REGION — Maine State Police
are taking a new tack to enforce Maine’s distracted driving law, using an
unmarked van to catch motorists in the act of texting behind the wheel.
According to Steve
McCausland, spokesman for the Maine Department of Public Safety, a four-hour
patrol of the van on Interstate 95 in southern Maine, including stretches
through Scarborough and South Portland, netted 23 citations last week.
“As one trooper
drove the van, a second sat in the back observing other driver’s activities as
they passed by,” McCausland said in a press release, adding that while texting
was the most common item competing with the road for driver’s attention,
motorists also were cited for eating, using the phone, and even reading.
“All affected their
operation,” said McCausland. “It was the largest number of motorists cited by
State Police for distracted driving since the no-texting law went into effect
last fall.
“The public sees
this every day,” said McCausland, “but the problem is that police in marked
cruisers are at a disadvantage because this activity is quickly put away.”
Despite the ban on
texting that became effective Sept. 26, 2011, According to the Bureau of
Highway Safety, Maine highway deaths are tending up 50 percent. There have been
21 fatalities so far in 2012, compare to 14 to this point last year.
Although most of
the recent deadly accidents were attributed to weather conditions, McCausland
says the most recent, late Wednesday in Eddington, may have been caused by
distracted driving.
Penobscot County
deputies say Tracy McPhee, 44, of West Enfield died when her car left the road
and slammed into a tree.
“An examination of
her cell phone showed she had been texting moments before the crash,” said McCausland.
The fine for a
first violation of Maine’s new anti-texting law is $100 and McCauseland said
troopers will continue writing tickets.
“This will not be
the only time that the van or other type of vehicle will be used to catch
motorists who are not doing what they are supposed to behind the wheel,” said
McCausland.
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