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March 08, 2010
Lawsuit Filed Against Bar That Served Alcoholic Beverages to An Off Duty Police Officer Prior to Deadly Collision
March 08, 2010
More Statistics on the Dangers of Texting While Driving
March 01, 2010
Southlake Woman Killed When Her Toyota Corolla Went Out of Control. Meanwhile, Toyota Tells Congress Its Vehicles Are Safe.
February 23, 2010
How Important Is Safety to Toyota?
February 18, 2010
The Politics Behind The Toyota Problems
Auto Accidents: Drivers Distracted by Text Messaging and Using Cell Phones While Driving
More Statistics on the Dangers of Texting While Driving
March 08, 2010
The Texas Department of Public Safety has released records which show hundreds of car crashes in North Texas last year were linked to a cell phone in the hand of the driver. Drivers on cell phones caused nearly 700 crashes in North Texas last year. Four of those wrecks resulted in fatalities. In the last five years, a direct link has been shown in more than 1,700 wrecks caused by drivers using their cell phones.
While Texas has enacted some laws against Driving While Texting or DWT, during the 2009 legislative session, lawmakers failed to enact laws that would make it illegal to text while driving. To date, twenty states have already banned texting while driving. As Dan Ronan, of AAA Texas explains the distraction, "You're looking at the keyboard, looking at the screen, processing the information, going back and forth, and you're trying to do this at 70 miles per hour on the George Bush Turnpike."
The Montes Herald Law Group, L.L.P. is a law firm with offices in Irving and Dallas Texas. We are experienced and qualified attorneys who dedicate our practice to the representation of personal injury victims, including victims of car accidents and other cases where people are severely injured through the negligence and reckless conduct of others. Please visit our website at www.MontesHerald.com for more information concerning our law firm and attorneys Rachel Montes and Tom Herald. If you desire a free consultation on a personal injury matter, please call us at (214) 522-9401 or email us at Rachel@MontesHerald.com or Thomas@MontesHerald.com for a free case evaluation.
Texting While Driving In Austin is Illegal
December 28, 2009
Effective January 1, 2010, texting while driving in Austin will be Illegal. The new law will still allow drivers to use their cell phone as a cell phone while driving, but not the texting and email functions that have become so popular. There will be a 30 day grace period for drivers to become accustomed to the new law. After that, a ticket will cost drivers up to $200. Unlike many other cities that have enacted bans on driving while texting, the Austin ordinance is not limited to school zones or to teenage drivers. This ban will be in effect for all drivers everywhere in the City.
The new city ordinance is due in part to the overwhelming research studies which continue to show that driving while texting or (DWT) can be just as dangerous as or even more dangerous than drinking and driving, and that drivers who text while driving are significantly distracted from their duties to operate a motor vehicle. Findings from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration blamed distracted drivers for 6,000 fatalities and half a million injuries in 2008. In December, 2009, the issue became a national issue when President Barack Obama signed an executive order stating that any government employee or its contractors that drive a government vehicle or using a government cellphone should not text while driving. The order blames texting while driving -- henceforth to be referred to as a DWIt, or driving-while-intexticated -- for everything from distracting drivers to causing deadly crashes. The executive order came as Congress wrapped up a two-day Distracted Driving Summit, in which distracted drivers were referred to as "a menace to society" and "an epidemic that seemed to be getting worse every year."
In addition, the Austin city ordinance is also due in part to the fact that efforts by Texas legislature enacted some new laws that make it illegal to text while driving, but the Austin City Council saw a need to make the ban apply to more than just a limited number of situations.
As of September 1, 2009, for the first time, the Texas legislature imposed state-wide restrictions on the use of cell phones and pda's. The new laws include:
- No handset talking or texting while driving are allowed when the school zone is active. Hands-free devices while driving and handset use WHILE STOPPED are allowed as are calls in certain emergency situations.
- Teenage drivers are prohibited from using wireless devices while driving. This includes a ban on talking on a cell phone, from sending or receiving text messaging and from sending or reading emailing while driving.
- Learners permit holders are prohibited from using handheld cell phones in the first six months of driving.
- School bus operators prohibited from using cell phones while driving if children are present.
The Montes Herald Law Group, L.L.P. is a law firm with offices in Irving and Dallas Texas. We are experienced and qualified attorneys who dedicate our practice to the representation of personal injury victims, including victims of car accidents and other cases where people are severely injured through the negligence and reckless conduct of others. Please visit our website at www.MontesHerald.com for more information concerning our law firm and attorneys Rachel Montes and Tom Herald. If you desire a free consultation on a personal injury matter, please call us at (214) 522-9401 or email us at Rachel@MontesHerald.com or Thomas@MontesHerald.com for a free case evaluation.
Presidential Ban on Texting While Driving: Driving While Intexticated (DWIt)
December 10, 2009
President Barack Obama signed an executive order stating that any government employee or its contractors that drive a government vehicle or using a government cellphone should not text while driving. The order blames texting while driving -- henceforth to be referred to as a DWIt, or driving-while-intexticated -- for everything from distracting drivers to causing deadly crashes.
The executive order comes as LaHood wraps up a two-day Distracted Driving Summit, in which he called distracted drivers "a menace to society" and "an epidemic that seemed to be getting worse every year." He also announced new findings from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that blamed distracted drivers for 6,000 fatalities and half a million injuries in 2008.
The executive order only applies to federal employees now, but drivers eyeing the guy who's DWIt in the lane next to them should take heart: Several states have already enacted bans on cellphone use while driving and, at the end of July, four Democratic senators, led by Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), introduced legislation that would push the ban nationwide.
Studies show that people who talk on the phone or text message while driving are actually as impaired as drunk drivers, braking almost 20 percent slower than other motorists. Motorists who talk on cell phones while driving are as impaired as drunken drivers with blood-alcohol levels at the legal limit of 0.08 percent. According to Jim Moulin of the University of Utah. "We found that people are as impaired when they drive and talk on a cell phone as they are when they drive intoxicated at the legal blood-alcohol limit," said Frank Drews, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Utah. Previous studies have suggested as many as 2,600 people are killed each year in accidents involving drivers on cell phones. About 10 percent of drivers say they sometimes talk on cell phones while driving, and that figure is growing.
Another study conducted by AAA found that nearly half of 16 and 17 year-olds say they text message while driving, and 20 percent of drivers overall admit to occasionally keeping one eye on their keyboards while the other is on the road. Considering that these teenagers are the least experienced driver's on the road, and that often they tend to be driving too fast or under the influence, the addition of another distractor makes for a deadly combination.
Researchers believe that part of the problem is that motorists on the phone don't realize what's going on around them. Previous research has shown that up to 50 percent of the visual cues spotted by attentive drivers are missed by the talkers. Another part of the problem is that people tend to over-estimate their ability to drive while distracted. As has been largely reported in drinking and driving studies that people who are intoxicated tend to believe they can handle it or drive safer after a few drinks, the study reported that. "Eighty percent of drivers think they are above average in their ability to drive while talking on a cell phone.
These studies confirm what our common sense tells us about distracted drivers: Drivers that use a cell phone to send text messages or emails while they drive are a clear danger to themselves and to others. Those who engage in this behavior are acting in a manner which is grossly negligent because it involves an extreme degree of risk that someone will be killed or sustain a substantial physical injury because of a distracted driver. Those that engage in this behavior are aware of the risk but nevertheless continue to engage in such behavior without regard to the rights, safety and welfare of others on or near the roadway, and without regard to the safety of their passengers who often are small children.
The Montes Herald Law Group, L.L.P. is a law firm with offices in Irving and Dallas Texas. We are experienced and qualified attorneys who dedicate our practice to the representation of personal injury victims, including victims of car accidents, drunk driving accidents, premises liability claims, insurance and bad faith claims, construction accidents and other cases where people are severely injured through the negligence and reckless conduct of others. Please visit our website at www.MontesHerald.com for more information concerning our law firm and Rachel Montes and Tom Herald. If you desire a free consultation on a personal injury matter, please call us at (214) 522-9401 or email us at Rachel@MontesHerald.com or Thomas@MontesHerald.com for a free case evaluation.
Auto Accidents: Drivers Distracted by Text Messaging and Using Cell Phones While Driving
October 26, 2009
It is now illegal to view, send or text message while driving your car in Austin. This new ban on texting is not limited to school zones, it applies anywhere within the City. The ordinance excludes police, fire and paramedics on the job using a wireless communication device. It also excludes drivers who are stopped at a traffic light. This new ordinance banning driving while texting was initially supposed to take effect in November, but council members delayed it until January 2, 2010. Each violation will be a Class C misdemeanor, which carries a fine of up to $500 and can be appealed in municipal court.
In addition, the Austin City Council approved several other traffic ordinances:
•· The city council also passed a resolution blocking police officers from drawing blood of drunk driving suspects. The measure requires technicians to draw the suspect's blood in a public health setting and with emergency services immediately available.
•· The council also adopted an ordinance that requires motorists to give 3 feet of clearance when passing a bicyclist or other so called vulnerable road users. They include runners, pedestrians or people in wheelchairs. For heavy duty trucks and commercial vehicles the distance is 6 feet. The ordinance takes effect in November.
UPDATE: WOMAN CONVICTED OF NEGLIGENT HOMICIDE AFTER BEING DISTRACTED BY TALKING ON HER CELL PHONE
October 10, 2009
Following the October 8, 2009 guilty verdict and sentencing of Jeri Montgomery (24) a Humble, Texas woman for negligent homicide in connection with the deadly accident she caused in which she was accused of being distracted by talking on her cell phone, the Harris County District Attorney calls the actions of a Humble woman accused of causing an accident after getting off of her cell phone selfish and narcissistic. The jury convicted Jeri Montgomery of negligent homicide, and she is serving a 30 day jail sentence for causing the accident that killed Chance Wilcox. She was also sentenced to ten years probation.
The Harris County District Attorney Pat Lykos commented, "She's talking on her darn phone and then she misses her entrance to the freeway," said. "Big deal. Just drive down to the next one. Why endanger everybody on the road? Part of that is selfishness." While driving and talking on a cell phone is not against the law in Harris County, unless you are in a school zone, Texas law allows prosecutors to press charges for Negligent Homicide in the event they believe a driver of a motor vehicle was negligent for any reason. In this case, the negligence involves driving while being distracted because of the use of a cell phone. As a result, the District Attorney's warning is clear to drivers in Harris County that if you are driving in Harris County, you should consider yourself warned. If people are driving while being distracted, regardless of what the distraction is, and engage in another reckless act and cause an accident," they may be charged with a crime.
Interestingly, the convicted driver, Jeri Montgomery, reportedly told a CBS Reporter that she doesn't think she got a fair shot, and her attorney has filed for an appeal.
This case is important not only to drivers in Harris County, but to all Texans because it highlights that while the law in Texas does not specifically make it illegal to use a cellular telephone while driving in all situations, in an appropriate case, criminal charges can be brought against drivers who drive recklessly because of being distracted by using the phone. See our blog for a summary of the current Texas laws that make it illegal to drive while using a cellular telephone, but beware that some cities have enacted ordinances that may also limit the use of a telephone while driving
Pushing for a Nationwide Ban on Driving While Texting
September 29, 2009
As a general rule, it is not illegal to text while driving in Texas. AAA has initiated a nationwide campaign to pass federal and state laws banning text messaging by all drivers in all 50 states by year 2013. AAA is seeking to implement legislation that will make it illegal to send, write or read text messages or e-mails while driving.
As of September 1, 2009, for the first time, the Texas legislature imposed state-wide restrictions on the use of cell phones and pda's. The new laws include:
•1. No handset talking or texting while driving are allowed when the school zone is active. Hands-free devices while driving and handset use WHILE STOPPED are allowed as are calls in certain emergency situations.
•2. Teenage drivers are prohibited from using wireless devices while driving. This includes a ban on talking on a cell phone, from sending or receiving text messaging and from sending or reading emailing while driving.
•3. Learners permit holders are prohibited from using handheld cell phones in the first six months of driving.
•4. School bus operators prohibited from using cell phones while driving if children are present.
Research also shows that approximately one in five drivers admit to texting while driving at least once in the last 30 days. The popularity of texting is unquestionable. About two-thirds of Texas teenagers surveyed said they have talked on a cell phone while driving in the past six months, according to the state Transportation Institute. More than half said they had read or sent text messages while driving. A 2007 study said cell phone use was among the primary causes of fatal car crashes among teens. According to CTIA, the number of monthly texting messages reached 110 billion at the end of 2008, a more than 11-fold increase in three years. AAA is asking drivers to go to its website at www.aaafoundation.org/multimedia/headsup.cfm to learn more about its efforts to stop driving while texting.
The Montes Herald Law Group, L.L.P. is a law firm with offices in Irving and Dallas Texas. We are experienced and qualified attorneys who dedicate our practice to the representation of personal injury victims, including victims of car accidents and other cases where people are severely injured through the negligence and reckless conduct of others. Please visit our website at www.MontesHerald.com for more information concerning our law firm and attorneys Rachel Montes and Tom Herald. If you desire a free consultation on a personal injury matter, please call us at (214) 522-9401 or email us at Rachel@MontesHerald.com or Thomas@MontesHerald.com for a free case evaluation.

