http://www.yorkshiretoday.co.uk/ViewArt ... ID=1660763
Motorists on mobiles are blamed for 13 crash deaths
Campaigners say figures are appalling
Exclusive
Simon McGee
Political Editor
DRIVERS using their mobile phones at the wheel contributed to the deaths of 13 motorists and injured more than 400 people last year, the Yorkshire Post can reveal.
The Department of Transport has for the first time compiled figures showing the true extent of Britain's problem with on-the-road phone use, depicting a human toll which safety campaigners last night dubbed shocking and "absolutely appalling".
There were 429 accidents in 2005 where police reported a "driver using a mobile phone" as a "contributory factor".
Of these, 29 accidents – including nine "serious" incidents but no fatalities – were in Yorkshire and Humberside.
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (Rospa) and national road safety charity Brake, based in Huddersfield, both welcomed the new statistics for finally shedding some "hard facts" on the real impact of ignoring the mobile phone ban – but warned that they were probably just the tip of the iceberg.
Brake's head of campaigns, Cathy Keeler, hoped the figures would act as a "wake-up call" to drivers who were still flouting the mobile ban introduced in 2003.
"We've been calling on the Government to collect this data for years to show just how real the danger of using mobiles while driving is," she said.
"There is research out there showing that using a mobile phone while driving is as dangerous as other forms of distraction, like drink-driving, but these
figures are a real breakthrough.
"The fact is that people too often forget that cars are dangerous pieces of machinery.
"You wouldn't use a piece of machinery like a chainsaw or try to do anything else complicated while chatting away on the phone so why should people think that they can drive and do so?"
Ms Keeler added: "But these are probably just the tip of the iceberg since there'll be many other cases where the police have not been able to conclusively establish a link with someone making calls at the wheel."
Rospa's head of road safety, Kevin Clinton, stressed his charity's concerns about the supposedly-safe use of hands-free kits.
He said: "Thirteen people killed in one year because drivers are using hand-held mobile phones is absolutely appalling.
"And as shocking as these figures are, they will under-estimate the problem because they do not include accidents involving drivers using hands-free mobile phones, which is just as dangerous as using a hand-held phone.
"The figures also illustrate why it is so important for drivers not to use mobile phones while driving and we urge employers in particular to make sure their staff do not do so while driving for work."
Research in the United States has suggested that hands-free kits and headsets are as bad as hand-held phones because of the distraction caused by having a conversation.
But Ministers appear intent on addressing the problem by cracking down further on mobile handset-using drivers.
The Government's Road Safety Bill, making its way through Parliament, proposes doubling the fixed penalty from £30 to £60 – and making it an endorsable offence, subject to three-penalty points per infringement.
Last night the Department of Transport said: "We're keen to make sure that drivers are aware of the dangers of mobile phones, which is precisely why we're on course to make them an endorsable offence in the Road Safety Bill which we expect to come into law in early 2007."
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Anyone seen national crash causation data anywhere else? I'm trying to find out where this data came from, and not least because DfT now have national data on a new contributory factor:
'exceeding speed limit' for the first time.
(I'm aware of the West Midlands Road Accident Review, and I'm working on it.)
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13 mobile phone deaths are something of a relief. I thought it could have been quite a bit worse. Don't forget we're well over 1,200 deaths per year behind expectation - and these figures eliminate mobile phones as a significant cause (something that I was able to deduce years ago).