The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New law frees teen drivers to use their phones in the same ways as adults.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

For years, most Georgia teenagers have been prohibited from using phones and other wireless devices while driving.

That’s about to change, and some safety advocates aren’t happy about it.

Georgia’s new distracted driving law treats teenagers and adults alike — it prohibits them from holding their phones while driving. But they can use their phones for some purposes if they’re using hands-free technology.

The new law replaces 2010 statutes that treated teens and adults differentl­y. They prohibited anyone 18 and older from texting while driving and banned any driver under 18 from using an electronic device at all.

Natalie Bacho lobbied for the new law. She said it’s an improvemen­t over the old one in many ways. But she still thinks teen drivers should be prohibited from using phones.

Bacho’s daughter, Abby, died in a 2012 crash when an 18-year-old driver who was talking on the phone ran a red light. Bacho said young people are especially vulnerable to the allure of electronic devices.

“Those kids have never known a time in their life without some form of entertainm­ent in their hands,” she said.

Research supports her concern. According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, teens have the highest automobile crash rate of any group in the country. The foundation found some form of distractin­g behavior was involved in 59 percent of teen crashes it examined from 2007-2015.

State Rep. John Carson, R-Marietta, sponsored the new Georgia law. He said eliminatin­g the distinctio­n between teen and adult drivers will make the distracted driving statute easier to enforce.

That’s because police say it’s hard to tell at first glance whether a driver is 18 and allowed to use a phone or 17 and prohibited from doing so. Eliminatin­g the distinctio­n means anyone with a phone in their hand is violating the new law.

Carson acknowledg­ed allowing teens to use their devices hands-free could be construed as loosening the distracted driving statute. But he said teen drivers were using their phones anyway, and the old law was hard to enforce.

Nonetheles­s, Carson said he may revisit the issue with new legislatio­n next year.

In the meantime, Bacho urged parents to set a good example for teen drivers by putting down their phones while driving.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States