CATTARAUGUS COUNTY
Ban approved on texting while driving
Published: June 25, 2009, 12:30 am
Story tools:
LITTLE VALLEY — A majority of Cattaraugus County legislators decided not to wait for the State Senate to vote on a ban of text messaging while driving.
For the sake of public safety, the Legislature voted, 18-2, Wednesday to approve the ban. As of Aug. 1, any driver caught using a wireless hand set to send, read or compose a text message while driving could face a fine of $150.
However, passage of a state law would make the county statute moot, officials noted. That possibility generated some arguments Wednesday.
Michael T. O’Brien, R-Portville, asked to send the measure back to the Public Safety and County Operations committees to await the outcome in the State Senate.
Sponsor John Padlo, D-Olean, urged no delay, noting he had waited for some time before introducing the measure, due to the State Senate stalemate.
He cited his own research and a local media outlet poll that showed that 408 of 477 respondents favor the county ban on text messaging behind the wheel.
Padlo also pointed to a list of more than a dozen other counties in the state that have banned the practice.
“It’s a more common form of communication, [and] younger people are establishing a behavior they won’t able to change, and it will result in a terrible car accident,” Padlo said.
Several other lawmakers agreed. Though Jim Snyder, R-Olean, pointed out some of the pitfalls the legislation, he noted, “Nobody in their right mind would vote against it.”
Bill Aiello, R-Olean, predicted the State Senate will pass the bill because it’s common sense. “It’s a sad day when we have to legislate common sense,” he said.

Newsletters
Sign up now for daily and weekly newsletters from BuffaloNews.com and get quick links to the info you want delivered directly to your inbox.Reader comments
Log into MyBuffalo to post a comment
MyBuffalo is the new social network from Buffalo.com. Your MyBuffalo account lets you comment on and rate stories at buffalonews.com. You can also head over to mybuffalo.com to share your blog posts, stories, photos, and videos with the community. Join now or learn more.








Comments have been disabled.
Due to a high volume of submissions that violate The News’ guidelines, commenting is no longer available on this story. If you’d like to share your thoughts on this story, click here to get information on contributing to The News’ opinion pages.