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Friday, October 1, 2010

NHTSA:NHTSA Head Calls for National Helmet Law ASK YOUR US HOUSE AND US SENATE CANDIDATES WHERE THEY STAND ON MANDATORY MOTORCYCLE HELMET LAWS, THEN V

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NHTSA Head Calls for National Helmet Law ASK YOUR US HOUSE AND US SENATE CANDIDATES WHERE THEY STAND ON MANDATORY MOTORCYCLE HELMET LAWS, THEN VOTE ACCORDINGLY. THIS IS A DIRECT ATTACK ON MOTORCYCLING FREEDOM - DON'T STAND FOR IT.
www.ama-cycle.org/news/story.asp?id=2278
Federal traffic safety official wants Congress to actively promote helmet use Posted September 28, 2010
The head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) told a congressional panel on Sept. 28 that he wants to work with Congress to promote helmet use among motorcyclists across the United States.
Addressing the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety and Insurance, NHTSA Administrator David Strickland said that to reduce motorcycling fatalities "the most important step we could take would be to assure that all riders wear a DOT-compliant helmet, which are 37 percent effective in reducing fatalities.
"We estimate that helmets prevented over 1,800 fatalities in 2008, and that more than 800 additional fatalities could have been avoided if all riders wore helmets," he said. "NHTSA will actively work with Congress to promote helmet use."
Strickland's comments were part of his overall testimony regarding how safety provisions in the transportation reauthorization bill (SAFETEA-LU) played a role in reducing highway fatalities.
The American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) is concerned that Strickland may be recommending that Congress try to pressure states into passing mandatory helmet-use laws. In the past, Congress tried to force states to approve such laws by withholding federal transportation and safety dollars to states without mandatory helmet laws.
The AMA supports states' rights to determine their helmet policies free from the threat of federal sanctions. Congress affirmed this right as recently as 1995 in the National Highway System Act, when lawmakers removed federal penalties placed on states that didn't have mandatory helmet laws.
"The AMA believes that the best way for the NHTSA to reduce motorcycle crashes is through programs such as rider education and increasing motorcycle awareness among vehicle drivers," said Ed Moreland, AMA senior vice president for government relations. "These programs would help reduce the likelihood that a crash will happen in the first place."
In addition, said Moreland, motorcyclists would be much better served by applying any funding that may go toward requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets to the national motorcycle crash causation study that is currently under way at Oklahoma State University.
This is a sentiment supported by U.S. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) and many of his congressional colleagues through recently introduced H. Res. 1498: Supporting Efforts to Retain the Ban on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) Ability to Lobby State Legislators Using Federal Tax Dollars and Urging the NHTSA to Focus on Crash Prevention and Rider Education and Training.