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Motorcycle
safety training funds under attack
PICKERINGTON,
Ohio--U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters reaffirmed her desire to lobby
states for mandatory helmet-use laws in testimony before the U.S. Senate
Appropriations Committee Transportation Subcommittee on March 6, the American
Motorcyclist Association reports.
Peters' testimony
follows letters she sent in February to U.S. House and Senate leaders urging
Congress to allow states to divert federal money away from motorcycle safety
training and awareness programs and instead push for mandated helmet
use.
Under federal law,
the U.S. Transportation Department is barred from lobbying for or against
specific state laws. That measure was passed by Congress at the request of
motorcyclists who specifically wanted to prevent the federal government from
lobbying for mandatory helmet laws. But when asked whether she would support an
exemption to the law to allow her department to lobby the states for mandatory
helmet laws, she said she would.
"I support giving
the information to states so that they can act on those laws," Peters testified.
"And I certainly have made myself available to a number of states, and, in fact,
have called governors when I see substantial increases in the number of
motorcycle deaths in a state, especially a state that has repealed a helmet
law."
Peters is pushing
to move funds out of motorcycle safety training and awareness even though the
money was specifically approved by Congress at the request of motorcyclists who
wanted to beef up the nation's motorcycle safety training and awareness
efforts.
In February, in
response to the letters Peters wrote, Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for
government relations, expressed concern that diverting federal motorcycle safety
funds to mandate helmet use could harm rider training courses and motorcycle
awareness programs that are already underfunded in many states.
At that time, he
also expressed concern that Peters' proposal could contradict sections of
transportation bills passed in 1998 and 2005 that ban the use of federal
motorcycle safety funds to lobby state legislatures in favor of mandatory helmet
laws and could effectively reverse that ban.
"Banning the
federal government from lobbying for mandatory state helmet laws was the very
reason Congress passed this measure in the first place," said Moreland. "What
Peters is asking for is not an exception to the rule, it's an example of an
exception completely circumventing the rule."
Moreland believes
Peters is willing to push for mandatory helmet laws at the expense of rider
training and awareness programs designed to teach motorcycling skills that would
prevent crashes from occurring in the first place.
"This latest
testimony reaffirms our fears--that the U.S. transportation secretary wants to
lobby for mandatory helmet laws by diverting funding specifically set aside for
motorcycle safety training and awareness to further her mandatory helmet-use
agenda," Moreland said.
"Helmet use is
certainly one part of a comprehensive approach to motorcycle safety, but the use
of motorcycle helmets is already advocated in existing motorcycle safety
training programs," Moreland said.
"Congress decided
to fund motorcycle safety training and awareness programs at the request of the
motorcycling community. This effort by Secretary Peters to divert money away
from those programs is an attempt to circumvent the wishes of Congress and those
motorcyclists nationwide who wanted to specifically augment rider training and
awareness programs," he
said.
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