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Will Iowa pass a hands-free driving bill? Lawmakers say 'this could be the year'
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P. Coonan
2025-01-23 20:26:10 UTC
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DES MOINES — Iowa Republican lawmakers say this could be the year they
finally ban motorists' handheld use of cellphones behind the wheel.

Law enforcement officials, advocates and grieving families of Iowans
killed by distracted drivers packed a Senate committee room Wednesday to
again implore lawmakers to ban motorists' handheld use of mobile devices
behind the wheel.

“There should never be any young person, or any person in this state, that
has to lose their life because someone chooses to text instead of drive,”
Judith Collora, of Mount Pleasant, told lawmakers. “Driving is a
privilege, and to choose to text instead of drive puts other people at
risk. So we ask you to pass it, and hope that we can save some lives and
save families the agony of losing their loved one. My daughter is never
going to call me again and say, ‘Love you, Mom.’”

Collora’s daughter was killed nine days after her 30th birthday in 2023 by
a driver distracted by his phone.

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A portrait and appreciation of Kristina Collora Pearson is seen in the
Honoring the Human Form art exhibit in the Schwartzkopf Gallery at the
Cherry Building in southeast Cedar Rapids on Sept. 27, 2023. The exhibit,
by the The Cedar Rapids Drawing Group, honors Kristina Collora Pearson,
one of the models depicted in the works who was killed in a car accident
at 30. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)
Kristina Pearson and her partner went out to buy house paint during the
afternoon of Aug. 7, 2023. As Pearson and Brown headed north on Boyrum
Street in Iowa City, Drake Brezina, then 24, stared down at his cellphone
as he drove his Chevrolet Silverado through a red light on Highway 6 —
slamming into Pearson’s driver’s side door. The crash ruptured her spleen,
tore her vertebral artery, fractured her skull, broke ribs and caused
extensive internal bleeding.

Physicians were able to keep Pearson’s heart beating for about two and a
half hours until the family could gather to say goodbye.

Brezina pleaded guilty, took responsibility for his distracted driving and
was sentenced to five years of supervised probation, with a requirement he
share his story as a warning of “the dangers of distracted driving,
texting and other forms of distracted and impaired driving as a major
problem in our society.”

Prosecutors requested the maximum 15 years in prison.

“We have to make the penalties more severe because, you know, if people
just can walk away from it, what is there to make them stop texting?”
Collora told reporters through tears.

She was accompanied by Berta Pearson, also of Mount Pleasant. Her
grandson, Pearson Franklin, a 20-year-old utility worker, was killed along
with a colleague in October 2022 while working on a bridge in Burlington.
The pair were placing construction barrels behind their stationary pickup
truck, which had its yellow construction lights on, when a driver
distracted by an app on her cellphone struck the two workers.

The driver, Emily Johnson, was found guilty of two counts of reckless
homicide and two counts of unlawful use of an electronic communication
device, and was sentenced to 90 days in jail and 30 months of probation.

“We have to do something. We can't let more kids die just because somebody
thought they needed to be on that silly phone,” Pearson said.

Bill would increase penalties for drivers caught using phone
A three-member subcommittee of Senate lawmakers voted unanimously
Wednesday to advance legislation that would make it illegal to use a phone
or mobile device while driving unless it's voice- activated or hands-free.

Senate File 22 would allow for mobile device use while driving only in
voice-activated or hands-free mode. Any hand-held use of a device while
driving would be prohibited.

The bill also would increase the scheduled fine for this violation from
$45 to $100 and would make it a moving violation that can be considered
for purposes of administrative suspension of a driver’s license or to
establish habitual offender status.

If serious injury or death occurs, the fine is $500 and $1,000,
respectively, and the driver’s license could be suspended.

The bill provides exceptions for first responders while on duty and health
care professionals in the course of emergency situations. It also provides
exceptions for receiving a weather or emergency alert, reporting an
emergency situation, for those operating farm machinery and for certain
radio operators and transit drivers.

Supporters, including bicyclists, motorcyclist, insurance companies,
automakers, law enforcement and others emphasized the bill's potential to
save lives.

They highlighted the need for clear legislation against texting and
driving.

State and local law enforcement officials say the state’s prohibition on
texting while driving, enacted in 2017, is nearly impossible to enforce
because drivers can say they instead were making a call or using the
device’s GPS, which still is allowed under current state law.

Sen. Janet Petersen, D-Des Moines, raised concern about the bill's
exclusion of farm equipment.

“The DOT said that there were 1,000 crashes the Midwest involving farm
equipment and cars, and 30 deaths in Iowa with cars and farm equipment,”
Petersen said. “… I would hate for us to be sending a message that it's OK
for them to text” and drive farm equipment on the highway.

“I'm happy to sign off on the bill, but I hope that maybe we can keep our
thoughts open as to making sure that everyone's safe, no matter where they
live, in rural or urban areas,” she said.

Distracted driving crashes have increased by 43 percent over the last
decade, according to Iowa Department of Transportation crash data.

There were 351 traffic-related deaths in Iowa in 2024, down from the 378
deaths in 2023, but still high compared to previous years. Wrong-way
drivers, high speeds, unbuckled seat belts and distracted driving have
contributed to those high numbers, according to the Iowa State Patrol.

With governor’s support, bill’s backers say ‘this could be the year’
Bills limiting cellphone use by mandating voice-activated or hands-free
technology while driving have been introduced in the Iowa Legislature
since 2019, but all attempts at passage have been unsuccessful.

The legislation overwhelmingly passed the Iowa Senate in 2023, but the
Iowa House hit the brakes. It failed to advance during last year’s
legislative session, after the proposal was combined with legislation that
would ban traffic enforcement cameras.

Despite bipartisan and law enforcement support, a wing of Republicans in
the GOP-controlled House have objected to the legislation saying it
infringes on Iowans’ individual rights, and that lawmakers should look at
other ways to more broadly crack down on activity that diverts attention
from driving — not just talking or texting on a phone.

Lawmakers this year, though, say they’re cautiously optimistic, hoping the
governor's backing will be the nudge needed to win majority backing in the
House to get it past the finish line.

During her annual Condition of the State address Tuesday, Republican Gov.
Kim Reynolds, for the first time publicly, pressed lawmakers to pass a
hands-free driving bill.

“For the sake of all our loved ones on the road, let’s finally pass
legislation that requires drivers to keep their eyes on the road and away
from their phones,” she said.

Rep. David Young, a Republican from Van Meter and chair of the House
Transportation Committee, has introduced similar legislation in the House
— House Study Bill 64 — and assigned it to a five-member subcommittee.

He said the bill will be discussed in committee over the next few weeks,
with plans to include the Iowa Secretary of Transportation and public
safety officials.

“I met with Transportation Secretary today, and in Iowa (for those) ages
14 to 17, the No. 1 cause of death is traffic accidents,” he said. “And he
had mentioned that within a year distracted driving fatalities in Iowa
have gone up 66 percent. So we need to stop those numbers, and hopefully
this can help.”

Young told reporters Wednesday he’s optimistic legislation will pass with
bipartisan support, bolstered by the governor's endorsement.

“This should be the year — I think could be the year” a law gets passed,
Young said. “I see almost 30 groups out there — and it's growing — get
behind this and be so public about it, as well as to have the governor
mention it in her condition of the state, gives us some momentum too.”

The Iowa Bicycle Coalition and more than 25 other groups representing law
enforcement, health care, labor, business, transportation and insurance
have launched a statewide campaign to press Iowa lawmakers to finally pass
a hands-free driving law.

Similar laws in states like Alabama, Michigan, Missouri and Ohio have
proved effective at reducing crash rates, according to a 2024 report by
the Governors Highway Safety Association.

“We believe it's going to save lives, plain and simple, and we believe
this is the seat belt law of our generation,” said Luke Hoffman, executive
director of the Iowa Bicycle Coalition.

The Iowa State Patrol and the Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau conducted a
survey during the 2024 Iowa State Fair that found nearly 85 percent of the
more than 1,300 Iowans surveyed supported legislation mandating hands-free
phone use. And 96 percent said they regularly see others driving with a
cellphone in hand.

“I think what's happened is the technology has kind of got improved, and I
think people feel more comfortable with it now,” said Sen. Mark Lofgren, a
Republican from Muscatine who is leading efforts to pass the bill in
Senate. “I mean, I don't want to be over confident here, but I think we've
got the best momentum going on now that we've ever had. There's no doubt
about that.”

Gazette reporters Vanessa Miller and Emily Andersen contributed to this
report.

Comments: (319) 398-8499; ***@thegazette.com

https://www.thegazette.com/state-government/will-iowa-pass-a-hands-free-
driving-bill-lawmakers-say-this-could-be-the-year/
badgolferman
2025-01-23 22:41:59 UTC
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Post by P. Coonan
DES MOINES — Iowa Republican lawmakers say this could be the year
they finally ban motorists' handheld use of cellphones behind the
wheel.
"texting" while driving is illegal in Virginia but it doesn't stop
people from doing it. I can't remember if it's a primary or secondary
offense though. They can pull you over for a primary offense, but the
secondary offense requires a primary offense infraction first. Maybe
it's because the cops are looking at their phones while driving too.

As a motorcycle rider I'm hyper aware of the attention level of other
drivers, and I can tell you at least a third of people are looking at
their phones while driving.
Alan
2025-01-23 22:55:42 UTC
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Post by badgolferman
DES MOINES — Iowa Republican lawmakers say this could be the year
they finally ban motorists' handheld use of cellphones behind the
wheel.
"texting" while driving is illegal in Virginia but it doesn't stop
people from doing it. I can't remember if it's a primary or secondary
offense though. They can pull you over for a primary offense, but the
secondary offense requires a primary offense infraction first. Maybe
it's because the cops are looking at their phones while driving too.
As a motorcycle rider I'm hyper aware of the attention level of other
drivers, and I can tell you at least a third of people are looking at
their phones while driving.
As a former motorcycle rider and current race driving instructor, I
second that.

And I agree that using a cellphone in your hand is distracted driving.

The problem that I see is that we can no longer as a society accept
GENERAL laws against things like "distracted driving".

Make a law against hand-held use of a cell phone? Sure: it solves ONE
problem.

But what about the driver distracted by his car's ridiculously bad
touchscreen interface? He can now argue that it can't really be
"distracted driving" when it causes an accident...

...because there isn't a specific law against it...

...and the manufacturers are allowed to build the idiotic things.
Marion
2025-01-24 22:08:09 UTC
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Post by P. Coonan
killed by distracted drivers
The problem with these laws is that they're not based on actual science.
They're based on religious beliefs.

Nobody has ever shown an increase in accident rates from the slowly
lowering trend from before cellphones existed, to while the ownership rates
were skyrocketing, to long after they plateued at about 100% ownership.

Nobody.

Well, almost nobody - since those who make money off of religious beliefs
certainly are "claiming" cherry-picked accident "statistics", namely:
a. Insurance companies (who make money from the laws)
b. Police agencies (who make money from the laws)
c. Accident lawyers (who make money from the laws)

If you remove those above who have a vested interest in making money off of
"claiming" accident rates which never changed - you can't find them.

Try it.
LOOK for the accident rates for the three stages of import:
Stage I: From 1920s to just before cellphones were in common use
Stage II: The short period of skyrocketing cellphone ownership rates
Stage III: After the plateau

Nobody (not you, not anyone) can find the increase in accident rates that
they themselves predict - which is the definition of a religious belief.

They believe in it.
And yet, even they can't find it.

Because, it doesn't exist.
Yet, they strongly believe it does.

Just like religion.
Everyone who claims the rates went up is simply fabricating that claim.

It's a religious belief.
Nothing more. Nothing less.

Pure religion.
Devoid of facts backing up the strongly held belief system.

So be it.
You can't change that people believe in religions.

Nor can you change that governments make laws based on religions.

The fact is that driving has always entailed handling distractions.
And, yes, cell phone use while driving certainly an added distraction.

But there is no evidence in the USA public record of reliable statistics
compiled by the US Census Bureau since about the 1920's that there has been
any measurable effect on US accident rates - which is an accurate
statistic.

If you google for statistics, you'll never find them except from the
aforementioned three agencies who make money off of the religious laws.

Even then, when you LOOK at their statistics, you see they're cooked.
Every single one of them.

There is no reliable evidence that cellphones increased the accident rate.
None.

And there are good reasons for that fact.
But you have to first LOOK for the evidence before you're ready for that.

In summary, those who believe in this religion do so sans any facts.
It's their right to believe in bogus belief systems - which I don't deny.

But when governments make laws based on religion, that's where I balk.
These laws are based on pure religious emotion. Not on actual facts.
Alan
2025-01-25 06:57:54 UTC
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Post by Marion
Post by P. Coonan
killed by distracted drivers
The problem with these laws is that they're not based on actual science.
They're based on religious beliefs.
What an utterly pompous asshole you are.

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