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Distracted Driving Laws Spread

Despite the crackdown, Americans are still reluctant to put their phones away when they drive.

Arizona, Montana and South Carolina are the only states left without distracted driving laws, after a three-year span when lawmakers in other states cracked down on drivers who talk, text or browse on mobile devices.

And drivers in those three hold-out states should still beware. Police in Arizona can ticket distracted motorists for reckless driving, and municipalities in Montana and South Carolina have enacted their own bans.

Lawmakers are especially targeting drivers who send text messages. The number of states that ban all texting while driving jumped from 28 in 2010 to 41 now, the Governors Highway Safety Association reported Wednesday.

The safety group said states are using many methods to stop distracted driving, including increased police enforcement, publicity campaigns, data collection and events such as Distracted Driving Awareness Month.

Despite the crackdown, Americans are still reluctant to put their phones away when they drive. “At any given daylight moment in America, approximately 660,000 drivers are using cell phones or manipulating electronic devices while driving, a number that has held steady since 2010,” the group noted in its report, which was based on a survey of officials in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Crashes involving distracted drivers led to 3,331 traffic deaths in 2011, the latest year for which data is available. The number of distracted-driving deaths increased by 1.9 percent from 2010, while overall traffic fatalities dipped. But the number of injuries from distracted-driving crashes fell 7 percent to 387,000, at a time when overall traffic injuries remained level.

The state officials in the survey said their biggest obstacle to fighting distracted driving was a lack of funding for enforcement, media and education.

The state efforts come as smartphone use among Americans has rocketed. Smartphones are so widespread that, for the first time in 2013, a majority of American adults own one, according to the Pew Research Center.

This story was originally pubished by Stateline.org. Stateline is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.