Featured Post
Free The Hostages! Bring Them Home!
(this is a featured post and will stay at the top for the foreseeable future.. scroll down for new posts) -------------------------------...
May 14, 2012
Texting While Walking In New Jersey
Israel is often compared to New Jersey. There are similarities between the two, such as the size and the population.
One way I hope Israel will not be comparable to New Jersey is in the new ban on texting while walking. A New Jersey town, Fort Lee, New Jersey, just passed a ban on texting while walking. Pedestrians caught in the act will be issued a jaywalking fine of $85.
From ABC -Yahoo News Blog:
------------------------------------------------------
Reach thousands of readers with your ad by advertising on Life in Israel
------------------------------------------------------
One way I hope Israel will not be comparable to New Jersey is in the new ban on texting while walking. A New Jersey town, Fort Lee, New Jersey, just passed a ban on texting while walking. Pedestrians caught in the act will be issued a jaywalking fine of $85.
From ABC -Yahoo News Blog:
Avid texters beware: Fort Lee, N.J. police said they will begin issuing $85 jaywalking tickets to pedestrians who are caught texting while walking.That's a fine that would bring in a ton of money in Israel. We Israelis are glued to our phones, texting, facebooking, tweeting, pathing or whatever it is people do. If the cops of Israel followed suit and instituted this fine for texting while walking, it would wreak havoc on Israeli society,,,
"It's a big distraction. Pedestrians aren't watching where they are going and they are not aware," said Thomas Ripoli, chief of the Fort Lee Police Department.
Ripoli said the borough, which is home to approximately 35,000 residents, has suffered three fatal pedestrian-involved accidents this year. He hopes his crackdown on people who display dangerous behavior while walking will make his town safer, but not everyone is on board with the idea of issuing $85 tickets.
"When I walk I still look around. I'm not like constantly looking down the whole time," said resident Sue Choe.
Another woman complained about the tickets were "a lot of money."
Officers handed out pamphlets during a short grace period in March before they began aggressively going after "dangerous walkers."
More than 117 tickets have been issued, according to the New Jersey Record.
Two professors at Stony Brook University in New York conducted a study on walking and texting. They found texters are 60 percent more likely to veer off line than non-texters.
"We want to raise awareness that a real disruption occurs because of texting," Eric Lamberg, co-author of the study, told Long Island Business News. "Texting disrupts your ability much more than does talking."
------------------------------------------------------
Reach thousands of readers with your ad by advertising on Life in Israel
------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
I would ban using the phone when crossing the road at a crossing. Many times, I stop at a crossing to let someone cross, and the person is involved in a conversation or an SMS, and takes his/her time (which is their privilege of course), but it is very annoying.
ReplyDelete