Blue Lights – Empty Wallets if You Use a Cell Phone While Driving in North Carolina

IF YOU USE A CELL PHONE WHILE DRIVING IN NORTH CAROLINA

Police will issue warnings to drivers found to violate the new law for the first six months to ease the shock to drivers.

After six months, be ready to see blue lights and empty wallets. A bill has been introduced in the North Carolina General Assembly to make it a crime to use your cell phone while driving.

House Bill 144 would outlaw “distracted driving” and impose penalties that increase with subsequent offenses. Beginning December 1, 2019, the police will have reason to pull over drivers who use their hands to engage in distracted behavior that impairs their operation of a motor vehicle. The definition includes the use of a handheld mobile telephone or handheld electronic device. If you receive one of these tickets, then be prepared to spend a pretty penny because the infraction carries a $100 fine in addition to the court costs, which boosts the total cost of a citation to nearly $300.

If you receive a second offense, then the fine goes up and carries insurance points which will also cost you more money. If you don’t learn from the previous two tickets, you can expect a $200 fine, court costs, and two insurance points for another offense within three years.

The support for this law can likely be found in your drive to work or to the grocery store today. How often have you seen a vehicle swerving in and out of lanes and pass the driver looking down at their phone? For me, I see it daily. As a lawyer, I see the tragic results when a family calls to explain that their loved one was injured by a distracted driver on their cell phone instead of paying attention to the road.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reports that over 3000 people died from distracted driving for the most recent year that data was collected. Age also appears to be a significant factor in the likelihood of being a distracted driver.  NHTSA’s National Center for Statistics and Analysis shows that kids between 15 and 19 years old represent about 23% of all distracted drivers. Adults between the ages of 20-29 represent 19% of all distracted drivers. The percentage goes down for each subsequent age group.

The critical information here is that these fatalities are 100% avoidable if people avoid distractions such as handheld cell phones or handheld electronic devices while driving.

If HB 144 is successfully passed by the North Carolina General Assembly, then both visitors and residents of our state should be safer as drivers learn to stay off their phones while driving.

At the Law Offices of Jason E. Taylor, we have offices across North Carolina and South Carolina, and we can attest to the pain families feel when a distracted driver injures someone. It is senseless for someone to lose their life because another person is too self-absorbed to delay responding to a text message for a few minutes. If you or someone you know has been hurt because of a distracted driver on their cell phone, then we have the legal team who will fight for you.

Call the Law Offices of Jason E. Taylor at (800) 351-3008 to share your distracted driver story with us.

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