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State House votes to stop drivers’ use of hand-held phones

Published January 15. 2020 10:41PM

HARRISBURG— A divided Pennsylvania House voted Wednesday to ban the use of hand-held phones for all drivers to make calls, although police would not be allowed to stop motorists for that reason alone.

Representatives voted 120-74 for the proposal that would expand current law, which bans any texting and prohibits the use of hand-held devices to make phone calls for truckers and other commercial drivers.

The prime sponsor, Rep. Rosemary Brown, R-Monroe, said she was disappointed that the House had amended the bill so that police could not stop drivers for using hand-held phones, making it instead a secondary offense that would result in more severe penalties when paired with another violation.

Brown voted for the bill and said she hoped to continue working on the legislation as it goes to the state Senate for its consideration. A spokeswoman for the Senate’s majority Republicans said the caucus has not reviewed the matter and offered no thoughts on its potential for passage.

The proposal in the House split both the Republican and Democratic caucuses, unusual in a chamber where divisions usually follow party lines.

Minority Whip Jordan Harris, D-Philadelphia, voted for it after speaking about how black drivers could be exposed to racial profiling stops if the language had not been amended to make it a secondary violation.

“As an African-American male who crisscrosses this commonwealth, I am nervous at times when I’m driving in Pennsylvania,” Harris said. “That is real.”

Rep. Mike Carroll, D-Luzerne, called the bill a step backward, warning it could result in more highway deaths because texting would also be a secondary offense. Current law lets officers pull over drivers they believe are texting, but critics say that does not happen often enough because officers can’t necessary distinguish calling from texting in a moving vehicle.

“This advances nothing, this makes things worse,” said Carroll, who said his in-laws were killed in a texting-related crash in the Philadelphia suburbs several years ago.

Current law carries a $50 fine for texting while driving. The pending bill would make either texting or making calls while driving punishable by a $150 fine.

There would be exceptions so drivers can use hand-held phones to call 911.

The bill also would require driver’s education training for teens on the hand-held device driving prohibition.

Comments
Wasted time by America's highest paid state assembly.
To confuse the conversation, a Philadelphia Democrat brings up skin tone? They may have said ring tone, and it woke him.

It will never end!
I would challenge you to try to understand the experiences that those who are different from you have in their daily lives. At one time I worked with an African American executive at a company in an affluent community who would get pulled over 3-4 times a year for no apparent reason. He would identify himself and then they let him go. Once I had to confirm his identity to a cop who didn’t believe he was an executive with the company. If I were AA I would be concerned about potential profiling made possible by this bill too.
Joe,
Stick to hand held cell phone use while driving bill.

A person who has fear of driving through Pennsylvania, needs to keeps their hands on the wheel, and the phone in pocket. How did we make it thirty years ago?
Stop with the side show.
Mike, read the article.

Again, you have your life experiences and others have different ones. I believe you would be defensive about the subject and guarded whenever a bill comes out that could make profiling easier. I'm not saying that the representative's position is one I agree with, but I do understand it. Writing it off as a "side show" or "confusing the issue" misses the point and an opportunity for real dialogue
What does racial profiling have to do with using your phone while driving? Maybe he's saying if a person is other than white he uses his phone a lot more while driving so it isn't fair? I don't get it. Whether a person is white, black, or sky blue pink, using your phone while driving should be illegal and this secondary violation bs is just that.
Racial profiling has everything to do with many situations that occur everyday in this country, unless of course one has no comprehension of what "the others" go through trying to navigate in the good old U.S. of A.

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