Archive for the ‘Bus Accident Law’ Category

Texting While Driving Continues to Pose Major Road Risk

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

cell phone use while driving 300x195 Texting While Driving Continues to Pose Major Road RiskA new study released last week, based upon U.S. government data,  confirms what our Chicago wrongful death lawyers have been saying all along:  driving and texting is a recipe for disaster.

The researchers, led by assistant professor Fernando Wilson of the School of Public Health at the University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, looked at data spanning nearly the last decade.  The results were published in the American Journal of Public Health.  The researchers looked at data from the National Center for Statistics and Analysis’s Fatality Analysis Reporting System, comprehensive a agency which records all deaths occurring on public roads in the United States.

What they found was staggering.  From 2001 to 2007, more than 16,000 people were killed in accidents involving a texting driver.

And the number of distracted driving deaths is only increasing.  In 2007, accidents involving cell phone use or texting resulted in 4,572 deaths.  In 2008, such behaviors resulted in 5,870 deaths.  The nearly 1,300 additional deaths represent an increase of 28%, or almost one-third again as many deaths.  The researchers stated that this increase was caused almost entirely by texting while driving – although cell phone use has remained relatively flat in recent years, texting has increased rapidly.

And lest you think that these rates are happenstance, or that the deaths are coincidence, consider the following:  the researchers found not only this staggering death rate, but an increase in particular types of crashes.  For example, growing numbers of accidents involve crashes into trees, light poles, and other stationary objects, the hallmark of a driver too distracted to even watch the road and keep his car on course.  Our Chicago car accident attorneys have seen the increase in such textbook distracted-driving accidents.

FocusDriven, an organization that advocates against distracted driving, puts the problem properly in perspective.  As board member Jennifer Smith has noted, the 5,000 annual American deaths from cell phone use and texting while driving is roughly equivalent to a commercial passenger airplane crashing every week for a year.  As Ms. Smith noted, “If that was happening, they would ground all flights until they figured out what the problem was and they solved it.”

But cell phone use, and texting, are wildly popular.  Although people are frightened of others engaging in these behaviors while driving, many people – including our lawmakers – engage in them themselves.  That makes getting effective legislation in place extremely difficult.  Our Chicago wrongful death attorneys echo the sentiments of FocusDriven:  if anything else were causing these numbers of deaths, our legislators would have acted by now.

Other research, which our injury attorneys have previously discussed, shows that texting while driving increases the risk of an accident by about the same amount as driving drunk.  Although many, including lawmakers, have an immediate reaction of doubt when they hear this, the research was straightforward and undeniable:  when the overall accident rate is compared to the accident rate of those driving drunk and those driving while texting, we see accidents increase by the same rate in each group.

The research released last week thus adds yet another troubling layer to the debate over cell phone use while driving.  The researchers found that drunk drivers are also more likely to use a cell phone or text while driving, perhaps because of lowered inhibitions and awareness of risk.  As if each of these behaviors alone were not dangerous enough, innocent drivers and pedestrians are thus faced with drivers engaging in both.

The government response:  a “summit” held in Washington, D.C., at which our leaders and lawmakers called for tougher laws to combat this growing menace.  While such a show is certainly appropriate, it is no longer adequate.  We call on our leaders to stop talking, and lead.

Not that there has been no government action at all.  Although this action has been stunted and truncated, it is happening, slowly but surely.  For instance, at the beginning of the year, truckers and other commercial drivers who use interstate highways were prohibited from sending text messages while on the road.  And the City of Chicago has banned the use of hand-held cellphones while driving.  That leaves a patchwork of surrounding suburbs and unincorporated areas unprotected, however, and many of the governing bodies of these areas have voted against appropriate restrictions.

Slow and steady is no longer acceptable.   We simply must have a statewide ban, in every state, on the use of hand-held cellphones and other text-messaging devices while driving.  Ideally, we would also have a federal ban on such behavior on interstate highways, by private drivers as well as commercial.

In the meantime, the innocent victims of distracted driving must stand up to these wrongdoers.  If the government will not protect us from distracted drivers, then we must protect each other – by bringing civil actions against such drivers when they injure the innocent, and thereby making drivers think twice before picking up the smartphone.

For a free consultation with an experienced Chicago wrongful death lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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CTA Bus Accidents Are a Daily Occurrence

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

CTA bus crash 300x199 CTA Bus Accidents Are a Daily OccurrenceOur Chicago accident attorneys are becoming increasingly concerned by the number of accidents caused by CTA buses.  As most Chicago residents are aware, CTA busdrivers often assume a cavalier attitude towards the surrounding traffic and pedestrians – changing lanes erratically, running red lights, and stopping across intersections.  Unfortunately, this has behavior has predictably resulted in an unreasonably high accident rate at the CTA.

In 2009, the CTA averaged a crash for about every thirty-four-thousand bus runs.  These accidents include not only more typical vehicle collisions, but buses colliding with pedestrians, bus shelters, light poles, viaducts, and even a house – which was so badly damaged it had to be demolished.

To put this figure in perspective, this is about one accident per day.

Lest you think that this number of accidents is normal, this puts Chicago at the bottom of the barrel in comparable mass-transit systems.  The Federal Transit Administration compiled statistics from 2008 to the present on the CTA, as well as the nine other biggest U.S. public bus systems.  The CTA had the most accidents of the ten.  While our Chicago bus accident lawyers are not surprised, we are disheartened.

There is some good news:  although the number of accidents is astounding, the CTA is posting more accident-free bus runs.  In fact, from 2008 to 2009, the CTA’s number of accidents per bus run increased by around nine percent.  The CTA management attributes this increase to its own efforts, including “renewed” emphasis on defensive driving, and better training, such as the use of bus simulators in its garages.

The CTA also credits another aspect of its driver training for the nine percent improvement:  driver retraining.  Yet it is not until a driver has been involved in two or more “serious” accidents that drivers are given one-on-one instruction that includes analysis of how the crashes could be avoided.

Perhaps more importantly, even with such a large improvement, the CTA remains woefully behind its peers in this important measure of safety.  We urge the victims of bus accidents caused by CTA bus drivers, and defective vehicles, to take action – perhaps if the CTA is called to account for these actions, it will get serious about training, “retraining” and disciplining drivers before a serious problem is at hand.  For those pedestrians, drivers and passengers seriously injured or killed in serious motor vehicle or bus accidents, it is critical to contact a top transportation accident attorney as soon as possible.

For a free consultation with an experienced Chicago personal injury lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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Distracted Driving Common Among Teenagers

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Drawing a conclusion that should not be shocking to the parents and friends of teenagers, a new study has found that distracted driving – perhaps the biggest danger facing motorists and pedestrians today – is rampant among American teens.  Indeed, the vast majority of American teenagers has engaged in distracted driving.  Our Chicago car accident attorneys sadly do not find this behavior surprising.  We do, however, find it troubling.

This most recent study of teens and distracted driving was conducted jointly by Seventeen Magazine and the American Automobile Association.  The two surveyed about 2,000 drivers between sixteen and nineteen years of age.  Both young men and young women were included.

The results help to explain why the number of car, truck, bus and other motor vehicle accidents caused by distracted driving is frighteningly high.  An astounding eighty-six percent of American teenagers admit to having engaged in such distracted driving practices as texting while driving, talking on a cellphone while driving, or eating while driving.  This is in spite of the fact that eighty-four percent of these teens are aware that these practices are dangerous.

According to data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, distracted driving caused close to 6,000 fatalities and 500,000 injuries in America in 2008.  Among American teens, automobile accidents are the single leading cause of death.

These facts, however, cannot force teen drivers to abandon distracted driving and stay safe behind the wheel.  Teenagers are more likely to take unnecessary risks, and often fail to fully evaluate risks and consequences.  That is why, of the distracted drivers surveyed, thirty-five percent believe that in spite of their distracted driving, they will not get hurt, and thirty-two percent believe that nothing bad will happen.

The notorious teenage sense of invincibility is also to blame.  A staggering thirty-four percent believed that their distracted driving was not a danger because they were used to multitasking – ignoring the basic realities and laws of physics which dictate that a driver cannot respond to a danger that he does not see because his eyes were not on the road.  Our Chicago accident attorneys, unlike these teens, have seen too many tragic distracted driving accidents to believe that anyone is capable of multitasking while driving an automobile.

The survey did provide some encouragement, however.  Although the teens surveyed attempted to defend and rationalize their own distracted driving behaviors, they were at least uncomfortable when other teens engaged in these same practices.  Nearly forty percent of the teens reported having been frightened, while a passenger in a car, by that car’s distracted driver.

We at Passen Law Group can only hope that this fear will lead teens to speak up, and complain about their friends’ distracted driving.  With teenagers, peer pressure is the single most effective means of changing behavior – if teens pressure each other to abandon distracted driving, there may be a positive change.  In the meantime, parents must closely monitor their teens’ driving practices, and step in if need be.

For a free consultation with an experienced Chicago personal injury lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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