The Day

Mass. lawmakers approve ban on drivers using hand-held cellphones

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Boston — Massachuse­tts drivers would no longer be able to use hand-held cellphones behind the wheel under a bill approved by state lawmakers.

The Senate voted 38-1 in favor of the bill Wednesday. The House approved it on a 153-1 vote Tuesday.

The legislatio­n now heads to Republican Gov. Charlie Baker for his signature. Baker has expressed support for a ban on drivers using handheld cellphones and filed a bill earlier this year that included similar language.

Baker’s press secretary said Wednesday that the governor will carefully review the legislatio­n.

Hands-free cellphones would still be allowed. Massachuse­tts already bans texting while driving. The bill would impose fines of $100 for a first offense, $250 for a second offense and $500 for a subsequent offense.

The bill would also require the Registry of Motor Vehicles

to collect data from traffic stops, including the driver’s age, race and gender without identifyin­g the driver.

The informatio­n would help identify police agencies that may be engaging in racial or gender profiling.

Every other New England state already bans drivers from using hand-held cellphones.

Democratic state Sen. Joseph Boncore, co-chair of the Legislatur­e’s Transporta­tion Committee, said distracted driving claims about 3,000 lives a year in the United States. He said 30% of drivers admit to using the internet or social media while driving.

“These deaths are preventabl­e,” Boncore said during Wednesday’s debate. “Too many parents have lost children. Too many children have lost parents.”

The bill would still allow drivers to view maps generated by a navigation system as long as the electronic device is mounted on the car’s windshield or dashboard. A driver would not be considered to be operating a car if it isn’t moving and not located on a part of a street intended for traffic.

The legislatio­n also states that a driver using a cellphone in response to an emergency can use evidence of the emergency — such as a disabled vehicle, accident or medical emergency — as an affirmativ­e defense to an alleged violation. Nothing in the bill would allow police to seize a cellphone.

Under the bill, a third or subsequent violation would be a considered a surchargea­ble incident under state car insurance policies.

The bill also seeks to curb racial or gender profiling by requiring the collection of data from traffic stops — not just the race, age and gender of the driver, but also the date and time of the offense, the municipali­ty where it occurred, whether there was a search as a result of the stop and whether it resulted in a warning, citation or arrest.

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