Skip to main content

Helmet wearing a key priority in road safety

Politicians can be an easy target for criticism. Their job involves making decisions that affect the lives of others, whether popular or unpopular, which they believe are nevertheless for the common good. But every once in a while politicians; international, national or local, do something so unutterably stupid it defies explanation. And in the US state of Michigan, the Senate has done just that by approving the repeal of the motorcycle helmet law.
February 27, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Politicians can be an easy target for criticism. Their job involves making decisions that affect the lives of others, whether popular or unpopular, which they believe are nevertheless for the common good. But every once in a while politicians; international, national or local, do something so unutterably stupid it defies explanation. And in the US state of Michigan, the Senate has done just that by approving the repeal of the motorcycle helmet law.

Legislation was recently approved by the Michigan Senate which, if approved by the House, would repeal Michigan's nearly four-decade old mandatory motorcycle helmet law. Quite why Michigan's Senate should have voted for this change defies logic. The Senate Bill 291 was approved by a vote of 24:14 and allows individuals of 21 years of age or older to ride without a helmet if they have a medical policy of US$100,000 in place.

AAA Michigan has said it strongly opposes this move and says that repealing the current law will result in more motorcycle fatalities and injuries and higher costs for all motorists. An Office of Highway Safety Planning analysis found that a repeal of the law would result in at least 30 additional motorcycle fatalities each year, along with 127 more incapacitating injuries and $129 million in additional economic costs to citizens.

The 2467 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found that in the three years after Florida's repeal of its mandatory helmet law, there was an 81% increase in fatalities.

The previous US Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters is a keen motorcycle rider and when she held the post was an active campaigner for motorcycle safety. She voiced her opinions on the need for helmet laws on numerous occasions, attributing her survival from one motorcycle accident with only very minor injuries to her own use of personal protective gear, including a helmet.

From an international perspective, what the Michigan Senate has done runs entirely counter to current thinking by any safety group or politician in practically any country on the globe. In Europe for example helmet use is mandatory for motorcyclists, although enforcement is lax in some countries. Those European countries where helmet use is not strictly enforced have, without exception, the highest rates of fatalities amongst motorcyclists. On a European level, this is an issue identified as requiring further attention to boost safety. In Asia where motorcycle use continues to grow, there is widespread concern over the high accident, injury and fatality rates amongst powered two wheeler riders. Some countries, including China, Malaysia and Thailand, are already introducing safety measures to try and tackle casualties amongst motorcycle riders, with helmet wearing seen as a key priority.

Quite why the Michigan Senate should defy both common sense and accurate research data in approving changes to laws that will inevitably lead to a higher rate of crippling injuries and fatalities makes no sense whatsoever.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • India’s road to safety
    September 5, 2012
    India's growth rate is the envy of the world, and its infrastructure is rapidly improving, but its road safety record is the world's worst. Patrick Smith reports on a conference aimed at finding answers to the problems Ambling through the gardens and marble magnificence that is the Taj Mahal or gazing down on the city of Jaipur from the hilltop Jaigarh Fort is far removed from the world outside.
  • Questions over effect of tough sentences for driving offenders
    June 17, 2014
    A UK academic claims that research shows higher prison sentences are unlikely to deter death by driving offences. University of Leicester professor Sally Kyd Cunningham suggests new laws from the UK Government could fail as a deterrent to crimes committed while driving. In the wake of the Government’s recent announcement of a comprehensive review of driving offences and penalties, an academic from the University of Leicester has argued that higher prison sentences could fail to act as a deterrent against de
  • Regulating Kenya’s boda boda business
    July 28, 2015
    Kenya’s many motorcycle taxis have an unenviably poor record for road safety - Shem Oirere writes. A state-owned road safety agency in Kenya is grappling with enforcement of new traffic regulations aimed at reducing the number of road accidents involving two-wheeled motorcycle taxis, popularly known as boda boda. The latest statistics indicate that fatalities relating to these vehicles shot up by 58% during the first four months of 2015. Experts have concurred with a previous study by the World Health Or
  • Young motorcycle riders at most risk in Europe
    January 20, 2017
    Young powered two wheelers are most at risk of crashing. That is the key finding of a recent report into powered two wheeler crashes in Europe. The analysis of 9,186 crashes where a motorcyclist was severely injured, shows that specifically young, male riders face a significant risk to become a road traffic victim. The European Commission recently published the ‘Study on serious road traffic injuries in the EU’ to collate data that could in the future prevent serious road traffic injuries. The aim was to