Advertisement

Teen driver? Leave cellphone off

Share
Times Staff Writer

SACRAMENTO -- Having already laid down the law for his two teenage daughters, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed legislation Thursday that will prohibit the rest of Californians under age 18 from using cellphones, text message devices and laptop computers while driving.

The new law, which takes effect July 1, 2008, addresses a leading cause of traffic accidents resulting in deaths and injuries, the governor said during a signing ceremony at Sequoia High School in Redwood City.

“This is to eliminate a major distraction for our young, inexperienced drivers and to make our roadways safer for everybody,” Schwarzenegger said.

Advertisement

He volunteered that he has barred his two teenage daughters from using cellphones while driving.

Katherine has been driving for a year, and Christina is about to start driving.

“I’m one of those parents, like anybody else that when your teenage child leaves in the car, you worry until they get home,” Schwarzenegger said.

“I told my daughters: ‘I give you the car. I give you the cellphone, but if I see you one time using both at the same time, both of them are gone,’ ” he said.

“ ‘The car will be gone for a long time and the phone will be gone for a long time. You go to school with the bus.’ They know that.”

The governor added: “And I sometimes spy on them. They also know that.”

Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among 16- to 20-year-olds, said Teresa Becher, chief of the Golden Gate Division of the California Highway Patrol.

“A person’s first year of driving is the most dangerous of their life,” Becher said.

The new law also prohibits under-18 drivers from using hands-free cellphone devices.

Violators will face a possible $20 fine for a first offense, and $50 for subsequent offenses.

Advertisement

Starting next July, adult drivers will be required to use hands-free equipment if talking on the phone while driving.

Some students at the high school Schwarzenegger visited are grumbling about the new law, according to Lovina Fernandes, a 17-year-old senior, but she said she and others think the new rules are good for teenagers.

“It will be safer for kids because there will be less distraction,” Fernandes said.

--

patrick.mcgreevy@latimes.com

Advertisement