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Many N.C. texting charges come from drivers over 25

Friday, January 28, 2011
(Updated Saturday, January 29 - 5:53 am)

RALEIGH (AP) — Teenagers aren't the only ones to blame for erratic driving tied to cell phones. Most of the motorists ticketed under North Carolina's new texting ban are actually over the age of 25, and some are over the age of 60.

More than 1,200 drivers have been cited since the law went into effect in December 2009, according to court records reviewed by The Associated Press. Violators face $100 fines, plus court costs.

Guilford County has recorded the most texting-while-driving violations, with 118 through the beginning of this year. Mecklenburg County, home of Charlotte, had 114. Wake County, home of Raleigh, had 107.

Brendan Byrnes, who works on the texting issue with AAA Carolinas, said young drivers with a grip on their cell phones have historically been a leading concern for safety advocates. But observers are increasingly seeing problems among adults behind the wheel who feel compelled to stay connected with work through e-mail, which also falls under North Carolina's texting law.

"This is really one of the biggest problems and the hurdles to not only fighting distracted driving but enacting legislation against distracted driving," Byrnes said. He noted that large groups of professionals — real estate agents, sales personnel, even legislators — are constantly on the road and want to get work done along the way.

The average age of those ticketed in North Carolina with texting while driving is 28, according to the AP review. More than half were at least 26 years old when they were cited, including eight people over 60.

Priscilla Blake, of Rock Hill, S.C., was 67 when she was pulled over last year after dropping her niece off at a university in Wilmington. She said she doesn't usually text while driving but was feeling sick and decided to try sending off a note to her niece.

Blake didn't know about the North Carolina law, but when a patrolman pulled her over she readily admitted that she was trying to send a message through her phone. She supports that law and thinks it would be useful in South Carolina.

"Texting takes concentration off driving," she said. "If you are texting, you are not looking at the road. Within a second, something could happen."

Sgt. David Sloan, who oversees traffic safety at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, said the ban is difficult for police to enforce because motorists are allowed to dial phone numbers but not messages. He said that forces authorities to take a close look at how long a motorist is tapping the keys on their phone.

Sloan suspects many of the tickets come simply after motorists acknowledge they were texting. Others come after close investigation following a crash. Roughly 700 were cited for other violations at the same time, some for driving while impaired, reckless driving or driving the wrong way.

At least one person appears to have been cited for texting while driving a motorcycle.

Sloan said it would be easier for officers if lawmakers required hands-free devices or banned phones for drivers altogether. That is already a prohibition for drivers under the age of 18.

AAA believes the number of violators in the state is far too low. A study commissioned by the motorist group last year found that 39 percent of North Carolina drivers admit to texting while driving.

"You've got a huge number of people committing this crime every single day — in some cases on every car trip they take," Byrnes said.

Accompanying Photos

H. Scott Hoffmann (News & Record)

Age Breakdown

More than 1,200 drivers in North Carolina have been charged with texting-while-driving since the law went into effect in December 2009. Here's a look at the number of motorists charged, broken down by age group:

  • 16-25: 612 tickets
  • 26-35: 379 tickets
  • 36-45: 192 tickets
  • 46-55: 59 tickets
  • 56-65: 15 tickets
  • 66-75: 2 tickets

Comments

This article has been closed to new comments. Comments are generally closed after 14 days. However, comments may be closed earlier at the discretion of the News & Record.

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HNest

January 28, 2011 - 2:51 pm EST

In 2006 there were 760,000 drivers in NC under 25 out of 6,315,000 total. In other words drivers under 25 represent only 12% of the driving population but got almost 50% of the texting tickets.

rooster8786

January 28, 2011 - 1:48 pm EST

Herre's an idea - The technology exists to make cellphones inoperable, except to call 911. Install it on ALL cars & then we don't have to worry about. Remember the time, not that long ago, where people used a service called voicemail?

Get Real

January 28, 2011 - 5:48 pm EST

I thought you were against government control.

aliluyya

January 28, 2011 - 6:26 pm EST

Also, how would the disablement affect passengers? In a car w/ 4 people w/ 4 phones, none of them would work?

johnodrake

January 29, 2011 - 9:38 am EST

Do you really want someone messin' with your car, installing an electronic device that will interfere with cell phones - even ones being lawfully used, and you having to pay for it to boot? I'll pass......

DDS

January 28, 2011 - 1:54 pm EST

I have come close to being in close call head on collisions with two people who were Texting or talking on their phones and they didn't even bother to stop ...they shrugged and kept right on driving and texting. Something should be done, but reverting to old age technology is not the way-jeez. SMH

johnodrake

January 29, 2011 - 9:39 am EST

If you didn't crash, why would they stop? Did you stop?

whyus

January 28, 2011 - 3:38 pm EST

The other day, I observed the driver of an 18 wheeler texting while driving down US 220 near Hamburg Mill road in 5 o'clock traffic. go figure!

johnodrake

January 29, 2011 - 9:41 am EST

In northbound 220 traffic at that time and location, the traffic was probably stopped:). Seriously, did you report it?

The_Doctor

January 29, 2011 - 10:07 am EST

Who has ever tried to make the case that only teens send/read text messages whilst driving?

n_rdrm2008

January 31, 2011 - 12:30 pm EST

liked earlier comment to ratio, and here was mine to tv stations
where can i see facts for this story? We compare 16-25 year olds, in total tickets to drivers from 26-infinity. how many drivers are in the two opposing categories. and the % of the two groups caught. i just did not like the way this story has been bantied about.

David

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