Close X
Thursday, December 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hand-Held Cellphone Driving Convictions Over 4,300, Six Years After Law Change

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jul, 2016 12:29 PM
  • Hand-Held Cellphone Driving Convictions Over 4,300, Six Years After Law Change
REGINA — The minister responsible for Saskatchewan Government Insurance says convictions for hand-held cellphone use while driving are high in part because of better enforcement.
 
However, Don McMorris also admits too many people are still breaking the law.
 
Legislation banning the use of hand-held cellphones while driving became law Jan. 1, 2010, in Saskatchewan.
 
SGI says there were just over 1,800 convictions that year and the number kept climbing to reach about 4,900 in 2014, before dropping back slightly last year to 4,300.
 
McMorris says there are more police officers on the road and they've learned how to better spot when people are using their hand-held phones while driving.
 
Still, he says the numbers are not acceptable and he hopes public education campaigns will help inform people about the danger.
 
"And now it's just a matter of the people that are driving doing their job," says McMorris.
 
"You hear of stories, and you wonder, man, was that person texting and if they were, how devastating that is when you look at a fatal accident."
 
Distracted driving surpassed impaired driving as the number one contributing factor in fatal crashes in 2012, but McMorris says it's now ranked third behind impaired driving and speeding.
 
McMorris says he still sees people using their hand-held cellphone while driving, such as while stopped at a red light.
 
"It drives me nuts," he says.
 
"You know people are getting away from holding the phone to the ear because they know that's too obvious, so they're texting down below and their eyes are down.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity

Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity
Ted McMeekin wrote in a Facebook post Monday that he will continue to serve as minister until Premier Kathleen Wynne names a replacement.

Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity

Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man

Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man
A 24-year-old Salmon Arm man is on trial in B.C. Supreme Court, charged with first-degree murder in the death of Tyler Myers in November 2008.

Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man

Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut

Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut
  Police say the toddler from Chesterfield Inlet along the west coast of Hudson Bay was attacked Monday afternoon.

Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut

Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor
The federal Liberals are considering a system that could see Ottawa — as well as other levels of government — sell infrastructure assets under their jurisdiction.

Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns
WOODSTOCK, Ont. — Police in a southwestern Ontario city say that five people aged 19 and younger have killed themselves since the beginning of 2016 in what an official of the Canadian Mental Health Association is calling a "suicide contagion."

Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper

Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper
The Whitehorse Star reported last week that the skull and some leg bones of a horse skeleton appeared to have been taken from an excavation site.

Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper