NY Attorney Offers Advice on Technology that Helps Keep Teens Safe While Driving

As an accident attorney, I could not help but laugh when I saw this Close to Home comic. Throughout my daily work, I meet many teenage victims of accident cases, so I understand the importance of not driving distracted. Therefore, while this comic is funny, it also got me thinking: is there a better way for parents to ensure the safety of their teen drivers— without going to the extremes of this mother and her driving gloves?

Recently, I have come to find a surprising source of comfort for the anxiety that having a teenage driver may provoke: technology. Indeed, those same cell phones that can cause so much potential for reckless and distracted driving can also be a powerful tool that can help keep young adults safe and accident-free.

Last November, my colleague Jim Reed wrote a blog post, which can be seen here, praising the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for banning texting while driving. Like Jim, as an accident attorney, I cannot say enough how much I agree with that decision. I am, however, also realistic in realizing that, like so many adults, teens are often glued to their cell phones. Even though there are laws in place banning texting and driving, the temptation is still there. That is why many parents may find a recent USA Today article, entitled “Devices Target Distracted Driving,” interesting; it cites cell phone apps or other forms of technology that can allow parents to stop their teen from texting, surfing the Internet, or even talking on their cell phones while they are driving.

Inspired by the USA Today article, here are three tools that can help keep your teens safe:

1. Cellcontrol- available for $7.95 a month for up to six phones, this in-car port stops drivers from gaming, searching the Internet, and receiving texts and phone calls while driving. You can see a video of how Cellcontrol works here.

2. iZup- a cheaper alternative to Cellcontrol, costing $20 annually, this blocks cell phone use while a car is moving, even disabling it at stop signs and red lights, often taking several minutes to disable after a car stops moving.

3. iCar Black Box App- In the event of an accident, this 99 cent app acts as a black box, recording a video during the accident that you can then access later.

Indeed, today the phase “There’s an app for that” can apply to so many varied topics, including everything from pet first aid to emergency flashlights when it comes to accident scenes. I deal with many families with teens who have been deeply affected by the terrible physical and emotional pain that car accidents can cause, and I can only hope that new technology can help prevent similar trauma in the future.

Even if these tools do not work best for you and your family, I encourage everyone with teenage drivers to stay safe, talk to your kids about their driving habits, and keep up to date with New York State teen driving laws.

No matter how you choose to protect your family while they drive, I hope that everyone stays safe this winter— preferably without having to wear “no-text driving gloves”! 

 Thanks, Christina

_______________________________
Christina Bruner Sonsire, Esq.
NY & PA Injury & Malpractice Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
303 William Street
Elmira, New York 14902-1338
csonsire@zifflaw.com
Office: 607.733.8866
Toll-Free: 800.ZIFFLAW (943.3529)
Web:zifflaw.com
Blog: NYInjuryLawBlog.com


Wider Access To “Black Box” Data Will Change Car Crash Lawsuits In Big Ways, Says NY Accident Lawyer

The use of event data recorders starting in 2013 will lead to big changes in car accident reporting.

Everyone has read about event data recorders (EDR) — usually called “black boxes” — that investigators find at the scenes of plane crashes. They are valuable tools for investigators in learning the exact details of what happened in the moments before and right up to the time of the crash itself.  Black box data reveals speed, braking, angle of forces, timing and a whole host of other valuable information.

My Westchester County colleague, Mark A. Siesel, recently pointed out that black box data will be more widely available in car accident cases starting in 2013. Starting in 2013, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will require that all vehicles capture the same data in the same format. There will also be a tool available to access all the data.This will be a huge change because it will allow a treasure trove of information to be available to those people investigating how a crash occurred.

My recent blog post on bicycles with GPS-enabled computers, coupled with the news about vehicle black boxes, provide cold, hard, objective proof of issues that historically been tough to prove — speed of a vehicle before impact, speed at impact, braking times and so on.

For now, the data from the black boxes in vehicles is not easily accessed by third parties such as insurance companies and litigants in car accident cases, even though between 65 percent and 90 percent of vehicles now made have EDRs, according to government figures from 2008.

Among the information available — the change in forward speed of the vehicle; the maximum change in speed; speed prior to impact; whether the driver applied the brake; seat belt use; the number of crashes and much more.

In New York and 12 other states (not Pennsylvania), privacy concerns led to laws requiring an owner’s permission to download the data. In New York, the owner is the person with the title to the vehicle.  Because of these laws, a vehicle owner, particularly one who felt that they might be at fault in causing a collision, could legally withhold permission to download their vehicle’s data.

OBTAINING BLACK BOX DATA QUICKLY CAN BE CRITICAL!

A big concern should be about the time limit on the access to the data. The data is only stored temporarily, for six to eight weeks of normal use of a vehicle.

This is another reason why it is critically important that injured parties promptly contact an experienced accident lawyer because there are many complex issues regarding preserving, analyzing and presenting the scientific data. Sad to say, it is never a good idea to try to perform your own brain surgery. Same goes for trying to handle your own injury case in Elmira, Corning and the Twin Tiers  ….

Thanks for reading.

Jim

_________________________________
James B. Reed
NY Car Accident Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
Mailto: jreed@zifflaw.com
Office: (607)733-8866
Toll-Free: 800-ZIFFLAW (943-3529)
Blogs: NYInjuryLawBlog.com and

 

 


NY Car Accident Lawyer Explains Why Lawsuits Can Be GOOD and Save Lives!

'02 Monte Carlo Driver Airbag Deployment

These days, it’s popular to blame trial lawyers for almost EVERYTHING bad.  However, it’s important to remind folks of the GOOD that comes out of lawsuits that have served to make our lives safer.

Trial lawyers have helped in changing safety standards in everything from flammable pajamas that needlessly killed thousands of children to seat belt laws to safer workplaces to safer cars to safer highways….

The bottom line is  that consumer lawsuits have saved countless lives because corporate America responds to one punishment– HIT THEM IN THE WALLET AND THEY WILL RESPOND!  Sad to say but corporate engineers are constantly weighing the costs of improving a product to make a product safer versus the possible costs of lawsuits for people who are injured or killed because a less safe design was used.   Because of this cold, hard, dollars-and-cents analysis, the costs of a possible lawsuit have the direct effect of making products safer.  And that is GOOD for all of us!

A recent op-ed in the Washington Post about safer automobiles got me thinking about how trial lawyers have made a difference in all of our lives.

Gibson Vance, the president of the American Association for Justice, reminds us of the role litigation has played in improving safety for motorists. In the April 15, 2011, op-ed “How our cars got safer,” Mr. Vance said new National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) figures show that traffic deaths are at their lowest since 1949.

Mr. Vance observed that better technology, better regulations and better-informed consumers all made an impact, then he made this important and often-overlooked point: “History shows that litigation and the civil justice system have served as the most consistent and powerful forces in heightening safety standards, revealing previously concealed defects and regulatory weaknesses and deterring manufacturers from cutting corners on safety for the goal of greater profits.”

Rather than cave to ongoing pressure from auto manufacturers to ease regulations and limit liability, legislators must continue to hold manufacturers accountable and protect consumers’ access to the civil justice system.

Mr. Vance cites as an example the litigation that drove American automakers to universally implement safer switches on power windows. The deaths of seven children in a three-month period in 2004, killed by power windows in cars, and the litigation that followed, led U.S. automakers to change the switches from ones you push down to raise the window to ones you have to lift up to raise the window. Children no longer get trapped accidentally in the windows by leaning on the switches.

Mr. Vance also said the auto industry has, for years, “worked to undermine regulations and limits its liability by pushing for complete immunity from lawsuits when their vehicles comply with minimum federal safety standards.”

As he correctly points out, this would be DEVASTATING for consumers.

He concludes: “… Without the civil justice system, gas tanks would still explode in rear-end collisions, seat belts and airbags would not be standard, and cars would roll over onto roofs that would be easily crushed.”

An important report:

To learn more about the role of litigation in safer automobiles, read the American Association for Justice report, “Driven to Safety: How Litigation Spurred Auto Safety Innovations.” I think you’ll find it interesting, important and eye-opening reading.

Thanks for reading, Jim
_________________________________
James B. Reed
NY & PA Injury & Malpractice Lawyer
Ziff Law Firm, LLP
Mailto: jreed@zifflaw.com
Office: (607)733-8866
Toll-Free: 800-ZIFFLAW (943-3529)
Web: www.zifflaw.com
Blogs: NYInjuryLawBlog.com and
NYBikeAccidentBlog.com