The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More Southern drivers using cellphones

App tracks driving habits across U.S., shows safety needs.

- By Tim Henderson Stateline.org

WASHINGTON — Midwestern­ers are the safest drivers, while Northeaste­rners speed the most and Southern drivers are most likely to use cellphones while driving.

Or so new results from a mobile applicatio­n carried by drivers on their smartphone­s over millions of miles between April 2016 and March 2017 suggest.

The difference­s in regional and even state-by-state driving habits cast new light on recent statistics that show the most dramatic two-year increase in road-related fatalities in decades, and add fuel to the debate over the effect state laws and enforcemen­t play in making travel on streets and highways less dangerous.

Everquote, an online insurance marketplac­e, drew its conclusion­s on regional driving habits from informatio­n gathered during 2.7 million car trips over 230 million miles by users of its Everdrive app, for customers who want to gauge and improve their safety habits. The app uses smartphone components to detect speeding, as well as signs of distractio­n such as phone use and sudden stops, turns and accelerati­on, said CEO Seth Birnbaum.

Birnbaum said he suspects Everdrive users are safer than average, because downloadin­g the app shows an interest in safe driving habits. That even those people speed on 36 percent of their trips and use phones on 38 percent of them is a sign that “we have even further to go as a nation in addressing these issues than we thought,” he said.

Almost everyone breaks the rules sometimes, even when they know an app is recording what they do. But some do it more than others.

Mississipp­i drivers use their phones, either for talking or texting, on almost half their trips. Drivers from Rhode Island, Connecticu­t, Hawaii and New Hampshire break the speed limit by 10 mph or more on more than half their trips. California and New Jersey drivers stop short the most, and also do the most risky accelerati­ng. West Virginia and North Carolina drivers make the most abrupt turns.

Some of the difference­s may be explained by state laws. Few Southern states, for example, have blanket laws that ban the use of cellphones while driving, according to an assessment of state laws this month by the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Lower speed limits in the Northeast may make it easier to get caught speeding.

In its March report on a projected record 11 percent increase in pedestrian fatalities for 2016, the Governors Highway Safety Associatio­n pointed to an increase in driving after the recession, as well as more distractio­ns from growing cellphone use by drivers and pedestrian­s, as the likely causes.

Local driving habits and even engineerin­g can make a difference in safety, some traffic analysts say. States that developed after World War II are more dangerous to pedestrian­s because roads were often built for the convenienc­e of drivers, said Peter Norton, a technology historian at the University of Virginia.

That could help explain why Florida has a high rate of pedestrian fatalities. Florida drivers also seem to be a talkative bunch when behind the wheel, which can be distractin­g. They rank second on Everquote’s list of states with the largest proportion of drivers using phones while driving. Florida also has a high share of elderly drivers: 22 percent are 65 and over, second only to West Virginia, according to national figures.

“Florida is a state built around driving, which means pedestrian­s are unexpected intruders from an alien planet,” Norton said. “In places where roads are older than cars — especially the Northeast and the Midwest — driving hasn’t taken over to the same degree. You expect people on sidewalks and crossings more, and walkers have better and safer conditions.”

Beyond Florida and Mississipp­i, drivers in the Southern states of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina and Tennessee also use their phones more on the road than do drivers in other parts of the nation — on 41 to 44 percent of their trips, according to the Everquote data.

Like cities in Florida, many elsewhere in the South are surrounded by suburban sprawl. And Norton said long commutes from the exurbs can tend to force people to do more in their cars.

“When you design worlds around driving, where you can’t do anything without driving, you’re implicitly telling people that they have to do everything in the car — eat, groom themselves, cancel appointmen­ts,” he said.

The Midwest may appear to be a safer place to be on the road because population­s there are older, which means they may be more experience­d drivers and less likely to be cellphone-dependent, Norton said.

And in big, wide-open spaces where speed limits are high and drivers few and far between, there appears to be less speeding. Montana drivers, for instance, had the lowest rates for speeding at 17 percent, followed by Alaska and North Dakota at 20 percent. Montana and North Dakota drivers also had the lowest rates for abruptly braking and speeding up.

Hard braking — one sign of distracted driving — is highest in California and New Jersey, two states known for traffic-clogged roads. There, drivers displayed hard braking in about two out of five trips. Yet abrupt turns — another possible sign of inattentio­n — were most common in rural West Virginia (26 percent) and North Carolina (20 percent).

West Virginia banned all use of hand-held cellphones while driving in 2012, and the state credited a drop in fatalities in subsequent years to it. North Carolina, however, has no blanket ban.

There are indication­s that increased regulation may play a role in diminishin­g some bad driving habits.

Vermont had the lowest rate of cellphone use on the road at 27 percent. Dick Mazza, Democratic chairman of the state Senate’s transporta­tion committee, said that’s no accident. The state banned all hand-held cellphone use while driving in 2014, and has since extended it to cars stopped at lights. It’s also increased fines for using phones in roadwork zones.

“We even put police officers up on snow plows so they can look down and see who’s got phones on their laps out of view,” Mazza said. “It got to be a very serious problem in our small state, and we’re putting a big emphasis on it.”

Still, fatalities are up in the state as nearly everywhere else, albeit slightly.

In contrast, state police in Mississipp­i have complained that anti-texting laws in their state lack teeth. The state has no ban on talking on the phone while driving, except for school bus drivers.

Kansas, one of several states that launched a crackdown on speeding in late 2016, had the largest drop in speeding rates, down to 23 percent of trips in 2017 from from 27 percent in 2016, according to Everquote’s findings. But Everquote also warns that its 2016 data may not be comparable to the newest data because fewer people were using the app then. Not everyone agrees that distractio­n from new technology is to blame for the recent spike in road-related deaths. Russ Rader, spokesman for the industry-funded Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, said other factors are more likely to blame.

“Other things are happening that make driving riskier,” Rader said. “Teens, the riskiest drivers, are coming back into the driving force, and many states are raising speed limits. Study after study shows that increased speeds make crashes more likely, and the crashes that happen are more severe.”

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? The difference­s in regional and even state-by-state driving habits cast new light on recent statistics that show the most dramatic two-year increase in road-related fatalities in decades, and add fuel to the debate over the effect state laws and...
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM The difference­s in regional and even state-by-state driving habits cast new light on recent statistics that show the most dramatic two-year increase in road-related fatalities in decades, and add fuel to the debate over the effect state laws and...

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