Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Texting? You may walk to court

- By Isabel Gottlieb Bloomberg News

A growing number of U.S. cities seek to reduce pedestrian fatalities, even if it means outlawing texting on foot.

This really shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone who’s done it: You are just no good at texting and walking.

While you might do OK at the reading and typing part, your preoccupie­d brain isn’t paying enough attention to what’s going on with your feet. It’s such a hazard that Honolulu last month adopted an ordinance to outlaw smartphone use by pedestrian­s crossing streets. Now Stamford, Conn., may become the second U.S. city this year to combat the problem with fines.

“The point is, if you’re on the street and not paying attention, it’s dangerous,” Stamford Mayor David Martin said.

That seems straightfo­rward enough, and there’s research showing texting can result in what’s called distracted walking. John Zelinsky, a member of the Stamford Board of Representa­tives, said he’s confident a proposed cellphone crosswalk ban will be adopted and that once texthappy citizens see cops issuing citations “they will think twice.”

Most U.S. states already ban texting by drivers. But there isn’t unanimous support for dinging foot-travelers in a bid to improve safety. The city council in Honolulu heard from residents, who testified about enforcemen­t hurdles, the impact on tourists and complained about overreach.

Some skeptics wonder if distracted-walking laws are unfair, or even counterpro­ductive. “Sure, people can walk into a risky situation, but that implies that pedestrian­s are often at fault,” said Jonathan Matus, chief executive of Zendrive, a company that uses smartphone sensors to track driving behavior. “I feel like legislatin­g pedestrian distractio­n might give aggressive drivers a scapegoat to blame fatalities on.”

Safety experts point to the numbers: U.S. pedestrian deaths have been on the rise, with 5,376 in 2015 and nearly 6,000 last year, the most in two decades and up 22 percent from 2014, according to data compiled by the Governors Highway Safety Associatio­n for a recent report. (The 2016 total is a projection based on numbers from the first half of that year.)

There are no statistics to show whether texting played a role in any of the fatalities, but “when you keep records for 40 years and see two consecutiv­e years with the back-to-back largest (increase), that tells me there was a game changer,” said Richard Retting, a former traffic safety commission­er for the New York City Department of Transporta­tion who worked on the report. “I don’t think it’s a leap of faith when you look at the increase in cellphone usage.”

Other cities have tried different approaches, with the Los Angeles Police Department launching a “look up, phone down” public informatio­n campaign and Augsburg, Germany, embedding traffic signals into sidewalks so people hunched over mobile devices can spot them.

Laws, though, can change change behavior, according to Retting. “It’s not so much about a draconian measure that has cops hiding behind lampposts, waiting to give people $200 tickets for looking at their phones,” he said. “It shifts what the social norm is in terms of what’s safe.”

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