Xilogic Events & News
Cellphone crackdown: 113 tickets and counting
By Jack Broom
Seattle Times staff reporter
When Trooper Keith Leary pulled alongside a woman using her cellphone on
Interstate 5 one recent morning, it was pretty clear she knew she could be
in trouble.
"She literally threw that phone across her car like it was a hot potato,"
Leary said. "She got rid of it pretty quick."
In the first half-month of the state's ban on using handheld cellphones
while driving, Washington State Patrol troopers stopped nearly 300 drivers,
ticketing 113. An untold number of others ditched their phones as fast as
possible when police vehicles approached.
Under the law, Leary couldn't stop the woman he saw on Interstate 5 near
Lynnwood, because she hadn't committed any other offense.
"But she saw me, and I think that was enough to get the point across. I'm
not sure if she might have busted her phone."
Despite the stops, troopers say, Washington drivers generally seem to be
heeding the law that bans the use of handheld phones — but allows hands-free
phones — while driving.
Trooper Cliff Pratt, spokesman for the patrol division that covers King
County, said he and other troopers, when driving their own personal cars,
are noticing fewer people holding cellphones to their ears.
Those informal observations, Pratt says, are probably more telling than what
troopers see from behind the wheel of their patrol cars. "Obviously, if you
see us, you're going to drive straight as an arrow."
In King County, troopers stopped 37 cellphone users from July 1 through 15,
issuing 13 tickets and 24 warnings. To the north, troopers stopped 34
drivers and wrote seven tickets in the district that includes Snohomish,
Skagit, Whatcom, Island and San Juan counties. Those figures don't include
stops by local police agencies.
"We want to educate people more than we want to ticket people," Leary said.
The most common "primary" offenses troopers have been using to pull over
cellphone violators include drifting across lane lines and speeding, Pratt
said. Troopers have also stopped people for not using seat belts, driving on
the shoulder, following too closely and having defective headlights or
taillights.
Even when a motorist is stopped, it's up to the officer whether to issue a
$124 ticket or simply a warning. Pratt said troopers typically base that
decision on how dangerous the person's driving is.
"We're still getting the word out," Pratt said. "It's going to take a few
months to a year for everyone to get the message."
So far this month, cellphone use has been listed as a factor in two
collisions investigated by the State Patrol.
Washington joined five other states and the District of Columbia banning
handheld-cellphones use by drivers. But in most of those states, a violation
is a primary infraction, meaning a police officer can stop a driver for that
alone.
In California, where a cellphone-driving ban took effect July 1 making
offenses a primary infraction, more than 4,000 tickets have already been
written by the California Highway Patrol alone. The "base fine" is $20 for a
first offense, but motorists actually pay more than three times that amount
once local assessments, which vary from county to county, are added.
Sen. Tracey Eide, D-Federal Way, the prime sponsor of Washington's law, said
she, too, has noticed fewer drivers holding cellphones. But not everyone's
complying: On a drive home from Eastern Washington on Sunday, Eide noticed
several motorists using handheld phones, including drivers of two
tractor-trailer rigs.
Eide said she would like the law eventually changed to make violations a
primary infraction, similar to the way the state's seat-belt law was
implemented as a secondary offense in 1986 and became a primary offense in
2002.
But she has no plans to push for the move in the next Legislative session,
adding: "It took me seven years just to get this."