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OMG US states to ban txting + driving

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‘Distracted Driving Summit’

The US government wants to crack down on teens texting their BFF Jill from behind the wheel through federal action and public education.

The Department of Transportation today convened a two-day “Distracted Driving Summit,” gathering lawmakers, experts, advocates, and automakers to mull plans and recommendations on the dangers of text-messaging and other forms of automobile interference.

Last year, 5,870 people in the US died and about 515,000 were injured in reported crashes involving driver distraction, according to statistics trotted out for the event. Driver distractions were involved in 16 per cent of the country’s fatal crashes in 2008.

“To put it plainly, distracted driving is a menace to society,” said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood in his opening address to the summit. “Distracted driving is an epidemic and it seems to be getting worse every year.”

LaHood said tomorrow he will announce actions that the department will be taken at a federal level to deal with the problem, but added that legal action alone is an ineffective way to curb careless driving behavior. “You can’t legislate behavior,” he said. “Taking personal responsibility is the key to this solution.”

The new data points to the largest proportion of distracted drivers are those age 20 and under. Sixteen per cent of all under-20 drivers in fatal crashes were reported to have been distracted while driving, the government cites. But the problem is more widespread than inexperienced youths, said LaHood.

“Across the board, federal researchers who have directly observed drivers of all ages found that more and more people are using a variety of hand-held devices while driving,” he said. “Not just cell phones, but also iPods, video games, BlackBerrys, and so fourth. They’re doing it every day of the week, in the rain, and with kids in the car. And we know this problem isn’t limited to private citizens. Incredibly, bus drivers, train operators, truck drivers, and even school bus drivers have allowed distractions to interfere with their work.”

LaHood evoked the case of a California commuter train engineer who allegedly missed a red signal because he was busy texting a friend, killing 25 and injuring 135.

Like most seatbelt laws in the US, distracted driving legislation is left to individual states to decide. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia have passed laws making texting while driving illegal, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, and 9 states ban young drivers from texting while driving. But some lawmakers want to strong-arm all 50 states into similar laws.

Democrat Charles Schumer is championing legislation that would require states to ban texting or e-mail while driving a motor vehicle or lose 25 per cent of their annual federal highway funding. (By the way, that’s how the US enforced a 55 mph (90 km/h) national speed limit from 1974 to 1995.)

“We need every state to put safety first,” Schumer told the summit. ®

via OMG US states to ban txting + driving • The Register.

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Thousands of sharks and turtles wiped out for tinned tuna | Greenpeace International

 

 

Netherlands — John West, the UK’s largest seller of tinned tuna, has been ranked bottom of an environmentally-friendly tinned tuna league table published by Greenpeace today, due to the use of destructive fishing methods used to catch its tuna. New research shows that John West tinned tuna is often caught using ‘fish aggregation devices’, or FADs, responsible for wiping out thousands of sharks and turtles every year – including some rare and threatened species.

FADs are used to attract tuna, but also attract a host of other species and juvenile tuna before everything around the FAD is scooped up in a huge net. On average, every time a FAD is used, 1kg of these other species will be caught for every 10kg of tuna.

“John West must stop selling tuna caught in this way. If the fishing industry is going to be truly sustainable, it must support the introduction of large-scale marine reserves across the world’s oceans,” said David Ritter, Greenpeace UK oceans campaigner. “Thousands of turtles and sharks are killed every year while catching tuna. And John West – the biggest tinned tuna seller in the UK – is%2

Sainsburys’ own-brand tinned tuna topped the Greenpeace league table. Its fish is caught using a pole and line, making it the only tinned tuna brand that is fished using sustainable methods. Its tuna also originates mostly from companies based in the developing tuna-rich coastal states rather than foreign fleets operating under unfair and unsustainable access agreements, making it a more equitable choice.

Although skipjack tuna, the most common species of tuna used for tinned products is more resilient to overfishing than yellowfin, bigeye and bluefin tunas, the fishing methods of skipjack are further pushing these species to oblivion world-wide due to the high by-catch of their juveniles in the FAD associated purse seine fisheries.  

“In the Pacific, yellowfin and bigeye tuna are now being overfished. The huge purse seine fishery for the less-valuable skipjack using FADs is undermining the recovery of these species,” said Sari Tolvanen of Greenpeace International. “Large-scale marine reserves need to be urgently established in the high seas enclaves between Pacific Island Countries and the overall fishing effort on all tuna cut by 50% in order to put the fishery on a long-term sustainable and profitable footing.”

Greenpeace is calling for retailers world-wide to take responsibility for the seafood and tuna products they sell. The fisheries organisations tasked with the management and conservation of tuna are currently failing, due to the dominance of the interests of big industrial fishing nations and short-term profits in the these forums.

“Unless suppliers and markets take action to source only sustainable products, the industry will simply fish itself and our oceans to death”, concluded Tolvanen.

Greenpeace is campaigning for a global network of fully protected marine reserves covering 40 percent of our oceans as an essential way to protect our seas from the ravages of climate change, restore the health of fish stocks, and protect ocean life from habitat destruction and collapse.

TINNED TUNA LEAGUE TABLE

  • 1. SAINSBURYS. All of Sainsburys’ tinned tuna is now pole-and-line caught, making its own-brand the only one that is entirely fished using sustainable methods.
  • 2. CO-OP. Around 50 percent of the Co-op’s tinned tuna is caught using pole-and-line.
  • 3. MARKS & SPENCER. Good overall seafood procurement policy, but a great deal of its tuna comes from fishing boats that have no restriction on the use of FADs.
  • 4. ASDA. Shows awareness of the problems, but a great deal of its tuna comes from fishing boats that have no restriction on the use of FADs and the tins fail to say how the fish was caught. Has expressed some support for marine reserves.
  • 5. MORRISONS. Again, some awareness of the problems, a great deal of its tuna comes from fishing boats that have no restriction on the use of FADs and the tins fail to say how the fish was caught.
  • 6. TESCO. The majority of Tesco tuna comes from boats that have no restrictions on using FADs, and the tins fail to tell customers how the fish was caught.
  • 7. PRINCES. No restrictions on the use of FADs, no support for marine reserves and Princes’ tins never say how the fish was caught.
  • 8. JOHN WEST. Never tells consumers how the tuna was caught, no restrictions on the use of FADs for the majority of its catch, no support for marine reserves and more widespread use of tuna from stocks under specific threat. Further, the John West general sustainable seafood policy lacks basic credibility.

via Thousands of sharks and turtles wiped out for tinned tuna | Greenpeace International.

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