Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Putting a stop to driving with CrackBerry
It didn't take long for the word to hit the street, but then, of course, that's where it originated.
On a downtown street.
I heard about it shortly after 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, which couldn't have been long after it happened.
Mayor Sam Katz's wife, Leah, was among a long list of drivers tagged by police on the first day of a month-long operation targeting drivers using hand-held devices. For emphasis, my informant, who couldn't help smiling about the delicious irony and the timing, said Leah was one of the first 10 drivers nabbed.
Later, a couple of reliable sources were able to confirm that, indeed, Mrs. Mayor was pulled over in a downtown "device" trap and slapped with a $199.80 ticket.
The mayor's office neither confirmed nor denied the report. Instead, his office told the Free Press it doesn't comment on His Worship's personal family matters.
How convenient.
But it's hardly just a personal matter if Mrs. Mayor -- who, like her husband, should be setting an example -- makes a conscious decision to disobey a traffic law that's aimed at preventing dangerous distracted driving.
Mind you, neither I nor many of you are in a position to judge her too harshly. The difference between what happened to Mrs. Mayor and people like many of you -- and shamefully even me in the past -- is we haven't been caught.
Still, that it could have happened on the first day of a publicized police operation suggests Mrs. Mayor wasn't paying attention to the news, that her husband didn't think to caution her police were out playing their own version of "tag, you're it," with drivers holding cellphones, or that neither of them thought it mattered.
If you know what I mean.
Mind you, the mayor and his wife may not be the only ones feeling a pinch of shame after Monday's police operation. The same street source who turned out to be right about Mrs. Mayor getting a ticket says a honcho at Manitoba Public Insurance was also swept up in the police net Monday, although an MPI spokesman couldn't confirm that.
If it's true, then that ticket would be even more embarrassing given MPI is spending $120,000 to pay the police overtime that's driving the Winnipeg Police Service, RCMP and Brandon Police Service roadside roundups.
As for how many were tagged in total Monday, oddly, when I asked, the Winnipeg police media messengers refused to disclose the number. They're not doing daily totals, I was told, which doesn't make sense given the purpose of the program is public awareness and deterrence.
Whatever the number of drivers nabbed Monday -- close to 100 I'm guessing -- it represents a fraction of the total who ignore the law every day. Either because they've been travelling in the CrackBerry lane too long to care, or more likely because they think they won't get caught.
Which is the same reason.
All of which makes me wonder why police can't be out running hand-held device operations such as this every month given how little it would cost MPI to back the program versus how much it would save in damage to vehicles, and more importantly, people's lives.
What we need out there on the road is an everyday sense that not only can drivers who use hand-held devices be caught, but they will be.
And that there will be consequences beyond a one-time fine of a couple of hundred bucks.
Manitoba, Alberta and Nova Scotia are the only provinces that don't have some form of a driver's licence demerit penalty attached to offences involving the use of hand-held devices in vehicles.
Would adding demerits make a difference?
Well, if seatbelt use is an indicator, it just might. Before demerits were added to fines for non-compliance, Manitoba ranked in the middle of the provincial pack for seatbelt use.
Now we're No. 3.
Demerits have to come, it's just a matter of time, or maybe some horrific collision caused by a driver texting or talking on a hand-held cellphone that finally forces the government to make the move quicker than it planned.
I'm guessing -- and hoping -- that in the meantime, Mrs. Mayor has learned a lesson so many other Winnipeggers still haven't. If only because what happened to her on the street, also hit the street.
And the newspaper.
gordon.sinclair@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 9, 2012 B1
More Columnists
- Back to Top
- Return to Columnists
Most Popular Columnists
- Good things come in small packages
- Jets could be greatly affected by deal
- Shy, kind and soft-spoken -- with the power to infuriate
- For Tim's mother, the issue is safety
- Rob Lowe shooting Casey Anthony story here
- Chelsea hungrier than Bayern
- Lobbyists' political gifts come at a price
- Vocal valour
- Snowbirds, Americans living in Canada read on...
- You could've warned them that you were leaving
- Common courtesy decreasingly common
- Some can't afford humane thing to do
- Jets could be greatly affected by deal
- Good things come in small packages
- For Tim's mother, the issue is safety
- Shy, kind and soft-spoken -- with the power to infuriate
- Best to use old stadium for entire season?
- Real NHL battle could just be about to warm up
- Bro: move in; you: move on
- Doomed water park gave Katz watershed moment
- If we build it, look out
- Common courtesy decreasingly common
- Majumder surprisingly frank -- and funny -- in HBO special
- You've got a Target? We're in
- Empty inside
- Katz versus Ford
- Can't share a vision when no one asks
- Some can't afford humane thing to do
- Water-park decision will show world who we are
- Signing Pav, completing stadium top of mind
- Long haul 'family' Every employee is a spoke in the wheel at Bison Transport
- Try cheese toast, caesar dressing at Like Hy's
- Jets could be greatly affected by deal
- Play's the thing to catch conscience of Parliament
- Common courtesy decreasingly common
- Becoming a hairstylist today goes far beyond knowing your way around a pair of scissors
- Some can't afford humane thing to do
- Long haul 'family' Every employee is a spoke in the wheel at Bison Transport
- Shy, kind and soft-spoken -- with the power to infuriate
- Try cheese toast, caesar dressing at Like Hy's
- Hope turns to dust in Niger
- Floating feline 18-year-old cat loves family swimming pool
- Rob Lowe shooting Casey Anthony story here
- Signing Pav, completing stadium top of mind
- You've got a Target? We're in
- Alberta vote is a gift for Harper
- The birth of a banana republic
- Rail firm looks to grain
- Play's the thing to catch conscience of Parliament
- Hope turns to dust in Niger
- The prince and the paper
- 'A special kind of sad'
- Another fine snow job from 'open' government
“We need to carefully add all the diverse elements that people need to live in a place: restaurants, workplaces, nice residences, perception of safety, green space, convenient transport, nearby schools for the kids they would like to have - if any piece is missing, the outcome will not last long.”
Posted by: goldenbob
Article: A SHED is not enough
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.