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The trend is
to consider hand-held cell phone use a driver distraction and a
contributing cause of many accidents.
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| California and Washington State join
Connecticut, the District of Columbia, New Jersey, New
York, and the U.S. Virgin Islands in completely banning
the use of hand-held cell phones while driving. |
By RTO Online Guest Contributors Ralph G. Martinez & Ed Rigsbee
bio
Editor's note: To be effective, Rent to Own professionals must
keep in constant contact with customers. This often involves
running a route and working the phone. Cell phones allow us to
combine these activities, increasing renewal efficiency and
improving our relationships with customers. This increased
efficiency must be balanced to insure the added benefit does not
come at the cost of distracted drivers or increased liability.
If your employee is punching in a
telephone number or raising their cell phone to their ear while
driving, you might be liable. A growing number of states in the
USA and several foreign countries are making it a crime to use a
cell phone while driving unless one’s cell phone operates "hands
free" or has a "hands free" device.
On July 1, 2008 law enforcement officers in two more states,
Washington and California, began writing citations to drivers
who do not comply with the "hands free" cell phone law. In California, a ticket now costs
a driver that violates the law $25 for the first offense and $50
for each violation thereafter. Drivers that are minors are
prohibited entirely from using a cell phone or a "mobile device"
while driving. What is your company’s current, and written,
policy on cell phone use while driving on the job?
States Adopting New Laws
California and Washington State join Connecticut, the District
of Columbia, New Jersey, New York, and the U.S. Virgin Islands
in completely banning the use of hand-held cell phones while
driving. Even more states prohibit minors from using a cell
phone at all when driving. Seventeen states and the District of
Columbia in the United States have adopted laws that deny cell
phone use to driving minors.
If you travel outside of the United States, you will recognize a
similar pattern. Twenty-five foreign countries have laws that
restrict or completely ban the use of hand-held cell phones
while driving. Australia, Austria, Britain, Brazil, Chili,
Denmark, Germany, Greece, Israel, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Philippines, Romania, Singapore, Slovenia,
South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and Turkey have
taken action to restrict the use of cell phones in cars.
If your state or country does not restrict using a cell phone in
cars, you can anticipate that soon they will.
The trend across civilized society is to consider hand-held cell
phone use a driver distraction and a contributing cause of many
accidents. Many states that have not enacted a "hands free" cell
phone law have been gathering collision data where cell phone
use was involved. It is a reasonable that law makers will use
this accumulated data to sell the need for a restriction or ban
of hand-held cell phones in cars. Some states have declined to
enact a restrictive use law, but have defined the use of cell
phones in cars as a "careless driving"[1] or defined the use of
a cell phone while driving within the definition of
"distraction."[2]
Productivity and Connectedness
Technological advances improve our productivity and
connectedness. Drivers across the United States redeem some of
their driving time each day by staying connected with parents,
children, and friends during their commute. Many also conduct
business by telephone during these long commute or travel times.
In decades past, you would have to pull over to the side of the
highway when you found a telephone booth or a pay telephone.
This may return as the preferred way to stay connected in route,
particularly for driving minors. Technology may give us
advantages, but they sometimes bring unexpected changes in our
lifestyle. The law all over the world is responding to the
increased number of accidents that involve drivers being
distracting on a cell phone. The law is merely catching up to
the new risk introduced by new technology that has been embraced
and exploited by all of us.
Higher Potential Liability for Employers
The protection of these new safety laws also creates new risks
for you, the businesses owners and leaders in the United States
and elsewhere. In most areas of the United States, if an
employee violates a safety law while involved in a car accident
on the job, they and their employer may be held negligent, even
if they are otherwise driving well. Generally the concept is
referred to as negligence per se. Lawyers use the principle of
negligence per se as a shortcut to establish liability in law
suits to win damages for people injured in accidents. The new
wave of cell phone laws are safety laws designed to eliminate
distractions and prevent accidents. Depending on the extent of
the injuries, this financial risk to an employer could be very
substantial. If the cited employee driver has violated the cell
phone law before, significant punitive damages could be assessed
against the employer. Negligence per se as a principle will be
used more frequently in personal injury cases when a driver was
using a cell phone.
Employee Handbook and Written Policy
As an employer, you should adopt a written policy and/or amend
their employee handbook to require strict compliance by their
employees with the "hands free" cell phone law that is adopted
by their country, state, county or township, or city by all
employees. Many businesses may instruct their employees not to
use cell phones while driving and to let incoming calls go to
voicemail to be returned outside of the car in a safe area. If
your business issues cell phones to its employees, or
necessarily requires the use of a cell phone by its employees,
make sure that the cell phones can be used "hands free." Note
that a cell phone that has a speaker phone function will not
necessarily comply with the law. Employers who hire employees
under age 18 should prohibit their use of a cell phone in a car.
The policy should be acknowledged by employees in writing and
enforced by the company. An attorney can help your business
assess the specific risk to it and how to protect against that
risk with an appropriate policy and implemented management
practice. We have developed a policy and are helping many
businesses protect against this new risk from this new safety
law. Adjusting to these developments not only will allow you
drive more safely on the highways, but to continue with your
business efforts – in both cases, undistracted.
About the Authors
Ralph G. Martinez is an attorney and the principal of Martinez
Law Group, Inc., a California business and real estate law firm.
Martinez has
been practicing law for 30 years. In addition to his state-wide
network of clients, Ralph Martinez has represented individuals
and businesses across the United States, Mexico, Canada, Central
America, Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia. Mr. Martinez
writes a blog to entrepreneurs and small businesses on the
Internet through his website.
Ed Rigsbee, Certified Speaking Professional, has been fumbling,
bumbling, and stumbling his way through the organizational mazes
of for-profits and non-profits for over four decades. Ed has authored three books and over 1,500
articles helping organizations to take full advantage of their
potential. Contact Ed, get additional (no charge) resources, and
sign up for his complimentary weekly Effective Executive eLetter
at www.Rigsbee.com.
[1] Utah 's law defines careless driving as committing a moving
violation (other than speeding) while distracted by use of a
hand-held cell phone or other activities not related to driving.
[2] Michigan deals with this issue by defining cell phone use as
a "distraction" in a comprehensive "distraction" law.
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only independent source of news for the rent-to-own, rental-purchase,
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