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Wednesday, November 19, 2003

Any Tired Hoggers or Conductors out there?

N.J. CRIMINALIZES DRIVING WHILE TIRED

BORDENTOWN, N.J. - As if staying alive were not enough of an incentive, motorists in New Jersey have another reason to make sure they are well-rested when they get behind the wheel — a first-in-the-nation law against driving while drowsy.

Under Maggie's Law, police will not be pulling over drivers whose eyelids look heavy. But the law allows prosecutors to charge a motorist with vehicular homicide, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $100,000 fine, in the event of a deadly crash if there is evidence the accident was caused by sleepiness.

No driver has yet been charged under the law, which went into effect last month and was named for a 20-year-old college student killed in 1997 by a van driver who admitted having been up for 30 hours.

Recent studies estimate 51 percent of motorists feel drowsy behind the wheel, and about two of every 10 drivers say they have fallen asleep while driving in the past year.

New Jersey is the first state to specifically list going without sleep as a crime, according to Darrel Drobnich, a legislative analyst for the foundation. Similar bills are pending in New York and have been discussed by lawmakers in Washington state.


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November 2003
UNION PACIFIC HITS THE BRAKES ON REMOTE CONTROL.

Union Pacific Railroad has halted its rollout of remote-control devices in rail yards until early next year because of train-crew shortages.

Employees who had been training others on the technology are needed instead to help run trains, said Robert Turner, senior vice president. Union Pacific came up short on train crews because of layoffs early this year, more retirements than expected and demands of additional business. It plans to hire nearly 5,000 people by the end of 2004. The Omaha-based railroad was about halfway through implementing the technology that moves locomotives and railcars by remote control. The 45 remaining yards will have remote control on schedule by the end of 2004, Turner said.

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