on the books, it’s our people on the ground,” Pritzker said. “This is a wake-up call for every resident of Illinois — your distracted driving could be someone else’s worst nightmare and no text or other distractio­n is worth that.”

Pritzker was joined by the sponsors of the legislatio­n as well as Illinois state troopers in the Illinois State Capitol for the signing. All observed a moment of silence for deceased troopers and Chicago Police Officer Ella French, who was shot and killed over the weekend.

Also attending the solemn billsignin­g ceremony was Lauren Frank, the wife of Illinois State Trooper Brian Frank, who was struck while responding to an accident in February. He suffered a severe traumatic brain injury.

Despite the initial “devastatin­g prognosis” from the doctors, he lived, Lauren Frank said. As of Thursday, Brian Frank remains in a minimally conscious state.

“The roller coaster that we’ve been on for six months has been excruciati­ng, and it was all preventabl­e,” Lauren Frank said in an emotional recounting of the day when “our entire life stood still.”

In the past six months, she and her husband have endured an ordeal of 35 doctors, four hospitals, three brain surgeries, two emergency room visits, 12 ambulance rides and eight weeks of therapy.

While Brian Frank has made “exciting” progress, the “setbacks are devastatin­g, and the unknowns of our future are overwhelmi­ng,” Lauren Frank said.

And she’s had to survive “every heartbreak­ing hour without the reassuranc­e from the one person I love the most that everything is going to be OK.

“He does not intentiona­lly respond to me, and I miss him every day.”

The new laws Pritzker signed on Thursday clarify how a driver should respond when approachin­g an emergency scene on the road. They also require the Illinois Department of Human Services’ Division of Mental Health to create an online resource page with mental health resources specifical­ly geared toward first responders, and allow state courts to order community service as a form of punishment for anyone who violates Scott’s Law.

That 2002 law, named for Chicago Fire Lt. Scott Gillen, who was struck and killed while responding to a traffic accident, requires drivers to slow down and move over when approachin­g a vehicle that has its hazard lights on. Failing to do so could result in a fine up to $10,000.

State Rep. Fran Hurley, D-Chicago, said the measures signed into law Thursday are “just a step toward tightening the screws on Scott’s Law.”

“We can’t legislate bad people from doing evil things,” Hurley said. “We can’t stop all the accidents on the highway but I’m going to try, and

I think everybody that supports police here and first responders will try as well.”

Along with clarifying a driver’s duty to move over and slow down, the legislatio­n Hurley sponsored also creates the Move Over Early Warning Task Force, which will study how to use 21st century technology to better help drivers safely navigate an emergency zone and adds that, if a person violates Scott’s Law while using a cellphone, that will be considered an aggravatin­g factor.

Lauren Frank said she didn’t know much about Scott’s Law until her husband was struck on Interstate 55 near Joliet on Feb. 15.

“The daily grief sits heavily on us as we wait and watch Brian fight for his life to come back to us. And again, this was all preventabl­e,” Lauren Frank said.

She said now Scott’s Law is also Brian’s Law — and Trooper Christophe­r Lambert’s law, Trooper Brooke Jones’ Law and “far too many others to list.”

The new measures that Pritzker signed into law on Thursday make changes so that “we may change our actions and spare the trooper, the trooper wife or husband, parent, sibling, friend,” Lauren Frank said, but it’s also to spare other motorists.

“You don’t want to be the person who walks around with this burden of guilt and responsibi­lity for the rest of your life, knowing that such an accident is preventabl­e,” she said.

“Our first responders count the lives of others as more precious than their own. They risk their lives for us every single day, and the simplest thing that we can do is honor them and count their lives precious, too, by slowing down and getting over ... [first responders] lay down their future, they lay down their life for you.

“So, I’m asking you today, when you get into a vehicle, lay down your distractio­ns. Lay down your hurry, lay down your phone. Lay it down — choose to love one another.”

“OUR FIRST RESPONDERS COUNT THE LIVES OF OTHERS AS MORE PRECIOUS THAN THEIR OWN. THEY RISK THEIR LIVES FOR US EVERY SINGLE DAY, AND THE SIMPLEST THING THAT WE CAN DO IS HONOR THEM … BY SLOWING DOWN AND GETTING OVER.’’ LAUREN FRANK, wife of severely injured Illinois State Trooper Brian Frank

 ?? BLUE ROOM STREAM ?? Lauren Frank, the wife of Illinois State Trooper Brian Frank, who was struck while responding to an accident in February, speaks at a bill-signing ceremony Thursday in Springfiel­d.
BLUE ROOM STREAM Lauren Frank, the wife of Illinois State Trooper Brian Frank, who was struck while responding to an accident in February, speaks at a bill-signing ceremony Thursday in Springfiel­d.

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