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HPD Question/Answer Cellphone -Fine $297
#1
The only time you can use your cell phone while driving is when you are calling 911, or you are stopped on the side of the road. with the engine off.
There are a few other exceptions I didn't know about.
Here's the article content and the facts on the subject:

Detective Sharie Souza of the Honolulu Police Department Criminal Investigation Division will answer this week’s questions from a viewer.

Question: Is it okay to use a cell phone while at a stop light or while parked on the side of the road?

Answer: While you’re operating a vehicle, you should not be on your cell phone.

That includes when you’re stopped at a light or parked with your engine on, on the side of the road. The exemption is when you’re making a 911 call.

Violation is a $297 fine.

“The following persons shall be exempt… (4) Drivers of vehicles that are at a complete stop, while the engine is turned off, in a safe location by the side of the road out of the way of traffic.”

§291C-137 Mobile electronic devices.

(a) No person shall operate a motor vehicle while using a mobile electronic device.

(b) The use of a mobile electronic device for the sole purpose of making a “911” emergency communication shall be an affirmative defense to this law.

© No person under eighteen years of age shall operate a motor vehicle while utilizing a hands-free mobile electronic device, except for the sole purpose of making a “911” emergency communication.

(d) The following persons shall be exempt from subsection (a):

(1) Emergency responders using a mobile electronic device while in the performance and scope of their official duties;

(2) Drivers using a two-way radio or a private Land Mobile Radio System, within the meaning of title 47 Code of Federal Regulations part 90, while in the performance and scope of their work-related duties and who are operating fleet vehicles or who possess a commercial vehicle license;

(3) Drivers holding a valid amateur radio operator license issued by the Federal Communications Commission and using a half-duplex two-way radio; or

(4) Drivers of vehicles that are at a complete stop, while the engine is turned off, in a safe location by the side of the road out of the way of traffic.

(e) As used in this section:

“Emergency responders” includes firefighters, emergency medical technicians, mobile intensive care technicians, [emergency management] workers, police officers, and federal and state law enforcement officers.

“Fleet vehicle” means any vehicle validly registered pursuant to section 286-53.5.

“Mobile electronic device” means any handheld or other portable electronic equipment capable of providing wireless or data communication between two or more persons or of providing amusement, including but not limited to a cellular phone, text messaging device, paging device, personal digital assistant, laptop computer, video game, or digital photographic device, but does not include any audio equipment or any equipment installed in a motor vehicle for the purpose of providing navigation, emergency assistance to the operator of the motor vehicle, or video entertainment to the passengers in the rear seats of the motor vehicle.

“Operate” a motor vehicle means to drive or assume actual physical control of the vehicle upon a public way, street, road, or highway, including operation while temporarily stationary because of traffic, a traffic light, or a stop sign.

“Use” or “using” means holding a mobile electronic device while operating a motor vehicle.

(f) Every person who violates this section shall be subject to a fine of $250 that shall be deposited into the state highway fund; provided that if a person violates this section while operating a motor vehicle in a school zone or construction area, as defined in section 291C-104, the fine shall be $300, which shall be paid to the director of finance pursuant to section 291C-171.

(g) Any violation as provided in subsections (a) and © shall not be deemed to be a traffic infraction as defined in section 291D-2.

(h) This section shall supersede any county ordinance regulating the use or utilization of mobile electronic devices while operating a motor vehicle. [L 2013, c 74, §2; am L 2014, c 175, §2]
http://khon2.com/2015/01/07/ask-hpd-is-i...n-the-car/
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#2
I missed the part where it becomes a felony.
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#3
I think the key language here is:
[“Use” or “using” means holding a mobile electronic device while operating a motor vehicle.]

I would take this to exclude hands free operation.
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#4
Hands-free cellphone devices such as Bluetooth are also exempted, provided the driver is 18 or older. Drivers younger than 18 are restricted from using such devices while driving.

http://westhawaiitoday.com/news/local-ne...kes-effect
"I'm at that stage in life where I stay out of discussions. Even if you say 1+1=5, you're right - have fun." - Keanu Reeves
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#5
any equipment installed in a motor vehicle for the purpose of providing navigation

Expect a judge to clarify "installed in", for example: a smartphone running Google Maps snapped into a holster on the dash. It's for "navigation", but is it "installed"?

valid amateur radio operator license ... and using a half-duplex two-way radio

Clever: HAM license isn't a loophole to use your cellphone, unless it's a Nextel iDen, which network was decommissioned a couple of years ago...
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#6
I guess I won't be able to listen to mp3's on my cell phone any longer
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