The market
today is
flooded with
electronic
devices that
can be used
in motor
vehicles and
millions of
motorists
are using
them with
reckless
abandon,
putting
themselves,
their
passengers
and their
fellow
travelers in
danger.
We've all
seen these
accidents
waiting to
happen. A
driver
holding up
traffic
while he or
she, with
head down,
finishes a
text
message, a
car swerving
into another
lane of
traffic
while the
driver reads
an email, or
a driver
recklessly
maneuvering
through
traffic with
one hand on
the wheel
and the
other
performing
that
infamous
one-handed
dialing
exercise.
Secretary
LaHood has
seen the
future of
unsafe
driving with
even more
use of cell
phones,
radios,
iPods, GPS
navigation
devices, TV
screens,
back-up
cameras and
yet-invented
electronic
devices, all
of which
distract
even the
most agile
drivers from
watching the
road.
These
distractions
are heaped
on others
that have
competed for
drivers'
attention
for years:
food and
drink,
checking the
speedometer
or gas
gauge,
reading
roadmaps and
road signs,
engaging in
conversation
or just
enjoying the
scenery.
We can't
turn back
the clock.
Distractions
are
inevitable.
But the
Secretary is
right to
call
attention to
the problem,
educate the
public and
offer
incentives
to limit
distractions
whenever and
however
possible.
The federal
government
can play a
useful role
in dictating
driving
habits and
restricting
technology
use, but
that role
has to be
limited.
Ultimately,
it is up to
the people
to act
responsibly.
The federal
government
is launching
in
cooperation
with cell
phone
companies a
federal
alerting
system,
called the
Commercial
Mobile Alert
System
(CMAS).
I am
concerned
that
government
will go too
far in
trying to
dictate
human
behavior and
hope we
fully
understand
the
implications
of
prohibiting
cell phone
use so that
it does not
also produce
undesirable
and
unintended
consequences.
For example,
forcing cell
phones into
the glove
box seems to
run counter
to federal
and local
Amber Alerts
that now
appear on
highway
traffic
signs and
urge drivers
to call
immediately
if a missing
child or
suspicious
vehicle is
seen.
The federal
government
is also
launching in
cooperation
with cell
phone
companies a
federal
alerting
system,
called the
Commercial
Mobile Alert
System
(CMAS). It
is expected
to be up and
running by
the end of
next year.
The new
CMAS-capable
phones will
receive
geo-targeted
notification
of
presidential
alerts,
hurricanes,
terrorist
attacks,
chemical
spills, and
evacuation
routes.
Amber Alerts
would be
sent to a
person’s
cell phone,
as well.
Moreover,
the messages
would be
sent in text
format.
This is not
only
inconsistent
with
Secretary
LaHood’s
anti-texting
initiative,
but also
offers up
another
classic
example of
the right
hand not
knowing what
the left
hand is
doing when
it comes to
the federal
bureaucracy.
[CMAS] is
not only
inconsistent
with
Secretary
LaHood’s
anti-texting
initiative,
but also
offers up
another
classic
example of
the right
hand not
knowing what
the left
hand is
doing when
it comes to
the federal
bureaucracy.
Clearly,
technology
can be both
a curse and
a blessing.
It has freed
up drivers
as early
model cars
required
manipulating
accelerator
and choke
levers in
the middle
of the
steering
wheel or
shifting
gears on the
steering
wheel
column. Car
radios
provide
critical
traffic
information
and
emergency
notices. GPS
Navigation
devices and
iPod
connections
are here to
stay. Soon,
most or all
devices will
be hands
free and we
will be
driving
“talking
cars.” There
are also
“heads-up”
displays
that project
your speed
or
navigation
arrows onto
your
windshield
so your eyes
don’t have
to wander
from the
road.
But there
are
legitimate
concerns
about real
prospects of
cars being
equipped
with
Facebook,
Twitter and
television-receiving
capabilities,
particularly
if they are
accessible
to the
driver.
There are
now cars
capable of
automatically
reducing
speed as it
approaches
an obstacle
or alerting
the driver
when there
is a car
approaching
in his
‘blind spot’
or if he is
swerving out
of his
traffic
lane. The
latter
probably
would be a
cheaper safe
guard for
the public
than the
placement of
‘rumble
strips’
along side
every
highway.
Hopefully,
the
Department
of
Transportation
and the FCC
will find
enough
wireless
spectrum so
drivers can
be notified
of road
conditions.
As our
infrastructure
is being
rebuilt and
repaired
there are
stretches of
road that
can be
perilous if
the driver
is not aware
of the
changes.
Wireless
notification
could surely
be used to
let drivers
know that
the
emergency
vehicle
siren that
they hear is
coming from
the left and
not behind
as all of us
become
distracted
trying to
respond to
the sound.
The recent
recalls in
the news
suggest that
we also need
to know more
about
electromagnetic
interference
in
automobile
computer
systems.
Any hot rod
enthusiast
or amateur
car mechanic
understands
the role of
electromagnetic
interference
on car
radios.
Whenever
they “souped
up” the coil
or spark
plug wires,
they had to
be sure that
the
dashboard
was
shielded.
The
examination
of potential
car software
glitches may
reveal the
need to
shield our
microprocessors
and magnetic
relays from
nearby
electromagnetic
interferences.
Here is
another area
the
Department
of
Transportation
and the FCC
can inquire
and
determine
what, if
anything,
needs to be
done.
Secretary
LaHood needs
to press
ahead with
public
education
and common
sense
incentives
for state
governments,
car
designers
and drivers
themselves.
But we all
hope the
Secretary
will stop
short of
attempting
to force
change in
human
behavior in
a free
society
where force
sometimes
doesn’t foil
bad
behavior, it
only
encourages
it.
More than
anything, he
should make
sure that
technology
remains a
partner in
auto safety,
not
something to
be
discouraged.
--###--
Billy Pitts
is a former
House
Leadership
staffer and
serves as a
member of
The Ripon
Forum’s
editorial
board. He
served on
the FCC CMAS
Advisory
Group, and
was also a
member of
the
Hurricane
Katrina
Technology
Impact
Commission.