BATTLE CREEK, MI (WTVB) – If you normally use your cell phone while driving, you’ll want to rethink that habit while in Battle Creek from now on.
Within the City of Battle Creek, it is now against the law to use a hand-held cell phone while driving for almost any reason, and police now will use it as an educational tool, and can enforce it.
The City Commission in February approved the new rules to prohibit the hand-held use of a cell phone while driving a vehicle. That includes scrolling and typing on a phone, as well as speaking.
Signs have been posted at entry points of the city, alerting drivers to the local law. Police did not issue tickets related to the ordinance before staff installed the signs.
A state law prohibits texting while driving, but city officials say the new ordinance is more enforceable. The local law addresses a broader variety of activities that take drivers’ attention away from the road.
Police Chief Jim Blocker does not expect to issue an abundance of tickets related to the ordinance.
“Although enforceable, we anticipate more educational opportunities than enforcement actions in this first year,” Blocker said earlier this year. “There is a shared responsibility on our part to get the message out – and this works well with the state law – that distracted driving is not safe driving.”
Exceptions to the law are radio operators licensed by the FCC; police officers, fire department personnel, law enforcement officers and others driving emergency vehicles while performing their official jobs; and anyone reporting a traffic accident, medical emergency or serious road hazard.
Frequently asked questions are available at the city’s website, battlecreekmi.gov/faq,