Don't Drive Intexticated

Just like drinking and driving, using a cell phone or other personal electronic device while behind the wheel is dangerous. The consequences are the same: deaths and injuries on our roadways. In Washington, it is against the law to hold a cell phone or other device while driving. AAA thanks the 82% of Washington drivers who say they follow the law. We ask you to join them and reduce the number of these preventable tragedies by putting down your phone – because lives depend on it.

“Speak Up!” for Safety


A 2021 AAA Washington survey revealed how children play a key role in reducing ALL driver interactions with cell phones/devices. The survey of 1,000 Washington drivers — ages 16 and older — asked drivers to select the top two situations most likely to influence them against using these devices while driving.

  • 51% chose “Children asking you to stop because they don’t feel safe”

  • 49% selected “A passenger asking you to stop because they don’t feel safe”

These findings have AAA calling on children and all passengers to “Speak Up!” for safety.

Partner with AAA to Save Lives
AAA Digital Pledge

Help spread awareness of the dangers of distracted driving by taking the pledge to put down your phone while driving.

Tell your family and friends why you #DontDriveIntexticated by creating a personalized pledge card that you can download and share on social media.

Take and share your digital pledge.


Washington State’s Distracted Driving Law

 

When it comes to distracted driving, Washington State has one of the most restrictive laws in the nation. On July 23, 2017, Washington banned drivers from using all handheld personal devices while behind the wheel, even when they stop at a traffic sign/signal or are stuck in slow-moving traffic.

  • Hold a cell phone or electronic device in your hand
  • Use your fingers to type, send, read, view, access, web browse, transmit, save or retrieve email, text messages, instant messages, photos or other data
  • Watch a video
  • To contact emergency services
  • You can use a single finger-swipe or button push to activate, deactivate or initiate a function
  • When your vehicle is off the road, in park
  • Hands-free use of personal electronic devices is legal, however, using your device hands-free is no safer than using it hand-held.**
  • First ticket = $136 fine AND the ticket is reported to your insurance company
  • Second ticket within five years = Fine doubles
  • Fine of $99
  • Secondary offense – handed out when you are pulled over for committing a traffic violation, such as crossing the centerline or following too close, while you were distracted by any non-driving activity.
  • Examples include eating, spilling your coffee, holding a pet on your lap, putting on makeup, shaving.

One Bad Decision Leads to Lifelong Regret

In a recent AAA study, two-thirds of Washington drivers claimed that they multi-task well while driving. Carri Fennel begs to differ. Nearly ten years ago, the Shelton teacher tried to respond to a message on her phone while behind the wheel. She never imagined how that one decision would forever change two families; her own and that of the pedestrian she nearly killed. In the ongoing fight to end distracted driving, Fennel spoke with Journey magazine. You can read her full account of that fateful day and its irreversible consequences.

Carri Fennel
The backend of a car on the road.

7 Ways to Prevent Driving Intexticated

  1. PUT IT AWAY
    Place your mobile device out of sight to prevent temptation.

  2. KNOW WHERE YOU’RE GOING
    If using a navigation system, program your destination before driving.

  3. PULL OVER
    If you have to call or text while driving, pull off the road safely and stop first.

  4. ASK PASSENGERS FOR HELP
    If riding with someone, seek their help to navigate, make a call or send a message.

  5. BE A GOOD PASSENGER
    Speak out if the driver of your vehicle is distracted.

  6. DON’T BE A DISTRACTION
    Avoid calling or texting others when you know they are driving.

  7. EVERYONE SHOULD PREVENT BEING INTEXTICATED
    Just as drivers need to pay attention, so do pedestrians and bicyclists. Never call, text or play games while walking or cycling.

AAA Washington Research Reveals Driver Behavior Under New Distraction Law


To recognize the one-year anniversary of Washington’s new Driving Under the Influence of Electronics or DUI-E law, AAA commissioned an independent study to find out what drivers know about the law, if they’re following it and what might change their mostly illegal and dangerous behaviors.

Of the more than 1,100 Washington drivers surveyed:

  • 90% say they are aware of Washington’s DUI-E law, its restrictions and penalties
  • 31% say they DO NOT use electronic devices while driving, listing their safety and the safety of their passengers as the primary motivator for putting down their phones

That means 69% percent of Washington drivers are still using their phones behind the wheel in mostly illegal and dangerous ways. The most common tasks are listed below. The AAA research also revealed that with few exceptions, the group most likely to break the law and engage in risky behavior is parents with children living at home.

Most Common Distractions

At least once in the past 30 days

Distraction

All Drivers

Parents

Set navigation while driving (illegal)

82%

87%

Answer a call with hands-free tech (legal but dangerous)

71%

80%

Read a text message, hand-held (illegal)

68%

74%

Make a phone call with hands-free tech (legal but dangerous)

64%

75%

Answer a call, hand-held (illegal)

60%

68%

Sent text messages, hand-held (illegal)

58%

68%

Made a call, hand-held (illegal)

52%

66%

Washington drivers are least likely to post to or read social media, look at websites or take a photo while driving. Of those who do, parents with children living at home are again engaging in this risky behavior more than all drivers combined.

Two of the most common tasks listed above, using hands-free technology to answer and make calls, are not banned by Washington’s DUI-E law. But the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety has conducted research demonstrating hands-free tasks carry nearly the same cognitive workload as the hand-held tasks, making them distracting and unsafe to do while driving.

Teen Drivers and Distraction


Distracted driving is one of the most dangerous temptations for newly licensed teen drivers.

TECHNOLOGY
 

While parents with children still living at home were found to be the group of drivers most distracted by technology in AAA Washington’s 2018 research, the 16- and 17-year old drivers in the survey admitted to engaging in the same unsafe behaviors at least once in the past 30 days.

  • 96% set navigation program while driving
  • 86% read a text
  • 82% answered a call
  • 78% sent a text

Another 78 percent of teen drivers reported answering a call using a hands-free system. Washington law bans any use of a cell phone or wireless communication device, INCLUDING hands-free options, while driving with a driving permit or intermediate license.
 

PASSENGER DISTRACTION
 

Despite those alarming numbers, the greatest risk to teen drivers is not technology but the distractions caused when driving with friends. New research from the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety found that when a teen driver has only teen passengers in a vehicle, the fatality rate for all people involved in a crash increased 51 percent.

Replace those teen passengers with people who are 35 years or older and the overall fatality rates in crashes decreased eight percent.

The increased risks underline just how important it is that parents get involved in their teen driver’s training, set rules and enforce them, and spend lots of hours with them behind the wheel, even more than is required by law.

AAA offers the following tips to parents of teen drivers, starting with supervised training – parents in the passenger seat acting as coach.

  • Require that teens log at least 100 hours of supervised practice before driving solo
  • Begin by practicing driving in low-risk situations, gradually moving to more complex situations: highways, nighttime, driving in the rain, and on and around challenging roadways.
  • Allow no more than one non-family passenger under the age of 20 during the first six months of driving
  • Use slightly different routes each practice session
  • Practice adjusting speed based on visibility, traffic and different weather conditions
     

RESOURCES
 

Learn more coaching tips and teen driving resources

AAA Safety & Training Programs

  • Father teaching son to drive.

    Teen Driving

    Understand the facts and risks.
  • A happy senior behind the wheel.

    Senior Driving

    Helping seniors drive safer & longer.
  • A mother putting baby in a car seat.

    Safe Seats

    Safe Seats 4 Kids car seat safety.
*Average daily claims from annual 2015 data collected by NHTSA. Copyright © 2018 Auto Club Enterprises. All Rights Reserved.
**According to AAA research, the use of hands-free and voice-activated systems is just as distracting as a hand-held cell phone.
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