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Summer may bring more ATV deaths

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – At least 18 people – five of them children – died in crashes involving all-terrain vehicles over the Memorial Day weekend, and federal safety officials expect more deaths in coming months.The 18 deaths were nearly double the average for other weekends in May, according to estimates by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. The five children were 16 or younger.With summer drawing near, commission spokesman Scott Wolfson expects more people to be riding ATVs, leading to more deaths and injuries unless riders follow basic safety guidelines:- No tandem riding.- Stick to off-road venues and away from roads or highways.- Always wear a helmet.For Carolyn Anderson of Brockton, Mass., the deadly Memorial Day holiday was a grim reminder of the 2004 death of her 14-year-old son, James.Anderson wants the government to ban youngsters from using the popular off-road vehicles – something the Consumer Product Safety Commission has declined to do.”Kids under 16 don’t have the judgment, they don’t have the physical strength a lot of time,” said Anderson, co-founder of Concerned Families for ATV Safety. “They’re short on common sense.”The industry says banning kids from all-terrain vehicles won’t work.”A lot of parents want their kids to ride ATVs,” said Tim Buche, president of the California-based Specialty Vehicle Institute of America. “ATVs are loads of fun every day for millions of Americans when used safely and responsibly.”Under a voluntary agreement between the industry and the commission, major ATV distributors require dealers not to sell adult-size ATVs to people who might allow children to ride them. Consumer groups say few dealers abide by the rule.Since 2004, sales of all-terrain vehicles have declined. Industry figures show that 912,000 of the vehicles were sold in the United States. In 2005, 856,000 were sold. In 2006, an estimated 856,000 were sold.Less reliable is recent data on fatalities involving ATVs. The Consumer Product Safety Commission has agreements with 100 hospitals in several states to report injuries. Coroners are required to report deaths involving the off-road-vehicles. Reports from both sources are still arriving for 2005.So far, the commission knows of 467 ATV-related deaths in 2005. Wolfson said commission staff members believe that number is much higher, closer to 700.Nearly 137,000 people went to the hospital in 2005 for injuries involving ATVs, according to the commission. About a third of the injured were children. The commission estimates that 90 percent of those injured under 16 years old were riding adult-size ATVs.For more than a year, the commission has been considering regulations that would lift restrictions on the engine size of youth ATVs, allowing manufacturers to make bigger vehicles. At the same, the commission would require installation of equipment to limit maximum speeds, based on the riders’ age.The American Academy of Pediatrics opposes the proposed rules and wants kids banned from riding all ATVs, youth models and those made for adults.”The academy feels strongly that children aren’t developmentally ready until about age 16 to operate a complex machine such as an ATV,” said Dr. Gary Smith, chairman of the AAP Committee on Injury, Violence and Poison Prevention. “It has to do with maturity, with judgment, with coordination, with strength.”—On the Net:Consumer Product Safety Commission: http://www.cpsc.govConcerned Families for ATV Safety: http://www.atvsafetynet.org


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