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Lance Cpl. Joseph Mlinko, a Marine Air-Ground Task Force planner with Marine Wing Communications Squadron 38 and a San Diego native, tests a driving simulator for the Distracted Driving event aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., Nov. 4. The simulator required participants to reply to texts from the simulator’s phone while driving.

Photo by Lance Cpl. Kevin Crist

Texting while driving kills

7 Nov 2011 | Lance Cpl. Kevin Crist Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS

A man is driving down the highway with his wife and approximately four-year-old daughter when an oncoming driver, texting at the wheel, veers in their lane, smashing into their vehicle. With the parents dead instantly, the daughter says over and over “mommy, daddy wake up.” This was a scenario from a graphic video.

The “Save a Life” Tour hosted a Distracted Driving event aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., Nov. 4, to teach Marines about the consequences of distracted driving.

The event began with an upsetting video showing many different outcomes of distracted driving, including portions with a car hitting a child and people suffering brain damage due to texting and driving.

People text and drive every day, not considering the pain and suffering they can inflict on themselves, a loved one or a complete stranger, explained Richardson.

“I was driving to Miramar a few days ago and a biker going about 90 mph passed me,” said John Richardson, an instructor for Distracted Driving and a Grand Rapids, Mich., native. “He let go of his handlebars, reached into his coat pocket, grabbed his phone and started texting while he was passing everyone like it was no big deal. He could have looked up and plowed into a car or a tree. It was unreal, the man was lucky he did not wreck.”

The “Save a Life” Tour has been travelling to many military bases along the West Coast the last few months to show service members how many ways they can ruin or end someone’s life just by replying to a text message.

Richardson explained that last year, over 20,000 people between ages 16 and 24 died from distracted driving.

After the video, there were driving simulators that require the driver to immediately reply to a phone programmed to text every few seconds, while trying to pay attention to the road.

Richardson explained how hard it was to stay at a steady speed while texting in the program.

Some people could get through the simulation without wrecking, but no one finished without breaking some kind of law, whether it was speeding or running a red light.

Distracted Driving had a display of a coffin for the event to show the possible outcome of distracted driving.

“I think Distracted Driving is a great program,” said Richardson. “More people die from distracted driving than from AIDS or cancer, so it is important that we let people know how dangerous it is.”


POLICY

The most important starting point for an EMS* is the development of an environmental policy. ISO14001 requires local governments to implement their own environmental policy. The environmental policy acts as a basis for the environmental management system.

PLANNING

ISO14001 requires that an environmental management system is planned properly. It requires the organization to consider the following carefully: Environmental Aspects; Legal and Other Aspects; Objectives and Targets; and an Environmental Management Program.

IMPLEMENTATION

The two requirements for implementation of an EMS is to define, document, and communicate roles, responsibilities and authorities, and to allocate the resources needed to implement and control the EMS.

CHECKING

The key requirement in this EMS step is to regularly monitor and measure key characteristics of activities and operations that could have a significant impact on the environment. Changes to EMS procedures may become necessary in order to deal with nonconformances with the EMS, with mitigating environmental impacts, or corrective and preventive action.

REVIEW

The management review process ensure that information is collected to enable management to carry out proper review. Top management review the need for changes to policy, objectives and targets, and ensure that a commitment to continual improvement is being demonstrated.

Marine Corps Air Station Miramar-EMS