As driving summit opens, AT&T launches anti-texting campaign

By Matt Hamblen, Computerworld |  Mobile & Wireless, AT&T, text messaging Add a new comment

AT&T Inc. announced a campaign today to warn cell-phone users, especially teens, about the dangers of texting while driving in advance of a federal Distracted Driving Summit that kicks off in Washington on Wednesday.

The carrier said it will put warnings about texting on phones it sells before the holiday season and on signs in its stores. AT&T will also revise its policies to expressly prohibit texting while driving for its employees who drive as part of their job. AT&T is one of the country's largest employers, with 290,000 workers.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is expected to attend the two-day meeting as well as federal highway safety officials and researchers on cell phone use while driving.

Information about the dangers of texting while driving is being included in defensive driving classes. Public service announcements are also planned to bring home the message to the public.

The campaign will be announced today by AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson at the Detroit Economic Club, AT&T said. "Our goal is to send a simple, yet vital, message to all wireless users: Don't text and drive," Stephenson said in a statement.

All the major wireless carriers have campaigns opposing texting while driving, although the companies vary on their views about laws banning the practice. AT&T and others carriers want to take advantage of the timing before the summit, which AT&T will attend and support.

But an AT&T spokesman said the carrier has decided to let the public decide its position on proposed legislation. Pending in the U.S. Senate is a bill to require states to ban texting while driving or face the partial loss of federal highway funds. "We think the decision as to whether there is specific legislation required is up to the public and to their legislators," the spokesman said in an e-mail today.

The bill, called the ALERT Driving Act , was introduced in July and would require states to ban drivers from sending text or e-mail messages or risk losing 25% of their federal highway funds each year they fail to comply.

AT&T said in July, before it had reviewed the ALERT legislation, that it was generally supportive of legislation prohibiting texting while driving, but did not explain its apparent shift today.

Verizon Wireless supports the legislation, while Sprint Nextel said it hadn't taken a position, but has long argued for better driver education to urge drivers not to text and drive.

The financial sanctions in the bill caused the Governors Highway Safety Association to oppose the measure.

Currently, 14 states have various laws that ban texting while driving, which some research studies have found greatly impairs a driver's ability to drive safely. One recent study found that the risk of getting into an accident is 23 times higher when texting while driving.

Some groups argue that more laws won't help. Vlingo Corp., which makes a mobile voice application, today released data from a survey of 4,800 people that showed little or no impact from state bans on driver behavior. Vlingo's view is that laws are hard to enforce, making hands-free technology all that more important.

ITworld LIVE

Mobile & WirelessWhite Papers & Webcasts

White Paper

Empowering Your Mobile Worker

Today's most productive employees are mobile, and your company's IT strategy must be ready to support them with 24/7 access to the business information they need across a range of mobile devices.See how corporations are meeting the many needs of their mobile workers with the help of Box.

White Paper

Converged Infrastructure for Dummies

As you know, everything is mobile, connected, interactive, and immediate. This is exactly why organizations need a highly agile IT infrastructure in order to keep pace with extreme fluctuations in business demand. This book will help you understand why infrastructure convergence has been widely accepted as the optimal approach for simplifying and accelerating your IT to deliver services at the speed of business while also shifting significantly more IT resources from operations to innovation.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

White Paper

SMB's and the Consumerization of IT

As social media becomes an integral part of consumer technology, an increasing number of employees are bringing their personal mobile devices to work, enabling social media and collaboration in the workplace.

White Paper

Refreshing the Mobile Infrastructure

The convenient portability and high functionality of consumer devices combined with the ability to connect to the Internet almost anywhere and at any time are resulting in a growing mobile workforce realizing important productivity benefits - right at the point of contact with customers and partners.

Webcast On Demand

Mobility KnowledgeVault

How "mobile ready" is your infrastructure? This Mobility Knowledge Vault provides a wide variety of expert advice on how to strike a balance between end user ease-of-use and security. Prepare your organization with primers on data encryption and user authentication, device disablement and devising an employee-liable device strategy that makes both IT and users happy.

Sponsor: Dell

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question