Cellphones, Facebook license plate fees in mix

Drivers, employers must pay attention to changes

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This photo taken Thursday in Chicago shows an Illinois license plate. While inaction on the severely underfunded state pension programs took most of the headlines, lawmakers and Gov. Pat Quinn adopted 150 laws that take effect Jan. 1, which range from an increase in basic license plate fees from $2, to $101 annually, raising as much as $20 million for state parks, and taxing strip clubs to help fund programs combating violence against women. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
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SPRINGFIELD – Drivers in Illinois have four new laws to pay attention to in the coming year: Gov. Pat Quinn signed laws confronting distracted driving and speeding. 

One new law makes it illegal for drivers to use cellphones in all roadwork zones. The law previously applied only to work zones with speed limit reductions of 20 mph or more.

Sterling police Lt. Tim Morgan said the new law beefs up the existing law.

The original law really didn’t apply to the majority of construction zones, he said. Interstate work zones usually require drivers slow from 65 mph to 45 mph, for example, but in-town work zones typically don’t require motorists to slow down that much, say from 30 mph to 10 mph, he said.

Morgan said the original law did not apply to the First Avenue Bridge reconstruction project.

“A lot of people assumed it applied and didn’t use their phones – which is good – but some people still did, and we could take no enforcement action against them,” he said.

The new law simply prohibits drivers from hand-held cellphone use in all construction zones; the law still allows drivers to use phones in hands-free modes, he said. First-time violations carry a $250 fine. Second and subsequent violations carry a $750 fine. All violations require a court appearance.

The law also makes it illegal to use a cellphone while driving within 500 feet – or a little more than a city block – of an emergency scene.

Morgan said the new law attacks distracted, voyeuristic driving.

“It gets people to focus on what is happening there and driving carefully,” he said.

Drivers approaching an accident scene, for example, might feel inclined to use cellphones to take video or photographs of the wreck, he said. The new law prohibits that and other hand-held cellphone use within 500 feet of any emergency vehicle (police, fire or ambulance) with its emergency lights on.

Another law bars commercial drivers from any hand-held cellphone use.

Quinn also signed a bill known as Julie’s Law, which increases penalties for serious speed-limit violations. The law is named after Julie Gorczysnski, a 17-year-old Frankfort girl who died after her car was hit by a driver going 76 mph in a 40 mph speed zone.

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