The
Government should consider tougher restrictions on driving while
using a mobile phone and stricter enforcement of the law to
prevent the ‘entirely avoidable’ tragedy of deaths and serious
injuries from related crashes on the roads, MPs
say.
In Road
Safety: driving while using a mobile phone,
the Transport Committee says the evidence is clear:
using a mobile phone while driving is dangerous, with potentially
catastrophic consequences.
MPs call on
Government to overhaul current laws on using hand-held mobile
devices while driving, to cover use irrespective of whether this
involves sending or receiving data. As evidence shows that using
a hands-free device creates the same risks of crashing, the
Committee also recommends that Government explores options
for extending the ban on hand-held devices to hands-free
phones.
In 2017,
there were 773 casualties, including 43 deaths and 135 serious
injuries, in collisions where a driver using a mobile phone was a
contributory factor. The number of people killed or seriously
injured has risen steadily since
2011.
However,
the rate of enforcement has plunged by more than two
thirds since 2011. Enforcing the law is essential to
ensuring that motorists do not illegally use their mobile phone
while driving. While the Committee welcomes the
Government’s review of roads policing and traffic enforcement,
the report calls on the Government to work with police to boost
enforcement and make better use of
technology.
The
penalties for using a hand-held mobile phone while
driving were increased
in 2017 but still do not appear to be commensurate with the risk
created and should be reviewed and potentially increased so that
it is clear there are serious consequences to being caught, says
the Report.
Chair of
the Committee, ,
said:
“Despite
the real risk of catastrophic consequences for themselves, their
passengers and other road users, far too many drivers continue to
break the law by using hand-held mobile
phones.
“If mobile
phone use while driving is to become as socially unacceptable as
drink driving much more effort needs to go into educating drivers
about the risks and consequences of using a phone behind the
wheel. Offenders also need to know there is a credible risk of
being caught, and that there are serious consequences for being
caught.
“There is
also a misleading impression that hands-free use is safe. The
reality is that any use of a phone distracts from a driver’s
ability to pay full attention and the Government should consider
extending the ban to reflect this.
“Each
death and serious injury which results from a driver using a
mobile phone is a tragedy that is entirely avoidable. We need
tougher restrictions, better enforcement and more education to
make our roads safer for all.”