Wednesday, October 10, 2007 , Updated
Cycling tickets on the rise at White Rock Lake
Cyclists have seen a rise in tickets issued at White Rock Lake as officers have increased enforcement of traffic laws such as stopping at a stop sign and wearing a helmet.
Posted by Laura S.
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mhawk05, says:
This makes me feel safer already!
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
I find it unbelievable that people can ride motorcycles in Texas without helmets but a cop is going to give me a ticket for not wearing a helmet on my bicycle?
Bring on the walking helmet laws please! This place has gone retarded.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
bobdon000, says:
Keep harassing the annoying bicyclists. They don't belong on public roads. They are a hazard and nuisance.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Tracy Yost, says:
Are you telling me there's a law in Dallas that requires ADULTS to wear a helmet while riding a bicycle ? That IS retarted. I mean, retarded. I mean, STOOPID !
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
There is no Texas law requiring bicyclists to wear helmets. But Dallas enacted a mandatory helmet law for riders of all ages in 1996.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
roberthanifen, says:
Head injuries from biking accidents generally lead to death or paralysis. So a ticket is all that stands between the public and paying some idiot's medical bills for life.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
mhawk05, says:
"Head injuries from biking accidents generally lead to death or paralysis. So a ticket is all that stands between the public and paying some idiot's medical bills for life."
Head injuries usually don't turn out to well in any instance.
Also, why are we not responsible for our own decisions? You get in the car, you may get in an accident; you stand on a hill in the rain, you might get struck by lightning. Am I not responsible for myself when I decide to ride my bike around the lake? It's called health insurance for a reason; this should not be the government's problem.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Catte_Nappe, says:
I don't have a strong position on the helmet issue, but some stepped up traffic enforcement on cyclists is most welcome.
There are a lot of them in my neighborhood, and many are good "road neighbors". However, too many aren't. Ignoring stop signs. Ignoring even red lights. One this evening passed me in a back up on a two lane road. He'd decided his "lane" was the space between the stopped cars to his right and left. A little "message sending" from the police is probably overdue. Makes me feel safer (I really don't want to run into or over one of these guys); and makes them actually safer in the long run.
PS - mhawk05 It's called health insurance because we each pay into a pool that any of us in the pool can use as needed. How much I have to pay eventually depends on how much is being paid out - including serious injuries or long term care. Consequently I end up paying more so your head injury gets covered. The way insurance works we are all responsible for each other. (Plus some extra thrown in for insurance company profits, but that's another story)
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
No running around the pool with scissors!
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Tracy Yost, says:
It's a wonder I made it to adulthood, what with all that bike riding with no helmet, and running around the pool with scissors. Of course, Darwinian logic might apply here. That said, I know people who have died on motorcycles with helmet on, simply because the other guy didn't see them. Life is dangerous, play at your own risk. I think folk should be allowed to engage in risky behavior, should they desire to do so. And yeh we got an insurance problem, but it's so much bigger than head injuries from two-wheeled vehicles........
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
I'm willing to bet far more head injuries are caused by auto accidents, but we don't require anyone to wear a helmet then.
I bet more head injuries are caused while walking. Falling down stairs.. bet that causes more head injuries too.
If I get a ticket for not wearing a helmet on my bicycle, I will not start wearing a helmet.. I will start paying a lawyer.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Yet one more personal freedom taken from us all, and we didn't even know it happened.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
ameripro, says:
When the city council passed this law, the proponents had some brain injured individuals appear at the council hearing. Interestingly, their injuries didn't need to have any relationship to bicycle riding. One brain injured example was actually injured while driving drunk and pulling out in front of an oncoming car in the middle of the night.
But the effect of the brain injured was compelling. Unfortunately, the proponents were less than candid about the true causes of the the injuries but they got their helmet law. If I remember correctly, the driving force within the proponents was from emergency room personnel.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Bemused, says:
Personal freedom sometimes expresses itself as negligent behavior that is detrimental to society. Still, I don't like the idea of local government, which is grossly incompetent, impossing such restrictions. Ride at your own risk!
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
Bicycle helmets GOOD. Brain damage BAD.
Wear a helmet. It's not a matter of usurping personal freedom. It's common sense.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Kirk- This is very much a matter of usurping personal freedom.
Everyone here on this forum has lost the right to ride a simple bicycle without wearing a helmet, because of the stupidity of a few, who obviously can't manage to do it without hurting themselves.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
Rick: Have you ever had your head hit the pavement? I've done it, both with and without a helmet, at relatively slow speeds (<20 mph). I assure you that it's much less problematic with a helmet.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Mike Orren, says:
<embed flashvars="m=1127610&v=2&type=video" height="346" src="http://lads.myspace.com/videos/vplayer.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="430">
Staff
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
I, for one, would wear a helmet all the time if it got Nicole Kidman to play with me.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Kirk- You know, I must say, I've spent a good deal of my life on a bike- from age 7 through most of my teens, and then several years as an adult- one year or so, it was my only transport, but I have never had my head hit the pavement. Whether this is due to dumb luck, or adequate coordination, I still am now unable to ride without a helmet because of folks like yourself. Thanks for the memories.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Robert Kelly, says:
I love how the council can enact an unenforceble law like this then selectively bust people. If I get a ticket I am in the lawyer camp as well. This worthless city can spend a little fighting me. Expensive- but fun. Just another example of how this city spends its time on worthless activities while leaving its legitimate functions on the sidelines.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
*"I still am now unable to ride without a helmet because of folks like yourself."*
Rick: As far as I am concerned, you are welcome to ride any vehicle you'd like without a helmet.
If you'll re-read what I wrote, I said "Wear a helmet." I'd tell you the same thing if you were inline skating, playing hockey, or ski racing...all of which I have familiarity with. If you were playing hockey, I would tell you to wear a cup, too. But I have played against people who don't, and that's their prerogative. (Usually, the desire to let one's freak flag fly on the ice disappears after the first slap-shot puck strikes the groin at 40 - 50 mph.)
Your not-so-subtle comment about "adequate coordination" is cute, but coordination has very little to do with sports injuries -- especially on bicycles. (Ever watch the Tour de France when one of the coordinated and highly trained riders hits his wheel on something at 30 mph and the entire peloton wipes out?)
But back to the issue of bike helmets. Here are some stats (from the Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute):
In the U.S., about 540,000 bicyclists visit emergency rooms with injuries every year. Of those, about 67,000 have head injuries, and 27,000 have injuries serious enough to be hospitalized.
784 bicyclists died on US roads in 2005. 92% of them died in crashes with motor vehicles (720). Two-thirds of the deaths were from traumatic brain injury.
Of the dead bicyclists, 86% were not wearing helmets. 10% were wearing helmets.
By the way, alcohol was involved in 36% of the cycling deaths in 2005. Draw your own conclusions about whether it's advisable to drink and drive and/or ride.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
eastside, says:
If only they would enforce the two abreast rule.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Kirk- With all due respect, my coordination comment was in no way meant to be cute, it was in my opinion appropriate. Aside from the impressive list of dangerous sports that you have familiarity with, you can't seem to navigate a bicycle without hitting your head on the pavement.
The numbers you list are just as impressive, but I would imagine there is an even more impressive number of Americans that ride their bicycles everyday without hitting their heads on the pavement. Unfortunately, the majority of us who can actually chew bubble gum and walk at the same time, have to suffer the minority who seem to be coordination-challenged.
The fact that there actually is a Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute speaks of how society negates natural selection.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Robert Kelly, says:
FYI- Here is the ordinance:
SEC. 9-8. BICYCLE HELMET REQUIRED.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
terryorze, says:
I have ridden a bicycle for 42 years with no head injuries. Eventually, everything will be illegal in the United State. I am seriously interested in voting with my feet now. Between this and tieing a dog up getting you jail time. Owning a dog that bites and injurs someone go to jail for ten years. It is just getting ridiculous. What freak accident that got blown up by the DMN caused this?
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
terryorze, says:
Where should I ride my bike now? I have enjoyed riding around White Rock lake for decades. I have never grown tired of it. Where will I enjoy riding just as much that is not in Dallas?
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
Rick:
You know, I will revise my previous recommendation and suggest that you not wear any sort of protective equipment for any sport or vehicle. In fact, if you would like to ride one of my bicycles this weekend, I would be happy to follow behind you in my car. How about meeting on Preston Road for a ride between 121 and Lebanon in Frisco, about noon on Saturday?
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
terryorze Anonymous
Where should I ride my bike now? I have enjoyed riding around White Rock lake for decades. I have never grown tired of it. Where will I enjoy riding just as much that is not in Dallas?
Holland. I've never seen a single helmet there. And far my cyclists than anywhere in the US.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Kirk- Dude! If this is your way of asking me out on a date- I'm married!
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Bemused, says:
rkisok, I wouldn't call this law "unenforceable." It will be upheld in the same manner as other laws: If police happen to be paying attention to cyclists and feel like issuing tickets, they will. But if they know the cyclists or like their bikes or something of that nature, they will refrain from exacting penalties.
I promise that this law will be prone to the same corruptions of application as all others. Selective enforcement is the hallmark of the Dallas Police Department. This stems partly from cronyism and partly from apathy. When you combine those two failings, consistency is impossible to achieve.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
I've ridden by countless cops, gotten on and off my bike in front of cops.. asked them questions from my bike etc.. never heard a word about a helmet.
My friend who is hispanic.. whole nother story.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
kirk, says:
Rick:
Poor woman.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
gian776, says:
Here in Westchester, New York, our county board of legislators are trying to pass a similar bicycle helmet law. It's very disturbing. I voiced my opposition at a public hearing the other night. i am really concerned about them taking my personal freedoms and choice of what to wear. Any advice on how we can prevent this atrocity? Any stories to share? Thanks.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Stephanie Hindall, says:
Rick and Kirk, ya'll are cute and all, but amid your comments and flirtations I think the point got a little muddied:
1) Helmets saves lives and prevent injuries.
2) The govt. shouldn't have a say in whether its citizens want to save themselves from harm.
In short: You're a dumbass if you choose to go helmet-free, and it is your right to be a dumbass.
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Bemused, says:
This law may prove detrimental to the environment, in that it might discourage people from cycling to work. Let's say you can easily get to work in fifteen minutes on a bike. Let's say also that you have to arrive at work in a well-groomed condition. Applying a helmet to your head for even fifteen minutes can lend a disadvantageous shabbiness to your appearance. This seems like a minor point, but it will likely influence people's transportation decisions.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
These laws certainly discourage cycling.
It discourages people who might otherwise hop on the bike for a quick ride down to the store.. because they don't want to get suited up in 'safety gear'.
It also props up the illusion that cycling is dangerous.. an illusion spread mainly by those who never partake in the activity.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Tefi- The scores of folks that prefer to ride a bicycle without a helmet, may seem foolish to you, but they may just be sensible, safe, intelligent people that understand the limits of such a basic form of transport.
It's just a freakin' bicycle! (Not everyone can be Lance Armstrong!)
You power it, you decide where you'll go, and how fast you'll get there.
It can't compete with the power and weight of a car, so If you ride in traffic, you might get hurt.
If you can't control it, you may hit the curb, fly over the handlebars, and hit your head on the pavement!
Maybe you shouldn't ride a bike at all.
And Tefi, please, save your "saves lives and prevents injuries" line for bumper stickers- go save a whale!
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
xdavidwattsx, says:
Some of you people are amazing.
"It discourages people who might otherwise hop on the bike for a quick ride down to the store.. because they don't want to get suited up in 'safety gear'."
What, it takes all of 4 seconds to put on a helmet?
You guys think being safe will prevent your head from hitting the pavement, but I'm sure most people who have been blindsided by other bikers, pedestrians or cars said the same thing.
These laws are no different than having to wear a seatbelt in a car or plane, or being able to drink and drive. Contrary to popular belief, at some point the government needs to step in and save people from their own stupidity.
"I have ridden a bicycle for 42 years with no head injuries."
So what, that means you won't have a head injury tomorrow?
Shut up and put a helmet on already. A brain is a valuable thing to protect even though it appears some of you don't seem to use it much. Helmet technology has come a long ways. They are pretty lightweight and unobtrusive these days.
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
xdavidwattsx- nice cut and paste work.
The point has been lost- I must admit I helped lose it, but...
It's not that I'm questioning whether it is safer to do anything with a helmet- just don't force me to wear one for my own safety. Let me decide how I want to risk my own well-being.
Next you'll want me to stop shooting heroine, or handling snakes because it's dangerous. Sheesh!
Verified
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Clay213, says:
xdavidwattsx
I hope you have your helmet on at all times. Walking.. sleeping.. standing..
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
OpusthePoet, says:
After surviving an attempt to use a motor vehicle as a murder weapon because I was riding on the street I would never ride without a helmet. I also think helmet laws suck. I also think mandatory airbags in cars suck, seatbelt laws suck, in fact every law that requires people to protect themselves against their will sucks. Smart people will wear protective equipment, stupid people will die and be harvested for their organs. BTW a bike helmet is basically worthless in a bike-car crash, mine may have saved my life but I still suffered brain damage. What will make riding a bike safer would be actually enforcing the laws against assault with a deadly weapon, the motor vehicle. Like what happened to me where there were 3 lanes and 2 vehicles, and the motor vehicle changed lanes to hit me. What hurt me most was the fact that the police discarded the physical evidence so they wouldn't have to investigate the assault.
Opus
Anonymous
2 years, 1 month agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Janders, says:
Those bike riders who choose to not wear a helmet can receive a $150 ticket along the Katy Trail. Most bike riders on the KT trail do not wear helmets so the police select who they want to ticket. If 20 bike riders without helmets are within 1000 feet of each other several will be chosen to get the $150 tickets while others just keep riding. Now that is solid law enforcement. As bike riders cross the Katy Trail at Knox Henderson and cars go after them in full view of witnesses and police tv bike riders get the $150 tickets while the cars drive off after being inches of striking the bike riders with or without helmets. Dallas is a one of a kind city, reckless drivers, reckless cops and reckless society. My bike group no longer uses the Katy Trail since several of us can not wear helmets for extended periods of time without having to take long breaks in between to wipe off the sweat and to keep tightening the straps that loosen due to also wearing goggles. Yes hlemets are needed for safety and should be worn but not everyone can wear them and police should not decide at a whom to issue $150 tickets. Oh by the way my group estimates that we have donated over $7000 to the friends of the Katy Trail the last few years. Well since they did not provide us with adequate warnings that police are issuing tickets we decided to notncontribute to them any more. My group now rides along the greenways in Las Colinas, it is much nicer than the Katy Trail and no police to issue tickets anywhere. What a difference.
Anonymous
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Pavel Lishin, says:
Well, if there are 20 riders and 3 cops, how exactly are the cops supposed to give everyone a ticket?
And if you don't want to wear a helmet because it's hot, fine, but to claim that you CAN'T because it slows you down because you HAVE TO STOP AND WIPE SOME SWEAT OFF is kinda pushing it.
Also, why should the friends of Katy Trail (whoever that is) put up warnings that, yes, the police are enforcing laws?
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
ch0, says:
Helmets are teh lame
Anonymous
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jeremy Dunck, says:
Spilling your brains when a toddler wanders across the trail is way lamer.
Staff
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
ch0, says:
If you value your brains, yes indeed.
Anonymous
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Pavel Lishin, says:
My brain? That toddler shoulda known better!
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Andrew, says:
Should we make out the $150 checks to the city or directly to the convention center hotel?
The only reason that this law was put on the books, was to give the cops a reason to stop the drug couriers who were riding bikes to make their deliveries. I guess all of the real crimes have been solved. My thought is that the cops are being forced to work on the KT to protect law abiding citizens from the scum of this town and are looking for ways to offset the cost of being down there.
I think that I will start riding my bike in Fort Worth on the Trinity Trails. That city made that park real nice - even without a toll road.
Anonymous
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
burlyqueen, says:
"My brain? That toddler shoulda known better!"
Unfortunately, parts of the White Rock Trail runs pass a couple of soccer/football fields and there are always a group of kids running amouk without parent supervision. I've had to take a couple of tumbles on the concrete trail to avoid these careless children and their oblivious parents.
Anonymous
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
alexander troup, says:
I am glad I dont live over there...Cycle Cops..on the run, with no really good thing better to do, saw in the 1902 Calaboose Police arrest and citation book at the library,a 100$ Fine for a baseball player ridding a bike with two well dressed prostitute's....Who were also ridding a bike on Market and Jackson St, mean cities have one good thing going for them,
They have to employ the mean authority attitude to run these's place's so the Immigrant's wont ruin the view....A/T, Time to craw to White rock, or is it Blood rock...
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jason Rice, says:
::careless children and their oblivious parents.
Damned pedestrians. Why don't they stay off the paths. If they don't want to ride they can just find their own place to walk or get their own paths or walk where there are designated pedestrian lanes.
:g/pedestrian/s//bicyclists/g
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
Pardon me while I repeat my post from the 'passenger thrown from motorcycle' story...
Helmet or no helmet, stupid people will find a way to hurt themselves and others.
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
AT- I'm sure you and I are the only ones here old enough to remember Bloodrock!
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jason Rice, says:
I think we should vote on Rick's next haircut and possibly a tattoo. The less free will he has, the better.
Verified
7 months, 2 weeks agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Janders, says:
Pavel, If there are 20 bike riders and only 3 cops you would need to follow police enforcement 101. Two cops block the front and one blocks the rear and you therefore trap all 20 riders without helmets and them you issue a $150 ticket toneach and everyone one of the 20 riders, do you have any other questions?Also do not twist other's words you will get no where do you understand? Read my post like others did and there is no mention of 3 cops. There were 6 cops all fully capable of stopping EVERY bike rider without a helmet and issuing a ticket. Now let's review this again. How many cops were there, is the answer 3 as you try to spin it or were there 6? Now let's put some more detail into how they select who gets the $150 ticket and who does not. Cop number 1 tells cop number 2 "here comes some more" meaning bike riders without a helmet. Cop 2 tells cop 1 "let's get the couple". Cop 2 tells cop 1 " no let them keep riding let's get that guy behind them instead". Cop 1 says "ok let's get him". So the couple keepnriding and the lone rider gets the ticket. That is selective enforcement, any questions from anyone? Have y'all noticed the new shining helmets along the trail? That is due to the warnings bike riders without helmets are receiving from these posts. The Katy Trail people were aware of the cops issuing tickets along the trail WE have been paying for. Did they provide warning to us? No, they did not and therefore we will no longer contribute to them. The bike trails in Las Colinas are much nicer than the Katy Trail. We ride in groups for several hours and helmets are needed for safety and everyone should wear a helmet when rising a bike. However if younare not wearing a helmet you should not be issued a $150 ticket without proper warning. What other bike laws are out there? Will we get a $250 ticket for not having wheel reflectors?
Anonymous
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Robert Kelly, says:
DOA Rick. Nice....:)
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jason Rice, says:
This is a year and a half old story, right? Jander's recall is remarkable. Nothing like an eyewitness. Exactly 20 riders and exactly (now) 6 cops. Got it.
Apologize Pavel. (pass the popcorn)
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Scott Doyle, says:
Janders, I refer you to <a href="http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2008/feb/11/man-shot-and-robbed-near-highland-park/#c21225">this post</a>. Please, for the love of the internet...pay heed.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Pavel Lishin, says:
Sorry, Janders. I was wrong. If I'm ever a policeman, I'll be sure and warn people that murder is illegal before placing them under arrest.
I'll also stop making up hypothetical numbers to illustrate a point. Or several points, or a single number, whichever the case or cases may be.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jason Rice, says:
::if you are not wearing a helmet you should not be issued a $150 ticket without proper warning.
Agreed. Bicyclists should first be tagged for a warning
And then later stopped for basic breeding and health monitoring.
The option would be applying license plates to the vehicles for monitoring and possible mandatory clothing with license monitoring.
So Rick, ya wanna apply for a guvmint issue shirt or regulated armband to leave your house?
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Pavel Lishin, says:
By the way, yes, I'd be pissed if I got a $150 ticket - but I wouldn't throw down a hissy fit because some other people got away with it.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Scott Doyle, says:
Right, you'd just throw rocks at their heads and scream "That'll learn ya!"...
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Travis Bush, says:
I think the helmet law should apply to children under the age of 16, otherwise it is just one more irritating regulation. No one really cares if adults suffer from closed head injuries anyway.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rawlins Gilliland, says:
Travis, the people at Parkland care 'if adults suffer from closed head injuries'. <i>(And so do those who pay Dallas property taxes like moi.)</i> Sadly, auto/cyclist accidents are on the rise as traffic becomes increased and cycle ridership doubles. Add to this the number of both who 'ease' (floor it?) through yellow and/or red lights......and you have a recipe for helmet laws.
I'm all for free America and not watching the so-called 'nanny state' overtake us. But I also see people who want to feel 'free' and celebrate this 'free country' riding 85 mph on Central on motorcycles w/o a helmet when they have three children (and three ex-wives?) They may be feeling 'free' but it's costing everyone else.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rick Yost, says:
C'mon folks...we're fighting natural selection here!
Before long we'll have children wearing helmets, knee & elbow pads, and groin cups just to go to school.
"Sheeeesh!"
We're trading freedom and common-sense for safety. Children should be learning self-reliance. Parents should make sure their children understand that life is naturally difficult and can be very dangerous. They should not be learning a false sense of immunity to everyday dangers.
Jason- Don't laugh too hard my friend.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Rawlins Gilliland, says:
<b>It's a free country compromise:</b>
Anyone with proof of health insurance should be allowed to ride without a helmet. If they have school age children, they must also have life insurance. <i>Simple</i>.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Jason Rice, says:
RG for President.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Travis Bush, says:
Rawlins..just chalk my comment up to failed sarcasm. As far as motorcycles go, I always wear the helmet...when I don't have anyone depending on me, then maybe I'll ride without one..till then the helmet stays on.
Rick..yes I agree about teaching kids to be self reliant. Teaching them that to cherish life is to be careful with it can also be done by wearing gear where it is appropriate. White Rock and other heavily trafficked areas are appropriate places in my estimation. At home around your own streets might be different where the traffic is slower because of speed bumps, dead ends, cul-de-sacs, etc.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal
Pavel Lishin, says:
Rawlins: Brilliant. I really like that.
Verified
7 months, 1 week agoLink to this comment | Suggest removal