COAST TO COAST BIKER NEWSCompiled & Edited by Bill Bish,
National Coalition of Motorcyclists (NCOM)
In testimony before the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee Transportation Subcommittee on March 6, Secretary Peters revealed her desire to promulgate nationwide helmet laws; “I support giving the information to states so that they can act on those laws,” she told Senators, adding “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governors when I see substantial increases in the number of motorcycle deaths in a state, especially a state that has repealed a helmet law.”
Calling upon the federal government to ease lobbying restrictions imposed at the behest of motorcycle rights organizations across the country, Peters has requested legislation that will allow her to divert motorcycle safety funding to convince states to enact mandatory helmet laws.
Peters has sent letters to House and Senate leadership urging legislation to allow states to utilize federal funds intended for motorcycle rider training and awareness programs to promote helmet laws instead.Why doesn’t she lobby for helmets in cars?
With the Ontario Human Rights Commission at his side, Mr. Badesha argued that Ontario’s helmet law violates his religious freedom, since Sikhist beliefs prevent him from wearing anything over his turban.
But Ontario Court Judge James Blacklock ruled that while the law prohibiting anyone riding a motorcycle without a helmet does violate his right to freedom of religion, it’s justifiable in terms of the benefit that society gains in possible reduced health costs and the possible loss of people’s loved ones.
The Crown’s case centered on increased costs to the health system should helmet-less Sikh motorcycle riders end up suffering head injuries, though Badesha’s attorneys pointed to a study that concluded that, assuming half of all Sikh motorcyclists wear turbans, the increase in serious injuries would be between .43 and 2.83 Sikh riders a year. The study also projected that medical treatment for traumatic brain injuries would increase from $151,700,000 to $151,834,685 — a .00005-per-cent overall increase in the province’s annual health-care budget.
Badesha has announced that he will appeal the decision, and backed by the local Sikh community he now intends to challenge the constitutionality of the law rather than focusing his fight solely on his ticket. He and his supporters will also lobby politicians to change the law.
Following the ruling, the World Sikh Organization of Canada (WSO) issued a statement expressing disappointment at the court’s decision and asserting that wearing a turban doesn’t substantially raise the risk either to the rider or to others on the road. The organization pointed to the Sikh motorcyclists in other jurisdictions who have been riding without helmets for many years. India, Hong Kong and Britain exempt Sikhs from wearing motorcycle helmets, as do the Canadian Provinces of Manitoba and British Columbia, where a human-rights challenge precipitated the exemption. Similar challenges have failed in the United States.
“We are confident of winning the battle this time,” Badesha said. “We don’t believe a helmet is safe. Every day riders with helmets die in road accidents. If I’m supposed to die today, I will die, and nothing can save me.”
On the up side, motorcycle sales in 2007 were over the 1-million mark for the fifth straight year, and battery and tire sales indicate that ridership and enthusiasm for the sport remain high.
According to the Times article, the U.S. Department of Commerce estimates a 2.2% sales drop in 2007, but some manufacturers are estimating a slide of up to 8-10%.
In a regulatory filing, Harley-Davidson Inc. said industry wide U.S. sales of large displacement motorcycles (over 650cc) fell 5 percent last year. Harley’s large-motorcycle domestic market share dipped to 49.4% from 50%, while their closest competitor Honda had a U.S. market share last year of 14.2%, down from 15.1%.
Bloomberg news services reported recently that Yamaha is experiencing its first profit drop in eight years, Kawasaki claims sales are down but less than the industry average, and Honda and Suzuki each admit losses that parallel the industry overall; but there’s also some bright spots including Ducati, KTM, Victory, and overall scooter sales.
On another positive note, industry market research group Freedonia has predicted an expanding global demand for motorcycles of 6% annually due primarily to emerging markets such as Asia and South America.And while declining motorcycle sales industry-wide has taken a toll on Harley-Davidson’s stock price, one of the country’s largest financial institutions, Citigroup, has removed the Milwaukee motorcycle manufacturer’s stock from its “recommended to sell’ list, citing sales trends that had “stabilized somewhat”.
“This move allows us to improve the competitiveness and appeal of our products by applying the latest technologies and production systems at one efficient location,” Akio Hamada, president & CEO of Honda of America, said in a statement. “Obviously, the motorcycle plant has a lot of historical significance,” he said. “It was Honda’s first plant in North America. It started producing motorcycles on Nov. 10, 1979. So obviously, there’s a lot of emotion involved in this kind of decision.
The sprawling plant, in Marysville, Ohio, employs 450 workers. Honda said there will be no layoffs when production ends in spring 2009. “There were a lot of people who felt disappointment,” said plant manager Jan Gansheimer, noting that many of the employees are motorcycle enthusiasts who have spent much of their careers at the plant.
Mirroring the rest of the industry, Honda’s U.S. motorcycle sales fell in 2007, but the company said that its decision to end Ohio motorcycle production was not based on a softening American motorcycle market.
Honda’s manufacturing venture in America began at the Marysville plant in September, 1979, where its first product was a motocross machine. Over time, a $165 million capital investment was made in the facility, which became the worldwide supplier of some of Honda’s most popular models, such as the luxury touring Gold Wing. The motorcycle plant reached its peak production in 1997 when it turned out 174,000 vehicles, including all-terrain vehicles. In 2005, ATV production was moved to South Carolina. Last year, the Ohio factory built nearly 61,000 motorcycles, 44,000 of which were Gold Wings and VTX cruiser motorcycles.
So it shouldn’t seem surprising that “Motorcycle News” is reporting that Honda and Yamaha are working with twelve car manufacturers to test and develop technology intended to “…reduce rear-end shunts, head-on collisions and drivers who turn right across a road in the face of oncoming traffic, a common cause of motorcycle accidents.”
The systems, which will begin testing in Japan this month, enable automobiles to communicate speed and road position to other vehicles, and warn of potential accidents via voice alerts and navigation system messages.
Fueled by government funded safety campaigns and worldwide legislative initiatives, these tests could signal a gradual revolution in motorcycle safety.
Scott Reichert recently took his case to court and was acquitted after the prosecution had presented its case and before Reichert had to put on a defense. Reichert, a member of the club Street Legal, originally considered just paying the fine he told the St. Cloud Times newspaper, but then he saw the police reports that hinted at a possible motive that police wanted to target some of the BPMs.
The July 7 run from the BPM clubhouse was intercepted by as many as 19 law enforcement agents, including members of the state Gang Strike Force and an agent from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The BPMs have been identified as a criminal gang based on criteria established by the Legislature, said Minnesota Gang Strike Force Commander Ron Ryan in defending their actions that day, A report filed in case by the Gang Strike Force cites two examples of criminal activity tied to the BPMs: one incident is from 1971; the other is from 1968.
Reichert and attorneys representing the dozens of bikers stopped that day contend that the officers and sheriff’s deputies were looking for more. If that’s the case, a box-score review of the stop could be considered a lopsided defeat: The nineteen officers wrote about 60 citations for riders failing to stop at a stop sign and two for riders having a small amount of marijuana. They arrested one biker for disorderly conduct, but found no one wanted on warrants and no illegal weapons.
About five dozen other cases could be headed for separate trials, according to lawyer Stephen O’Brien, the Minnesota Aid to Injured Motorcyclists (A.I.M.) Attorney representing the remaining bikers.
First, Pamela Anderson made celebrity headlines around the world with her sold out Valentines Day show at a famous Parisian Gentlemen’s club Cabaret house Le Crazy Horse. A crowd of over 500 fans paid $300 to watch the former Baywatch star give a performance that finished on the back of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle.
A few weeks after Ms. Anderson’s unique Valentines present, pop star Prince threw a post-Oscar party in his Beverly Hills mansion, which featured room after room of exotic dancers dressed in various themes with one featuring a scantily clad woman enthusiastically using a motorcycle as a prop.
Many industry experts would agree, if this trend of women shedding clothing at the sight of a motorcycle becomes popular, currently struggling two-wheeled sales could see a marked improvement.
–U.S. Supreme Court Justice George Sutherland (1862-1942)
–Photos from the Bob T. Collection–