In December, the National Transportation Safety Board that states ban drivers from using their cell phones in any way while operating a car.
In its report, the NTSB cited an accident that killed two people and injured at least 50 others. The crash took place on Interstate 44 near Gray Summit, Mo.
A St. Louis-area Democrat has introduced legislation that takes care of part of that recommendation. Mo. currently bans texting while driving for those under 21. State Sen. wants to expand that to all drivers, though a for consideration when the legislature reconvenes in January would not allow police officers to pull someone over on suspicions of texting while driving.
"You have to start small," Wright-Jones said. "These things take time, and we just take the steps that come to us, and we'll push it as far as we can."
Wright-Jones' measure is identical to one that got a committee hearing but nothing else. She thinks the NTSB's Dec. 13 recommendation may spur her colleagues to action this year.
"Every year the bills comes up, there are new thoughts about it, there's more discussion, and if it doesn't go as far as I'd like it to go this year, I'm sure someone in the future will pick it up and eventually we'll have some type of law," Wright-Jones said.
The senator says she’d also like lawmakers to consider enhancing penalties for accidents that are caused by people who are texting while driving.