weepej wrote:
In Gear wrote:
But when we have a case of six of one and a half dozen of the other
Hmm, I'd say we have a case of 24 of one and half a dozen of the other, which probably represents the weight of something going wrong for somebody driving a heavy car at quite some speed whilst texting on a phone, and a cyclist going through a red light.
Rest assured weepej that we do hammer those who persist in using these phones. Oh .. sure they are small. But they still require a hand to keep ot the ear or worse - cradling between ear and shoulder - which rather impedes observation skills.
Texting? You have to look to see what u r txtg and it's not quite the same as touch-typing or two finger typing on a keyboard

As for the msgs..i m afrd i hv prblm w txt spk. (probably nowt like what my own kids type. I do not understand it. Wildy is much easier

as is the dyslexic poster on some other forum .
BUT... you know the old saying
My Mum's fave sayings to us over sibling fights wrote:
Two wrongs do not make anything right.
He was fatally unlucky. She was catastophically unlucky in that his decision to ignore the light and her decision to read a text message and glance - perhaps to the right instead of ahead - taking for granted that there were no pedestrians crossing or rogue cyclists around when approaching from a curved slip. I doubt she was actually texting. Mad Doc chatted to me on the phone earlier today. We were planning to meet for a bicycle ride - but it's so windy and wet up here that we decided to put off. However, he did ponder one thing and said he was going to post it up. Not seen it so far so I will pinch his thought.
It's just that the press published the text message the woman's ex sent to her.. but not her reply? That does seem odd given the verbatim relay of the original message. I wonder... I think we are being misled by journalese. I do not think she was actually texting.. but had "used the phone" in the sense of picking it up and reading this message. I think it highly likely that she was reading the message and not physically texting when she hit the cyclist. If this was the case - and I strongly suspect this the reality on the basis that a journalist's report is focussed on sensation based loosely on the facts.
Now this slant makes more sense as reading a message is just the same in lost concentration terms as actual texting a reply. Let's put it this way - she denied texting as she was not texting - but reading the text? The wording of the law does not really differentiate between reading a text and physically sending one - and it really is up to a judge's interpretation or "ratio decidendi". We have this precedent in place .. and I suspect this was the real reason behind the prosecution - especially if a forensic check showed the time the message was sent and then viewed.
Now I am giving this insight to let folk. pal, lurks, muppets, trolls whatever..

out there know the dangers of holding the phone - even if as innocent in intent as the lorry driver removing from a jacket and placing out of reach

(Though I have to say - we do use professional judgement and make common sense decisions based on what was actually SEEN in context WITH the prevailing traffic condition as well as the standard of the overall driving.
But two wrongs never make it right. I would have been happier if the stuntsafetyjournalese had focussed on the dangers of jumping red light signals on the basis that you never know if the driver on the green light reads a text message, sends a text message or just simply accelerates to "beat the lights"
A series of THINK! adverts on amber gambling..
"textering driving does not make dexterous driving"
." Use a mobile phoney create a phoney expert driver"
But her sentence? I think she would have benefitted more from a shorter sentence - but a longer ban requiring an extended re-test given we already have speeding penalites - admittedly via automation.. which brings me back to an earlier point.
Had she been booked for speeding in this area? Decisions would be made professionally. But if our officers decided that a fine with points was warranted - then she would have received a full explanation as to why the action was warranted. The explanation is actually "trained" - but officers can adapt to their own personality style. But basically - we aim to give a lasting safety message which hopefully does not see them re-offending and improves their skills or attitudes. Maybe she would have learned sufficient not to text.. to approach lights with a COAST aware mind.

Who knows? And YES// before you post back weepej - we estimate a 2% fail in pulls with polite but with a touch of lemon and vinegar acid twist lectures..
