In other words,
We, the gov't will not bother to clearly spell out a minimum level of attention for training or licensing purposes ... only for punitive purposes.
Sounds like a pound of cure (insufficient), in and of itself implicitly denying the existence of an ounce of prevention.
Quote:
And nobody has managed to satisfactorily explain why it's not dangerous for truckers to use CB radios or emergency services to use their 2 way radios but somehow it's dangerous for "Joe Public" to use a phone!
Emergency services, commercial drivers, law enforcement, and taxi drivers all volunteer for additional driver training, at least here in the States.
The driving standards for normal citizens who do not earn a living by driving contain no criteria regarding the ability to decide how much attention needs to be paid, or can be diverted from the task of driving, from moment to moment.
Here's an idea: during the L-Test, the student gets a phonecall with no ID (this call is part of the L-Test). If the driver either:
safely pulls over to answer the phone, or
hands the phone to the proctor, and says, "answer this for me, please?"
Perfect answer.
If the student stops at a redlight or other traffic control device where they will not impede another's progress for at least 30 seconds, receives this anonymous call, answers the phone, and says something like, "can I/you call you/me back?", "would you text it to me?", or, "hold on a moment while I pull over"
Good answer.
Every law enforcement or emergency services driver was taught NOT to use the radio while steering, because that is an unacceptable distraction from the driving task. The average citizen gets no such lessons on how to manage attention as a finite resource.
How many here turn down the radio when looking for an address at night?