PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Texas Cities Institute Texting Bans While State Drags Its Feet

A Texas state representative plans to reintroduce a bill that bans texting while driving statewide, despite its veto by Governor Perry in 2011. Now, Texas cities are enacting their own bans.

2013-01-12
January 12, 2013 (Press-News.org) Getting distracted driving legislation passed into law in Texas has been an upward struggle. The state's culture of personal liberty has stymied efforts by state legislators to enact a texting while driving ban for all motorists.

Now, municipalities across the state are taking the matter into their own hands and seeking to lower the number of Texas distracted driver accidents by passing city ordinances banning texting while driving for adults. Some cities have even banned all handheld cellphone use while behind the wheel.

Current Texas distracted driving laws are lax

Presently, the state of Texas only bans texting while driving for novice drivers and bus drivers through a ban on all cellphone use. The state also prohibits texting and handheld cellphone use for all drivers in school zones. Beyond that, the state has been reluctant to legislate bans for adult drivers.

In 2011, Governor Rick Perry vetoed a bill passed in the state legislature that would have banned texting while driving statewide for all motorists, claiming the bill was the government's attempt to micromanage adult motorists. The bill's author, Representative Tom Craddick, R-Midland, plans to reintroduce the bill in the upcoming 2013 session.

Critics were also concerned over how the law would be enforced. The law would have prohibited drivers from using an electronic device to send, read or type a text-based communication, but exempted dialing a phone number or using a GPS application on a phone. These exceptions, some argued, would make it difficult for police officers to prove someone was texting rather than dialing a number.

Texas cities take action on cellphone use while driving

However, these qualms have not deterred 28 cities across Texas from enacting their own texting and cellphone bans. For example, in Amarillo, law enforcement has no problem pulling drivers over for perceived texting while driving, since any handheld cellphone use while driving is a violation of the city's cellphone ordinance.

Cities like Galveston and Conroe have instituted bans on texting while driving that fine guilty drivers $200 to $500. However, other cities believe that educating motorists on the dangers of distracted driving is more helpful than imposing penalties.

Dangers of distracted driving

Distracted driving is a dangerous activity that causes thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of injuries every year. Texting is one of the more common factors in driver distraction. The crash risk for a texting driver is 23 times more likely than if they drove without the distraction.

Until Texas lawmakers pass a statewide ban on texting to address the perils of distracted driving, people will continue to lose their lives to the dangerous behaviors. If you or a loved one has been injured by a distracted driver, please contact an experienced personal injury attorney.

Article provided by Clint Brasher Attorney at Law PC
Visit us at www.brasherattorney.com


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Top-Selling Cars Earn Low Safety Ratings in New Crash Test

2013-01-12
A new crash test by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety measured the performance of 18 midsize family cars, and the results were poor for some of the country's most popular vehicles. The test measured the cars' safety performance in a crash where the car hits a barrier at an angle, which is one component of the car's overall IIHS safety rating. New front corner crash test The IIHS, a nonprofit organization funded by the insurance industry, recently added the "small-overlap offset frontal crash test" to its battery of safety tests. In the small-overlap ...

Tainted Steroid Shots Cause Meningitis, Infection in Minnesota Patients

2013-01-12
Nearly four months after the New England Compounding Center (NECC) issued a recall on three lots of its Methylprednisolone Acetate injections, new cases of fungal meningitis and other infections caused by the tainted drug are still surfacing. Methylprednisolone Acetate is an injectable steroid that is used primarily to treat patients with chronic lower back pain. The predominant contaminant in the outbreak is believed to be a black mold called Exserohilum. The pathogens were allowed to contaminate the recalled lots of steroid injections sometime during the compounding ...

CDC: Drowsy Driving Prevalent, Extremely Dangerous

2013-01-12
Most people know that it is dangerous to get behind the wheel of a car after having had too much to drink. But how many of us regularly get into our vehicles when we are tired, either from staying out too late or from not getting enough sleep the night before? Drowsy driving is much more dangerous than most people realize. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, approximately one-third of all fatal car accidents are caused, at least in part, by driver fatigue. Just like drunk drivers, drowsy drivers are less attentive, have impaired reaction ...

California Non-Competes Must be Carefully Connected to Sale of a Business

2013-01-12
If you are a California employer, how can you stop an employee from taking his or her skills or knowledge to a competitor? In general, you can't because California law prohibits non-compete agreements in most cases. However, an interesting recent case involving two non-compete agreements addressed an exception to the rule. California law generally prohibits non-compete agreements in the employment context, because the law wants to promote a policy that favors employee mobility and the right to pursue a livelihood. However, California law makes an exception to this rule ...

Minnesota Court Orders for Protection Can Interrupt Domestic Violence

2013-01-12
Americans are overwhelmed by stranger-on-stranger gun violence like the recent mass shootings in a Colorado theater and a Connecticut grade school. Sometimes though shooting crimes are smaller in scale, but just as deadly. Unfortunately, the spiral of domestic violence between spouses, romantic partners or other family members can also ends in death. In October 2012, in the quiet Twin Cities suburb of Cottage Grove, a young husband with a history of terrorizing his wife shot her in a sandwich shop and then turned the gun on himself. According to kare11.com, Tensia Richard ...

Homeowner Bill of Rights will Help Protect Californians from Foreclosures

2013-01-12
As of January 1, 2013, homeowners and borrowers in California will have a slew of new laws protecting them from predatory lenders and unscrupulous mortgage servicer actions. The California Homeowner Bill of Rights was created by state Attorney General Kamala D. Harris as a response to the mortgage crisis and purports to bring fairness and accountability to California's foreclosure process. Governor Jerry Brown signed the Bill of Rights into law and the changes will help to keep lenders from using abusive tactics against homeowners who are: - In default on mortgages - ...

Capital District Trial Lawyers Association Names New Officers

2013-01-12
The association elected John Harwick president. Harwick is a partner at Hacker Murphy, LLP in Latham. Also elected were: Christopher Mills of Mills Law Firm, vice president; Thomas Mortati of Burke, Scolamiero, Mortati & Hurd, treasurer; and Mackenzie Monaco of the Carter, Conboy, Case, Blackmore, Maloney & Laird, secretary. Each will serve through 2013. The Capital District Trial Lawyers Association has about 500 members. The organization hosts monthly continuing legal education luncheons and also puts on an annual dinner, honoring a local judge and a ...

Toyota Sudden Acceleration Defect Case: $1.1 Billion Settlement

2013-01-12
Toyota Offers Settlement for Decline in Value Caused by Auto Defects In late December, Toyota Motor Corp. agreed to pay $1.1 billion to settle the economic loss class action lawsuit it faced for unintended acceleration. The damages are intended to cover the decline in vehicle value caused by the auto defect and the installation of additional safety features. In 2009 and 2010, Toyota recalled more than 10 million vehicles after receiving claims that the vehicles were accelerating unexpectedly. Many incidents of sudden acceleration occurred when floor mats were caught ...

"The Sleep Doctor", A New Radio Show At KAAM Hosted By Dr. Kent Smith

2013-01-12
KAAM - AM770 coordinates a new radio show called "The Sleep Doctor" and invited Dr. Kent Smith, DDS, D-ABDSM from Sleep Dallas to be the host of the inaugural show. Listeners not only are able to learn what this life threatening medical condition called sleep apnea is about, but they can phone in to talk directly with Dr. Smith and ask him any sleep disorder- related questions. This program will air live every Tuesday from 1:00pm to 1:30pm Central Standard time on AM770. Sleep Dallas Director Dr. Kent Smith was chosen by this radio station to be the new show ...

Herbal treatments for postmenopausal symptoms can be recommended as an alternative to HRT

2013-01-11
Herbal and complementary medicines could be recommended as an alternative to hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for treating postmenopausal symptoms says a new review published today in The Obstetrician and Gynaecologist (TOG). The review outlines the advantages and limitations of both pharmacological and herbal and complementary treatments for women with postmenopausal symptoms. The menopause is defined as the time after a woman's menstrual periods have ceased (12 months after a woman's final menstrual period). It is associated with an estrogen deficiency and can cause ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New model to find treatments for an aggressive blood cancer

Special issue of Journal of Intensive Medicine analyzes non-invasive respiratory support

T cells take aim at Chikungunya virus

Gantangqing site in southwest China yields 300,000-year-old wooden tools

Forests can’t keep up: Adaptation will lag behind climate change

Sturgeon reintroduction initiative yields promising first-year survival rate

Study: Babies’ poor vision may help organize visual brain pathways

Research reveals Arctic region was permafrost-free when global temperatures were 4.5˚ C higher than today

Novel insights into chromophobe renal cell carcinoma biology and potential therapeutic strategies

A breakthrough in motor safety: AI-powered warning system enhances capability to uncover hidden winding faults

Research teases apart competing transcription organization models

Connect or reject: Extensive rewiring builds binocular vision in the brain

Benefits and risks: informal use of antibiotics to prevent sexually transmitted infections on the rise in key populations in the Netherlands

New molecular tool sheds light on how cancer cells repair telomeres

First large-scale stem cell bank enables worldwide studies on genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease

Hearing devices significantly improve social lives of those with hearing loss

CNIC scientists reveal how the cellular energy system evolved—and how this knowledge could improve the diagnosis of rare genetic diseases

AI sharpens pathologists' interpretation of tissue samples

Social outcomes among adults with hearing aids and cochlear implants

Passive smartphone sensors for detecting psychopathology

Ireland’s first BioBrillouin microscope will enable non-invasive assessment of living cells and tissues in real-time

Aligned stem cell sheets could improve regenerative therapies

Emergency department data show rise in hospitalizations due to pediatric clavicular fractures

A key group of cerebral amygdala neurons identified in anxiety and social disorders

What the sea spider genome reveals about their bizarre anatomy

More people need to know how to prevent SIDS

Many people choose unemployment benefits over poorly paid jobs

Certain young people more prone to anxiety and depression

Review article highlights urgent need for aflatoxin control strategies in Pakistan’s feed supply chain

Researchers reveal key differences in STING inhibition between humans and mice

[Press-News.org] Texas Cities Institute Texting Bans While State Drags Its Feet
A Texas state representative plans to reintroduce a bill that bans texting while driving statewide, despite its veto by Governor Perry in 2011. Now, Texas cities are enacting their own bans.