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chon derry

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About chon derry

  • Birthday 03/16/1959

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  1. YOU CANT TOUCH THAT.................................................14 people over 8 years , gov claims 80 a year.....not the same..

    January 30, 2018

     

     
    January 30, 2018 4:36 pm
    Updated: January 30, 2018 11:12 pm

    B.C. lawyer says number of driving fatalities due to electronic devices is ‘exaggerated’

    CKNW
    lizayuzda.jpg?quality=60&strip=all&w=55& By Liza Yuzda Reporter/Legislative Bureau  CKNW
    GBCNH180130Bchernecki_tnb_2.jpg?w=670&quality=70&strip=all

    Are governments, ICBC and even the police exaggerating the dangers of distracted driving? A Richmond company says its freedom-of-information request has revealed far fewer deaths due to drivers using cellphones than officials claim. Ted Chernecki reports

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    A Richmond lawyer says ICBC and the province are greatly exaggerating the number of deaths caused by using an electronic device behind the wheel.

    According to Paul Doroshenko, BC Coroners stats show that 14 people died from using an electronic device while driving between 2008 and 2016. This after ICBC said last year that 80 people a year were dying from distracted driving.

     

    “They lump in people who are staring at their radio, or just drift off not thinking, maybe people who fall asleep, with people with cellphone violations,” said Doroshenko.

    “Clearly, cellphone violations aren’t the threat they are made out to be.”

    READ MORE: B.C. to impose big penalties for distracted driving

    Doroshenko said he’s not suggesting that using a device while driving isn’t dangerous, but the problem is that those people aren’t the ones being stopped.

    “They justify these enforcement actions where they hand out tickets like crazy to people who look at their cellphone at an intersection when they hear it beep and they’re worried about their kid at school or something — those people get a ticket.”

     

    He said giving tickets to people who are just sitting at a light won’t help make roads safer, noting the fines exceed the risk.

    In a written response to Doroshenko’s numbers, Joanna Linsangan with ICBC said the focus on smartphone safety is because they are the most common driver distraction.

     

     
     
     
     
     
     
    1. Show previous comments  6 more
    2. Sean Monahan

      Sean Monahan

      Doesn't matter to me if it's 5 people. It's x number of fatalities that could and should be avoided.

    3. chon derry

      chon derry

      part of the why I posted this is because of  the current icbc thing there's no denying the cell phone distraction thing and how its a revenue thing for icbc but its the exaggeration part ,and its the stupid people that have slipped by the driving instructors and WILL continue to have accidents whether theres a distraction law or not, and those are the people we CANT afford  financially or from a safety prospective.

    4. c00kies

      c00kies

      I don't know what the current punishment is for being caught, but maybe something like a DUI where you have your license suspended and have to attend classes will deter people. 

    5. Show next comments  9 more
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