Letters To The Editor Pass ATV safety laws: To the Editor: To
little fanfare, by 2010 Mississippi had met its five year goal of
decreasing highway traffic deaths by 10 percent two years early. A
major part of that decrease was enacting a Primary Seatbelt law in 2006
and the public education campaign about the new law, “Click It or
Ticket.” Mississippians have a decided libertarian streak; we do
not like to be told what to do by our government. Our low seatbelt
usage and resulting high highway death rate, however, finally convinced
state legislators to pass a law that had been shown in other states to
significantly decrease highway deaths and injuries. And it worked. February
9 the Senate passed SB 2196, requiring that children under age 16 wear
helmets and pass a safety course when riding ATVs on public lands.
Eighteen senators signed on as co-sponsors. Some of the same
opposition that defeated Primary Seatbelt legislation for so many years
has prevented passage of ATV safety legislation up to now. Opponents to
helmet laws and ATV safety education requirements for children and
teens protested that riders should be able to do what they want on
their ATVs. Their argument loses all weight when faced with the
increasing number of ATV deaths, especially deaths of children, in our
state. In 2009, the last year for which fatality numbers have
been released, 10 Mississippi children died in ATV crashes. Many more
were severely injured or maimed when their ATV flipped, crashed, or ran
off the road. The Mississippi Medical Association, the Mississippi
Department of Health, the Mississippi Chapter of the American Academy
of Pediatrics, SafeKids, the Brain Injury Association, and state trauma
professionals are all supporting an ATV safety law. Mississippi
death rates from ATV crashes for children under 16 are increasing at
twice the rate of all ATV deaths. We know that states with no ATV
safety laws, like Mississippi, have almost twice the rate of ATV deaths
as states with either helmet or other safety laws. Mississippi is one
of five states with no ATV safety laws. If the increasing number
of deaths is not a sufficient reason, then maybe the costs to taxpayers
will be. The average charge at Batson Children’s Hospital for one
patient injured in an ATV crash is almost $17,000. There were 79
children hospitalized for ATV injuries in 2009; one died. The care for
injured children who were not wearing a helmet costs more than for
those who do, and children wearing a helmet are less likely to suffer
brain injuries with long-term costs and heartache. ATV safety
laws in other states have reduced ATV deaths and serious injuries. SB
2196 now goes to the House. It is long past time for this bill to be
approved by the House Transportation Committee and passed by the full
House. How many unnecessary deaths of children on ATVs will it take to
get lawmakers’ attention? Dr. Tami Brooks Dr. Rick Boyte Mississippi Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics Thanks “Big Fish”: Someone once told me that it was better to “be a big fish in a little bowl, than a little fish in a big ocean.” Well,
I have certainly never felt like a big fish, in fact, I would identify
more with a tadpole. Regardless, as a teenager, I itched to escape from
the little well I knew to an ocean of unknown. But
there is no substitute for home, so I returned to the fish I had
learned to swim with, the ones who called me by name. One
day recently was a great day to live in a little bowl. That day, my
husband was treated with respect and compassion, in a little office, in
a little town. That day, he actually went to a doctor, without an
appointment, with complaints of terrible side pain. That day, this doctor examined him within the hour, then scheduled and performed surgery by 7 p.m. that evening. That
day, this doctor changed his plans for the evening, juggled his life,
and, undoubtedly, left his family waiting, to make mine whole again. Thank
you, Dr. Brooks Monaghan, for taking care of all us little fish for
these many, many years. Thank you for valuing our community and our
people and making Holly Springs and Marshall County better, healthier
and stronger, despite our means or our names. Thank you for treating us all, our grandparents, parents, siblings and children, like equal fish. But, thank you most, for never acting like a big fish and continuing to swim with us in our little bowl. Amery Ewing Moore |