Tag Archives: crash

Essential Roadside Emergency Supplies For Your Motorcycle

Contributed post on emergency supplies for our North American readers

Roadside emergencies can happen anytime and anywhere. Being prepared for any scenario can save your life — from hit and run accidents to flat tires on the side of the road, having the tools to deal with an unexpected emergency can save you a lot of time and headaches.

In many cases, being able to help yourself or others in a roadside emergency situation can be vital to your own and others’ survival. When help is still far away, knowing what to do in an urgent situation and having the proper supplies right with you in your storage box can make all the difference.

Just ask the legal experts from Davis, Saperstein & Salomon, P.C. about the advantages of having the proper roadside emergency supplies for your motorcycle. In the case of accidents caused by either poor weather conditions or by another vehicle, being able to take action right on the scene can save you money and hassles later on.

Every rider should have the barest emergency supplies packed in their storage box at all times. Take a look at our comprehensive list of the most important items that you should keep with you when out your motorcycle, just in case of emergency.

First Aid Kit

Touratech first-aid kit solo supplies
Touratech first-aid kit

Purchase a pre-packaged first aid kit to keep in your storage box at all times. Bandages, ointments, and medications should be included in the bare essentials of each kit.

Duct Tape

This fix-all product has nearly unlimited uses in any emergency situation. Treat wounds, make small repairs or tape up broken parts with ease. Make sure to have at least one full roll of duct tape in your emergency supplies.

Tire Repair Kit

Getting a flat can be a real pain. If you are near an urban area, you may be able to get away with a temporary fill up on the roadside or have your tire patches at a nearby garage. Carry a tire gauge with you to check your tire pressure before you head out on any longer trips. A low tire may not blow on you, but it can affect your mileage and performance.air hoses tyre pressure gauge supplies

Multi-Tool

A good quality multi-tool can be a literal lifesaver. Make sure that you have at least one blade and as many utility blades as possible for the best protection and service.

Victorinox SwissTool supplies
Victorinox SwissTool

Spare Light Bulbs

If there’s one thing that keeps you safe on the road, it’s your taillights, headlights and turn signals. These components are crucial to making you visible to other vehicles on the road, especially once the sun goes down. Make sure to keep a couple of spares in your storage box so you can replace a burnt-out bulb as soon as possible, keeping your motorcycle at its most visible.

Thermal Blanket

Accidents can happen in any type of weather, but the consequences can be harsher when there’s rain or snow. Make sure you have a thermal or fire blanket packed in your storage box at all times — you never know when you might need it.

Water

There is no way to tell when you may become stranded on the roadside. Staying properly hydrated can be the key to your survival and comfort. Make sure to keep several bottles of water or a reusable water bottle (full of water, of course) with your supplies.

Food

Protein bars and meal supplements can be a lifesaver when you run into a roadside emergency situation. It could be hours until you have a chance to eat, so pack some high protein snacks with your supplies to tide you over until you can have a proper meal.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Call for longer roadworks warranty

New roads and roadworks in Australia are falling into disrepair too soon while short warranty periods are allowing contractors to avoid fixing their mistakes.

Australia has “defects liability periods” (DLP) from as little as three months to seven years, but mainly around two years.

This follows a move in Britain to hold road contractors to account for potholes and other road failures from the current two-year period to five years.

Apart from the misuse of taxpayer funds, the lack of decent warranty periods poses a danger to motorcyclists as potholes are a significant hazard for motorcyclists.

Shoddy roadworks have been blamed for many crashes and even rider fatalities.

Road failure example

Victorian Motorcycle Council chairman Peter Baulch says another example of failed road surfaces is the Peninsula Link Freeway which opened in February 2013.

He says the “whitish discolouration” in this composite photo he supplied is sand and clay from the subsoil under the road being forced up through cracks in the asphalt surface.Roadworks warranty

“Ultimately these cracked sections will break up completely and become flying missiles as cars and trucks pass over them,” he says.

To date there has not been any remediation undertaken to halt or repair this problem, which will only get worse, particularly as winter approaches and water penetrates the subsoil.

“It is worth noting that this problem first became visible and noticeable in late 2018; exactly five years after this freeway was opened.”

There are no doubt many other examples in other states, including recent cases in Queensland and NSW where new roadworks started melting in the heat.

Melting tar claims first crash victim Mt Glorious costly repair bitumen warranty
Melting tar

Rider reps agree

Peter says contractors should definitely be held accountable for failed roadworks and South Australia’s Ride to Review spokesman Tim Kelly agrees that a five-year warranty is “a great idea”.

However, Motorcycle Council of NSW chairman Steve Pearce is concerned about long warranties.

“There would be general contractual obligation to repair defects but I would be surprised if anyone would agree to a guarantee for five years,” Steve says.

It should be noted that any extension to the defects liability period would be likely to result in a higher cost for roadworks contracts.

However, a short warranty and low contract price may be false economics as it would possibly cost a higher rate to get contractors to return to fix faulty roadworks after the warranty period.

Warranty periods in states

Melting tar claims first crash victim Mt Glorious warranty
Electronic sign (difficult to read with the sun on it!)

We contacted roads departments in all states and territories to ask about their roadworks contract warranty periods.

A NSW Roads and Maritime Services spokesperson says they require all road works to be delivered “defect free, fit for purpose and in accordance with contract requirements and specifications”.  

“As per industry practice, contracts also specify a defects liability period during which contractors warrant the works and return to remedy any defects identified.”

They did not specify the warranty period.

“Warranty periods vary across contracts and from maintenance to construction projects,” the spokesperson said.

The duration and terms of warranty periods are confidential under the respective agreements entered into with Roads and Maritime Services contractors.” 

VicRoads Director of Procurement Services, Felicity Roberts, says all their contracts include a defect liability period, which requires any issues arising shortly after a project is complete to be repaired.

“For current contracts, the DLP is between one and two years, depending on the size and scale of the project delivered,” she says.

It is believed there are no current plans to change this time period.

A Queensland Transport and Main Roads spokesperson says most of their construction contracts have a defects liability period of just three months.

“However some major projects may have longer defect periods,” the spokesperson said. Roadworks warranty

“With any project involving the use of asphalt, the supplier provides an additional warranty of up to two years. 

“If additional infrastructure such as service utilities are installed, we generally require these works to be carried out without disturbing the road surface.

“When this isn’t possible we require the installer to warrant the integrity of the site for two years.”

WA Main Roads says their contracts include provisions for the correction of defects caused by poor construction processes. 

“The length of the defects liability or corrections period will vary depending on the form of contract, but typically ranges from one year to seven years,” they say. 

“In addition to these contractual requirements, Main Roads has resources in place to provide a timely response to maintenance issues on its network, including repairing potholes.”

None of the roads departments was able to provide details of the number of call backs for warranty works “as this information is subject to confidential obligations under relevant contracts”. 

In other words, the taxpayer never finds out!

Other states and territories have not yet replied to our request for information.

UK warranty

UK Transport Secretary Chris Grayling says their proposed specifications on highway roadworks would demand the contractor returns to bring the road surface back to normal in five years.

“Potholes are the biggest enemy for road users and this government is looking at all options to keep our roads in the best condition,” he says.

“Road surfaces can be made worse by utility companies, so imposing higher standards on repairs will help keep roads pothole-free for longer.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Selfies the new scourge of road deaths

If you think talking or texting on a mobile phone while driving is dangerous, a new trend of taking selfies has emerged to further endanger riders’ lives.

A US study has found more than 15% of drivers say they take selfies while driving. And 5% “go live” while driving, possibly imitating James Corden’s enormously popular Carpool Karaoke.

The Simply Insurance study, based on United States Department of Transportation data and a survey of American 1430 drivers, found 88% use their phones while driving, which includes handsfree.

Phone stats

It may not be as big in Australia where it is reported that only 1.5% of Aussie drivers illegally use their phones.

However, those statistics could be much less than the reality.

In NSW, about 40,000 drivers are fined each year for illegal use of a mobile phone.

Yet in a one-month trial of just two fixed special detection cameras on the M4 motorway and Anzac Parade and one mobile device, more than 11,000 offences were recorded. (They were not fined during the trial and there was no breakdown on talking, texting or taking selfies.)

In the same month only 1999 NSW drivers received mobile phones fines.

Selfies new scourge of road deaths
Camera detects a phone offence

The trial has now moved to a pilot program ending in April with no offence notices to be issued.

The cameras will be rolled out across the state later this year.

Misdiagnosed crashes

The problem is that many of the deaths occurring from illegal mobile phone use such as selfies go unreported, are “misdiagnosed” (possibly as speeding) or are categorised as distracted driving.

The US study found one in every four car accidents was caused by texting and driving. That does not include using the phone to make a call!

We wonder how many crashes in Australia could be attributed to illegal mobile phone use if only that was a category in the statistics and properly investigated by police, rather than just added to the “speeding” column.

And don’t think Aussies aren’t doing it, even though most support the tough penalties. In the US study, 94% of drivers support a ban on texting while driving, yet 98% claim they still do it.

So drivers seem to think it’s ok, so long as they get away with it.

However, it should be noted that US phone penalties are scant and low (see details further on in this article).

Tougher penaltiesSelfies new scourge of road deaths

Motorcycle riders are particularly keen on increasing mobile phone penalties.

We are endangered by mobile phone use as motorcycles are more difficult to spot in a driver’s periphery vision when it is glued to a phone.

Drivers who illegally use a mobile phone while driving should have their licence suspended, says the Motorcycle Council of NSW chairman Steve Pearce.

NSW last year increased the penalty for illegally using a mobile phone while driving in from four to five demerit points following reports of drivers being fined for not only talking on their phones, but updating their social media profiles and taking selfies.

However, Steve says the MCCNSW believes that licence suspension for illegal mobile phone use should be mandatory.

Australian penalties

The National Transport Commission amended the Australian Road Rules to make it illegal to touch a mobile phone at any time while driving or stopped in traffic, unless it is “secured in a mounting affixed to the vehicle” or “the phone does not require the driver, at any time while using it, to press anything on the body of the phone or to otherwise manipulate any part of the body of the phone”.

Most states have adopted this ruling.

Mobile phone fines vary across the nation:

Fines around the worldselfies Vietnam - double mobile phone penalties

Fines vary around the world from no fine in many Asian countries to thousands of dollars and licence suspensions in Canada.

New Zealand has a low $80 fine which matches their low fines for speeding. Consequently 3.5% of Kiwi drivers use their phone while driving compared with the reported 1.5% in Australia.

Almost half (24) of American states have no hand-held phone ban. Some states only issue fines if the driver is in a school zone or committing some other traffic offence such as speeding. Arizona and Montana even allow drivers to text!

The toughest measures in the USA are in California. The state has a $US150 fine (about $A205) for the first offence and more than $US250 (about $A345) for a second violation and one point.

Canada has a distracted driving offence which attracts a $1000 fine and three demerit points. A second conviction could mean a fine of up to $2000 and a seven-day licence suspension. A third offence could mean a fine of up to $3000 and a 30-day suspension.

Fines in Europe vary from less than €50 (about $80) and one point in eastern Europe to €420 (about $A675) in the Netherlands and up to six points in the UK.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Technology to make A pillars invisible

German tech company Continental is working on a system to make thick A pillars in cars invisible so drivers can see motorcyclists, cyclists and pedestrians.

Most modern cars now have curtain airbags in the pillars which makes them thick, presenting a huge blind spot that obscures small and vulnerable road users such as riders.

Invisible pillars

Now Continental is using its interior camera and integrated OLED displays in the vehicle’s A-pillar to virtually make it invisible.Blind spot SMIDSY Continental German tech company Continental is working on a system to make thick A pillars in cars invisible so drivers can see motorcyclists, cyclists and pedestrians.

Their Virtual A-Pillar tracks the driver’s movements and displays an image of the vehicle’s exterior environment on interior OLED displays, enabling the driver to “see through” the A-pillar.

It’s a similar system to the Jaguar Land Rover “360 Virtual Urban Windscreen”.

SMIDSY crashes

While these inventions may help reduce crashes caused by drivers not being able to see riders approaching on side streets, overtaking cars or being overtaken, it doesn’t stop driver inattention.

The very fact that drivers would feel more secure with these and other “safety” technologies may make them drop their defences and not look out for bikes.

In fact, most Sorry Mate, I Didn’t See You (SMIDSY) crashes occur when drivers have perfectly good vision, usually at intersections, yet still pull out in front of riders.

SMIDSY crashes are the biggest cause of motorcycle crashes.

SMIDSY crash scientific university
SMIDSY crash

Research by several universities has revealed several reasons for SMIDSY, including:

  • The inability of drivers to judge a rider’s approaching speed;
  • Inability to register the approach of small vehicles such as motorcycles;
  • The “low threat” of a motorcycle compared with a larger vehicle;
  • Motorcycles are about 10% of traffic so drivers don’t expect to see them;
  • Distraction by in-car technology and mobile phones; and
  • Hi-tech safety devices make drivers lazy.

The intentions of these invisible A pillar inventions are noteworthy, but they will never replace education programs to remind drivers to check for motorcycles such as the Maurice Blackburn Lawyers video campaigns.SMIDSY invisible crash

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Horror motorcycle crashes in two states

Three motorcyclists are critically injured following a horror night on the roads in NSW and Victoria with police appealing for witnesses to the crashes, including one hit and run.

On initial police reports, it appears that two of the incidents were the fault of drivers.

Pennant Hills crash

A motorcyclist remains in a critical condition after coming off his bike at Pennant Hills overnight.

The crash happened on Pennant Hills Road when a southbound motorcyclist swerved to avoid a northbound silver Mitsubishi Outlander performing a U-turn, near the intersection of Pomona Street, about 6.20pm (Thursday 7 March 2019),

The 23-year-old rider was thrown from the motorcycle, sliding along the roadway before hitting a brick wall.

He sustained head and internal injuries and has undergone surgery overnight in Westmead Hospital, where he remains in a critical condition.

The driver of the SUV, a 62-year-old man from West Pennant Hills, continued south but was flagged down by another motorist.

He immediately returned to the scene and spoke with police. The man was arrested and has now undergone mandatory testing; he has also provided a statement to Crash Investigators.

Police are appealing for anyone who witnessed the crash and has not yet spoken to officers, or anyone with dash cam vision, to contact the Crash Investigation Unit or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Anyone with information about this incident is urged to contact Crime Stoppers: 1800 333 000 or https://nsw.crimestoppers.com.au. Information is treated in strict confidence. The public is reminded not to report crime via NSW Police social media pages.nsw cops police Horror bike crashes in two states

Hit and run

Keilor police are appealing for witnesses or dashcam footage following a hit run in Laverton North last night (7 March).

Investigators have been told a motorcycle rider collided with an unknown vehicle on the entry ramp of the Western Ring Road near the Princes Freeway about 6.25pm.

The rider, a 42-year-old Altona North man, was thrown from his motorcycle and suffered non-life threatening injuries. He was transported to hospital for treatment.

It is believed the driver of the vehicle fled the scene without rendering assistance.

Anyone with information or dashcam footage is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.crimestoppersvic.com.auvictoria nsw cops police Horror bike crashes in two states

Rear-ender

Police are investigating a collision in Balwyn North this evening that has left a motorcyclist with life-threatening injuries.

It is believed the motorcyclist was travelling inbound on the Eastern Freeway near Burke Road about 9pm when it has struck the back of a silver Mercedes.

The yet to be identified male rider was thrown from his BMW motorcycle and has been taken to hospital in a critical condition.

The female driver of the Mercedes was not injured.

Police believe a second motorcycle may have been travelling in the vicinity at the time of the collision.

Anyone who witnessed the incident or has dash cam footage is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.crimestoppersvic.com.au.

Long weekend patrols

Riders on Victorian roads and bush tracks are advised that police will be targeting motorcyclists this Labour Day long weekend.

Click here for more details.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Police target riders on long weekend.

Victoria Police will target both road and off-road motorcyclists this Labour Day long weekend in the annual Operation Arid.

Extra police resources, including 10 more “booze and drug buses”, will be deployed in priority areas, including Wangaratta/Benalla, Yarra Ranges, Geelong/ Moorabool, Glen Eira and Greater Dandenong.

The operation runs from 12.01am tomorrow (8 March 2019) to 11.59pm Monday (11 March).

Road Policing Command Assistant Commissioner Stephen Leane says they will pay particular attention to road and off-road riders because of the record number of deaths so far this year.

Rider deaths

radio jock calls fr rider ban on highway long weekend
Rider fatality on Melbourne’s Monash Freeway last month

Up to date, 17 riders have died this year compared with seven up to the same time last year.

The five-year average is nine, according to Transport Accident Commission figures.

However, Police say they will not just target motorcyclists, but all motorists.

“We especially urge motorcyclists and country road users to do everything in their power to make themselves as safe as possible as these groups make up 80 per cent of our lives lost this year,” Assistant Commissioner Leane said.

“Please just slow down and drive to the conditions. It doesn’t take much; plan your journey, don’t drink if you’re going to drive, and take that extra few minutes to drive at a speed that is appropriate to the conditions you are travelling in.”

“All too often we accept fatal crashes as a normal thing that just happens on long weekends.

“Well I am saying one person is too many, let alone the 59 lives lost this year.

“The only acceptable number is zero, so we need the community to assist in ensuring that this weekend is safe for everyone.”

2018 long weekend Operation Arid results:

  • six lives lost
  • 3129 speeding offences
  • 441 mobile phone offences
  • 262 seat belt offences

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Automated cars ‘increase SMIDSY crashes’

Hi-tech automated cars make drivers lazy and less likely to see motorcycles which could lead to an increase in Sorry Mate, I Didn’t See You (SMIDSY) crashes, a new study has found.

Rice University and Texas Tech University studied 60 drivers over a 40-minute drive in a “simulated partially automated vehicle” and found their hazard perception decreased.

Partially automated vehicles are those with sensors that detect hazards and apply drive aids such as steering and brake application to avoid a collision.

These systems don’t totally take over, so the driver need to monitor for hazards and react to them by taking avoidance action.

Automated complacency

However, the study found that drivers in these vehicles depend on the tech and become complacent, losing attention to the road ahead and its various hazards.

The study found that “safe operation becomes less likely when the demands associated with monitoring automation increase and as a drive extends in duration”.

So the longer they drive, the worse their inattention and complacency becomes.

“This study also supports the notion that vigilance performance in partially automated vehicles is likely due to driver overload,” according to the study, “Driver Vigilance in Automated Vehicles: Effects of Demands on Hazard Detection Performance,” in the publication Human Factors.

It’s not good news for motorcyclists who are already largely unseen by motorists.

And as more and more tech is included in cars, it could get worse, says study lead author Eric Greenlee, an assistant professor of psychological sciences at Texas Tech.

“The bottom line is, until automated driving systems are completely reliable and can respond in all situations, the driver must stay alert and be prepared to take over,” he says.

“These vehicles have a lot to offer, but we’re a long way from being able to detect everything going on,” the researchers say.

“Until that day comes, we hope this research will raise awareness about the limitations of automated cars and their operators.”Riders ‘risk cancer from autonomous cars positive automated

Death knell

However, a 2017 US report by a motorcycle industry panel, cleverly called Give a Shift, says automated vehicles could kill off motorcycling.

“There is a “very real risk of motorcycling being completely cut out of the conversation for future vehicle infrastructure systems,” the group concludes in its report.

“As this (autonomous vehicles) technology grows, contemporary motorcycles will be even further elevated into higher risk categories in the eyes of traffic systems technologies, insurance companies, city planners and autonomous vehicle manufacturers who currently own and direct the conversation.

“The panel feels strongly that the single biggest threat to motorcycling overall (particularly in urban and higher density environments) will be the incompatibility between autonomous vehicles and existing motorcycles.”

The group says the technology will push self-operated vehicles such as motorcycles “out of the transportation matrix”.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Two riders die, pillion injured in 4WD head-on

Two male riders have died, and a female pillion is in a critical condition after a head-on crash with a 4WD near Young, NSW, yesterday (Friday March 1, 2019).

NSW Police are asking for anyone with information about the crash to contact Crimestoppers.

The accident happened about 2.10pm on Murringo Road, near Swamp Road, Murringo, about 20km east of Young.injured

Police have been told a motorcycle, travelling with a pillion passenger, has collided head-on with a 4WD Landcruiser.

There are no details yet about which vehicles were on the wrong side of the road.

The Landcruiser then rolled and crashed into a second motorcycle.

The two motorcyclists, a 59-year-old man from Ungarie and a 57-year-old man from Girral, were unable to revived and died at the scene.

The pillion passenger, a 57-year-old woman from Ungarie, was treated at the scene. She was airlifted to Canberra Hospital in a critical condition for treatment to internal injuries.

The 27-year-old male driver of the 4WD was also taken to Canberra Hospital for treatment for a fractured arm.

A third motorcycle stopped at the scene without incident.

Officers from the Hume Police District established a crime scene and have begun inquiries into the circumstances surrounding the crash.

A report will be prepared for the information of the Coroner.

NSW police advise that information provided to Crime is treated in strict confidence. They also reminded members of the public not to report crime via NSW Police social media pages.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Witnesses sought over hit-run rider

Victorian Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a hit-and-run crash in West Melbourne left a motorcyclist with serious injuries.

The accident happened on Footscray Road at 5.10am today (February 28, 2019).

The 29-year-old male rider was treated by paramedics on scene and taken to hospital with serious injuries.

Police believe a white, early 2000s model Mitsubishi van, with registration plates WWX576, was seen leaving the scene travelling south on the Citylink, over the Bolte Bridge towards Port Melbourne.

Mitsubishi van hit-run rider
Police are looking for a Mitsubishi van like this

The vehicle has damage to the front left side and a missing headlight from the hit.

Anyone who witnessed the collision or has dashcam footage or information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.crimestoppersvic.com.au.

It follows the sad death yesterday of a 28-year-old rider in hospital after a collision in Tarneit on Sunday (February 24, 2019) about 8.45pm at the intersection of Bethany Road and Claire Way.

The motorcyclist from Tarneit was travelling east on Bethany Road when he collided with a BMW sedan as the vehicle was turning into Claire Way.

The driver, a 29-year-old Mount Waverly man, stopped and assisted at the scene.

The rider was taken to hospital with life threatening injuries but has sadly died.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Returned riders safety risk ‘is a furphy’

Police and road safety authority claims that returned riders are the biggest safety risk on the road is a “furphy”, says Victorian Motorcycle Council media spokesman John Eacott (pictured above).

John has spent some time analysing Victorian Transport Accident Commission (TAC) statistics and now claims returned riders are not the major safety risk they have been labelled.

He says this is a concern because road safety initiatives are being directed to the wrong group.

Stats don’t lie

“It would appear that the TAC site has a better analysis than we initially thought with Motorcycle Age Group and Gender as a good start,” he says.

“In 2018, there were 38 motorcyclist fatalities and, in 2017/2018, 1312 motorcycle riders were compensated by the TAC for injuries involving an acute hospital admission.

“Some 53% of motorcycle riders who lost their lives in 2018 and 48% of those hospitalised in 2017/2018 were aged over 40.

“While the numbers of females injured have increased, males are significantly more likely to lose their lives or be seriously injured than females.”

While these are Victorian figures, the state and national stats show similar results. Check out the national fatalities graph below.

Returned riders safety risk is a furphy

However, this is only half the story.

Licence holders by age/gender

John also researched the ages of registered Victorian motorcycle licence holders on the Motorcycle Crash Data site.

He found that in June 2017 there were more than 420,000 Victorians with a current motorcycle licence or permit with the following breakdown:

  • 88% were male;
  • 5% aged 25 or less;
  • 70% aged over 40;
  • 20% aged over 60 (with 4% over 70); and
  • Just over half (56%) of motorcycle licence holders were active riders.

Once again, the figures are expected to be similar in all states and nationally.

“So while the age group and gender implies a ‘worrying’ crash rate for over 40s, they account for less than 50% of fatals and hospitalisations yet comprise 70% of licensed riders,” John says.

“Using the stats on the age group page, under 25s have 11% of fatals and 24% of hospital admissions, yet they are only 5% of registered riders.

“Comparatively the over-60s comprised 21% of fatalities and 11% of hospitalisations yet are 20% of licence holders, so they are underrepresented in hospitalisations and on percentage for fatalities.

“The lack of referencing to these factual statistics by the various authorities along with the constant referencing of stats for over 40s shows an institutional bias against older riders.

“Until this is corrected and the over-representation in accidents of under 25s is addressed, we fear nothing will change.”

Road safety funding misdirected

VMC chairman John Eacott against mandatory gloves and boots injuries Returned riders safety risk is a furphy
John Eacott

“Time and time again the government and media make comments about returned riders being a problem,” John says.

“We are actually underrepresented in crash stats and under 25s are grossly overrepresented and this is not being addressed.

“It is a misapplication of resources and the Motorcycle Safety Levy.”

John suggests the levy would be better used to subsidise advanced rider courses that would be voluntary for mature riders and mandatory for novices before they secure their full licence.

“The VMC does not agree with the levy,” he says.

“No other section of the road-using public has to fund their own safety. It’s appalling.

“However, while it’s there, let’s use it to subsidise these course as a positive improvement in motorcycle safety.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com