April is National Distracted Driving Awareness Month

Today, I was driving on Georgia 400 during rush hour when I noticed that the man in the lane to my left, that is to say, the fast lane, had hung his head, focused intently and extensively on dialing. I wanted to honk, to alert him to the fact that his eyes were on his lap instead of the road on which he was driving at top speeds, but I feared startling him and prompting the feared accident.

We have an occasion this month to ramp up the word about the rules of the road. April marks Distracted Driving Awareness Month for a reason. As technology offers us more opportunity than ever to connect constantly, we must disconnect while driving.

Let’s see.. lots of us jostling alongside each other at high speeds in heavy metal — well, that’s a sport that requires our full attention. When we’re driving robotic smart cars that drive themselves, we’ll revisit this. But for now, we still need to exercise caution and control over our vehicles.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood blogged today about a powerful program at a Rockville, Md. high school where students simulate the experience of losing a classmate every 15 minutes. The program was originally intended to demonstrate the fact an American is killed every15 minutes in an impaired-driving crash. But these days, texting and driving has been added to the program, as Secretary LaHood writes in his blog:

http://tinyurl.com/3roaj2d

Kudos to Secretary LaHood for calling attention to this grave issue and to the students at Rockville High School for programming that drives home the danger of impaired and distracted driving.

When driving, let’s remember to use our phones in case of emergency, not to cause one.