SAFE DRIVING
We must educate early and often
The Dec. 17 editorial ("Make it the law to hang up and drive") states: "If any other blight were routinely killing 350 Minnesotans a year ... Minnesotans would clamor for its eradication."
I already see cell phone use while driving as a disease or blight. In fact, it is only one of many causes of an epidemic afflicting our roadways. After reading the column by the Washington Post's Dana Milbank ("Can you text 'draconian' while driving?" Dec. 19), I felt encouraged.
We need a multipronged approach for the eradication of the primary culprit: distracted driving behavior. Yes, a ban on driver cell phone use is a step in the right direction.
But it is not sufficient. We must engage and educate our future drivers when they are in their formative years. If we can have 2- and 3-year-olds play computer games, we can certainly coach elementary school students on good driver behavior.
These kids might even help us motivate the elder drivers who claim ownership to a driver's license but are too distracted to drive with discipline.
My recommendation is not just talk. I have been walking the talk for the past four years, raising awareness to distracted driving and educating young, very young and adult audiences at teen panels and driver-ed programs and through participation in state and national initiatives.
What motivated me? I am a bereaved parent who lost a daughter to a distracted driver. The last time I saw my daughter Shreya was on her 19th birthday in 2007.
VIJAY B. DIXIT, EDEN PRAIRIE