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New Study on Causation Between Cell Phone Use and Traffic Accidents

A recent study by the National Safety Council indicates that cell phone usage, including text messaging, accounts for nearly thirty percent of traffic accidents. Of the 1..4 million annually, approximately twenty percent was attributed to texting. This scope of the problem continues to grow, although advocates have created an organization similar to Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) to advance an important public safety agenda.

 

For homeowners, the quality of roads is drectly related to the quality of life.  Whether it is the highways or a local street, those roads need to be safe for a home to be desirable.  Distracted drivers pose a danger to themselves and everyone around them.


Read the full story in the Washington Post...

Posted on Wednesday, January 13, 2010 - 2:03pm

Virginia Ranks Poorly on Highway Safety Ratings

The Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, a non-profit group that monitors each state's safety regulations, has ranked Virginia in its lowest category. The group makes its determination via 15 different laws and how they are implemented. According to the group, Virginia performed poorly because many of our highway safety laws are punishable as a "secondary" offense. For example, under current law, failure to wear a seat belt is a secondary offense, meaning that one can only be fined for that offense if an officer had already stopped them for another reason. The same is true for the texting ban that took effect last July.

Read the full story...

 

Posted on Tuesday, January 12, 2010 - 5:10pm