New 2017 laws in California for cell-phone and kiddie-seat use.

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For those of you who live and/or drive in California, several new driving laws take effect next year. Here's a rundown on a couple of them:

http://www.pressdemocrat.com/news/6478504-181/cellphone-use-car-seats-and

North Bay drivers who hold or operate their cellphones to snap photos, check email, navigate routes or for almost any other purpose risk being cited under a new law that goes into effect Sunday.

Under current rules, California drivers can cradle their cellphones to snap selfies, surf music playlists or for any other activity other than for texting or making phone calls and still be within the law.

That changes under the new restrictions, which prohibit drivers from “holding and operating” cellphones for any reason, except for functions that require only “the motion of a single swipe or tap of the driver’s finger,” and only if the devices are mounted on the windshield or dashboard of the vehicle.

“If you can get through the drive without using your phone that’s ideal,” CHP Officer Jon Sloat said.


The expanded cellphone restrictions are the most far-reaching of several new changes in traffic laws taking effect Sunday. Other changes deal with car seats and lane splitting.

Under the new cellphone rules, California drivers are still permitted to hold their phones to make emergency calls. Drivers who mount their phones must do so in a spot where it does not interfere with their view of the road, Sloat said.

He said drivers using headphones must refrain from putting ear buds in both ears in order to be able to hear traffic sounds, including emergency vehicles.

It’s been a decade since California enacted a law restricting drivers from making calls without the aid of a hands-free device. In 2008, a ban on texting or reading messages while driving was added.

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New California laws taking effect in 2017

The restrictions are aimed at lowering traffic injuries and fatalities resulting from distracted driving. In California last year, 16 drivers were killed in collisions involving inattention and a hand-held cellphone. More than 500 drivers were injured in crashes involving similar factors.

In 2015, the CHP issued 78,000 citations for using a cellphone while driving and more than 13,000 citations for writing, sending or reading text messages.

Financial penalties vary depending on where the infraction occurs. In Santa Rosa, the current fine for using a cellphone while driving is $162, once fees are factored in.

Another traffic law change taking effect Sunday requires children to ride in rear-facing seats until they turn 2 years of age, or weigh 40 pounds or stand 40 inches tall. Under current law, children are required to ride in rear-facing seats only for the first year, or until they weigh 20 pounds.

Sloat said many parents already default to keeping their children in rear-facing seats past a year.

“It’s been a recommendation for years,” he said.

Lane splitting, in which a motorcyclist passes other vehicles by riding between them along the lane line, remains legal in California after Sunday. But under the new law, the state becomes the first in the nation to formalize the practice by establishing guidelines for motorcyclists on how to do it safely.