Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

VPD Issues Close To 2,000 Tickets To Distracted Drivers In One Month

Darpan News Desk, 04 Oct, 2017 11:04 AM

    VANCOUVER — Police in Vancouver are hoping pressure from family and friends will succeed where fines and penalties have failed in convincing drivers to put down their cellphones when they get behind the wheel.

     

    Officers handed out nearly 2,000 tickets in September to drivers caught using an electronic device in Vancouver as part of a month-long campaign, Sgt. Jason Robillard said Tuesday.

     

    "If you know someone who just won't give up their phone while driving, perhaps you have some influence on them," Robillard said.

     

    British Columbia is far from the only province wrestling with how best to discourage distracted driving. Saskatchewan police also announced a campaign to crack down on the problem throughout October.

     

    "It's frustrating," Robillard said. "You don't need to be a police officer to know that this is a problem."

     

    Karen Bowman, a spokeswoman for the Traffic Injury Research Foundation based in Ottawa, said law enforcement can only be only part of the solution and that any long-term fix needs to focus on changing behaviour.

     
     

    "This is about driver behaviour and their belief systems and what is socially acceptable," she said.

     

    "It's been a really, really long time since driving drunk has been socially acceptable, but we're nowhere near that with distracted driving."

     

    Bowman launched the program Drop It And Drive seven years ago in B.C., which was incorporated into the Traffic Injury Research Foundation earlier this year. It involves educators visiting schools and work places across the province to share evidence-based research into the dangers of distracted driving.

     

    Bowman spoke about the importance of establishing muscle-memory habits, which might include drivers developing the ritual of stashing their phone in the glove box as effortlessly as remembering to put on a seatbelt.

     

    Statistics posted by the Canadian Automobile Association say drivers who text are 23 times more likely to be involved in a crash or a near-crash event than non-distracted drivers, and that 26 per cent of all car crashes involve phone use, including hands-free phones.

     

     

    In April, B.C.'s public auto insurer launched a research project aimed at exploring how technology could be used to reduce distracted driving.

     

    "We know that the source of a lot of the distraction is technological, so we're hoping we can use technology to counteract that problem," Mark Milner, a spokesman with the Insurance Corporation of B.C., said Tuesday.

     

    Milner said the Crown corporation is looking to launch a pilot project in the coming months, though he declined to give examples of what kind of technology might be involved.

     

    In B.C., distracted driving has surpassed impaired driving as a leading factor in traffic fatalities. The fine for using an electronic device while driving in the province is $368 and four demerit points.

     

    Robillard said Vancouver police hear a number of explanations from drivers who are using their cellphones.

     

    One man said he was watching a financial video from his website, while a woman said she thought it would be all right to have her cellphone on her lap while eating lunch with both hands, he said.

     

     

    Last month, Vancouver police highlighted the case of a driver who racked up more than $700 in fines and eight demerit points in eight minutes because of a reluctance to put down a phone.

     

    Police posted a photo of the two tickets on social media, showing that within a space of barely six blocks along one of the city's most congested streets, the driver of a rented car was stopped twice for using an electronic device.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada
    VANCOUVER — A Sri Lankan man found guilty of smuggling Tamil migrants to Canada has walked free after receiving a four-year prison sentence.

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada

    WATCH: Stretch Limousine Crashes Into Home In Surrey

    WATCH: Stretch Limousine Crashes Into Home In Surrey
    Police say the damage from the crash has made the house uninhabitable.

    WATCH: Stretch Limousine Crashes Into Home In Surrey

    Suspect Charged With Manslaughter In Fatal Surrey House Fire

    Suspect Charged With Manslaughter In Fatal Surrey House Fire
    The death of a man in a Thursday morning fire in Surrey is suspicious and homicide detectives have now taken over the case, Surrey RCMP said.

    Suspect Charged With Manslaughter In Fatal Surrey House Fire

    No Plans For Drug Legalization Despite Overdose Crisis: PM Trudeau

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he's aware of B.C.'s struggles dealing with the rising tide of opioid deaths, but there are no plans to legalize illicit substances like heroin as part of the response.

    No Plans For Drug Legalization Despite Overdose Crisis: PM Trudeau

    B.C. Groups Say Federal Cash To Help Sexual-Assault Victims And Diversity Work

    Seven organizations that received funding include the Ending Violence Association of B.C. and the Women Against Violence Against Women Rape Crisis Centre.

    B.C. Groups Say Federal Cash To Help Sexual-Assault Victims And Diversity Work

    Crews Struggle With Southeastern B.C. Wildfires As Conditions Ease Elsewhere

    Crews Struggle With Southeastern B.C. Wildfires As Conditions Ease Elsewhere
    CRANBROOK, B.C. — The BC Wildfire Service says the unprecedented, aggressive behaviour of three blazes in southeastern British Columbia has forced firefighting crews to withdraw from the area.

    Crews Struggle With Southeastern B.C. Wildfires As Conditions Ease Elsewhere