this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2023
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“In four years Mike van Erp has filmed 1,400 drivers using their phones, leading to 1,800 penalty points, £110,000 of fines — and him being assaulted by disgruntled motorists. Is he a road safety hero or just a darned nuisance? Nick Rufford joins him on patrol”

I’ve watched a few of his videos. I should be surprised that he catches so many drivers in their phones, but in and around London? Not surprised at all.

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[–] [email protected] 37 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

If people rely on driving for their work or independence, they should not be using their phones while driving. It's not hard. A friend of mine is a train driver and you can imagine that being caught using your phone in that job is instant dismissal. His solution is to turn the phone off and put it in his bag, therefore there can be no temptation to use the phone and absolute proof in the case of an incident that phone usage wasn't part of it. If a motorist can't resist the temptation to use their phone, they should be doing the same.

The overwhelming majority of people 'caught' by Mikey seem to be using social media, not taking urgent work calls.

It is still dangerous to use the phone in traffic jams, because what phone users do while texting or doing Instagram is to be looking down while using their peripheral vision to see if traffic is moving, or even less. So they see a movement and move off, not having seen the pedestrian crossing through the gaps. I've witnessed a crash caused by such a distracted driver - albeit it was in Houston - the phone user next to us heard a car horn from behind and without looking just went and hit the car in front. Had there been someone crossing the road in front they would have been crushed.

Being in a traffic jam is still actively driving. Mikey might not be a hero, but calling him a "tool of the oppression of the state" is severely overegging the pudding, when to avoid such "oppression" all you have to do is not use your phone and pay attention to driving.