(Camp Hill) -- The law banning texting while driving goes into effect in about four months. Governor Corbett says he regularly sees people texting behind the wheel when he’s on the highway. "They can’t see out of the side-view mirror if they have it up on the left-hand side," he says. "They’re totally distracted. There goes my cell phone right now." The law makes texting while driving a primary offense, so police will be able to pull over someone they suspect is flouting the rule. Republican state Senator Robert Tomlinson of Bucks County sponsored the bill, which was stripped of an amendment to make driving while talking on a hand-held cell phone illegal. He says he doesn’t think this is the end of efforts to pass such a measure. "I think that debate’s going to go on. I think, I believe that the House is going to take up a cell phone bill," he says. "So, we’ll go into that debate on cell phones. Hand held phones I think are dangerous." Tomlinson and Corbett both disagree with critics who say the texting ban is unenforceable. They point to a letter from the State Police endorsing the law.










