California Legislature—2015–16 Regular Session

Assembly Concurrent ResolutionNo. 52


Introduced by Assembly Member Frazier

March 26, 2015


Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 52—Relative to distracted driving.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

ACR 52, as introduced, Frazier. Distracted Driving Awareness Month

This measure would proclaim April 2015 as Distracted Driving Awareness Month and call for awareness of the distracted driving problem and support for programs and policies to reduce the incidence of distracted driving.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, A 2013 statewide traffic safety survey conducted
2by the California Office of Traffic Safety, reported that more than
336 percent of Californians surveyed thought texting or talking on
4a cell phone while driving posed the biggest safety problem on
5California roadways; and

6WHEREAS, In 2013, nearly 70 percent of the California drivers
7surveyed said they had been hit or nearly hit by a driver who was
8talking or texting on a cell phone; and

9WHEREAS, In 2013, 45 percent of the drivers surveyed said
10they have made a driving mistake while talking on a cell phone;
11and

12WHEREAS, In 2013, nearly 48 percent of the drivers surveyed
13said that texting while driving is the most serious distraction for
14drivers; and

P2    1WHEREAS, A 2012 statewide observational survey of cell
2phone use by California drivers, showed that 7.4 percent of drivers
3were using cell phones at any given time during daylight hours;
4and

5WHEREAS, In 2012, 3,328 people were killed and 421,000
6were injured in distraction-affected crashes; and

7WHEREAS, To read or type the average text takes 4.6 seconds.
8Just three seconds of texting while driving at 65 mph is equal to
9driving 100 yards, equal to the length of a football field,
10blindfolded; and

11WHEREAS, Engaging in visual-manual subtasks, such as
12reaching for a phone, dialing, and texting, associated with the use
13of handheld phones and other portable devices increased the risk
14of getting into a crash by three times; and

15WHEREAS, Text messaging creates a crash risk 23 times worse
16than driving while not distracted; and

17WHEREAS, According to the National Highway Traffic Safety
18Administration, only about 1 out of 5 young drivers think that
19texting makes no difference to their driving performance.
20Sixty-eight percent of young drivers 18 to 20 years of age are
21willing to answer incoming phone calls on some, most, or all
22driving trips; and

23WHEREAS, Parents who engage in distracting behaviors while
24driving more frequently have teens who do the same. According
25to a 2012 teen driver distraction study conducted jointly by the
26University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute and
27Toyota, teens send or read text messages once a trip 26 times more
28often than their parents think they do; now, therefore be it

29Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
30thereof concurring,
That the Legislature proclaims April 2015 as
31Distracted Driving Awareness Month and calls upon residents,
32government agencies, business leaders, hospitals, schools, and
33public and private institutions within the state to promote awareness
34of the distracted driving problem and to support programs and
35policies to reduce the incidence of distracted driving in California
36and nationwide; and be if further.

37Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
38of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.



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