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  • 2021-05-06 (xsd:date)
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  • Did an Ohio State Senator Drive During a Zoom Call About Distracted Driving? (en)
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  • In May 2021, news articles and widely-shared social media posts reported that an Ohio State Senator had been caught driving during an official Zoom video conference, and even used a fake office background. On May 6, Brody Logan, a reporter at the NBC affiliate KSEE in Fresno, California, posted a short video to Twitter, along with the following text: This Ohio State Senator thought he was slick, using a Zoom background of his home office while driving... debating a bill for harsher penalties for distracted driving... Similarly, Newsweek published an article with the headline Ohio Senator Uses Zoom Office Background While Driving During Hearing on Distracted Driving Bill. The report went on: Andrew Brenner did drive during the Zoom call, and he did use a fake office background. However, the meeting had nothing to do with distracting driving, which was an important component of much of the commentary surrounding the incident, since it provided a significant element of irony. As a result, we're issuing a rating of Mixture. The incident in question took place during the May 3, 2021 meeting of the Ohio Controlling Board, a body that provides legislative oversight of statewide spending, procurement and investment in Ohio. The video can be watched in full on the Ohio Channel website, here. When Brenner first appears, he is clearly sitting in a parked car, not wearing a seatbelt: He disappears from view for a short while, then reappears, this time with his camera zoomed in on his face. Around the 3:30 mark, his background abruptly shifts from his car, to a fake office: Brenner then disappears from view again, and when he becomes visible again around one minute later, he can clearly be seen driving the car, with his seatbelt on, and the office backdrop still in place: In an interview with the Columbus Dispatch, Brenner admitted he was driving during the meeting, but denied being distracted: On the same day as the Ohio Controlling Board meeting took place, May 3, Republicans in the state house introduced House Bill 283, which would enhance and expand Ohio's existing prohibition against distracted driving and using electronic devices while driving. However, after watching the full Ohio Controlling Board meeting from that day, as well as checking its agenda, it's clear that none of the participants even mentioned House Bill 283, specifically, or distracted driving more broadly. That particular claim, as made by Newsweek and Logan, was inaccurate. (en)
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