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NHTSA 07-08
Monday, Sept. 29, 2008
Contact: Eric Bolton
Tel.: (202) 366-9550
U.S. TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY MARY E. PETERS PROPOSES NEW SAFETY RULES FOR
MOTORCYCLE HELMETS
WASHINGTON – New rules proposed today will improve motorcycle safety by making
it easier for riders to identify and use effective helmets, instead of unsafe
“novelty helmets, announced U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters. The
proposal will also make it harder for riders to use novelty helmets in states
that require DOT-certified helmets, she said.
“Novelty helmets do little to protect riders during an accident,” Secretary
Peters said. “This proposal will make it easier for riders to know in advance
whether the helmet they buy will keep them safe.”
The proposal would amend the agency’s current motorcycle helmet safety rules to
require manufacturers to place a larger, tamper-proof DOT label on the back of
certified helmets. The new labels will make it harder for vendors to remove the
labels on safe helmets and affix them to the unsafe novelty helmets.
The proposed rule would also strengthen the tests helmets must go through to
receive DOT certification, including updated tests on how the helmets hold up
during impact, whether objects can penetrate the helmet and how well the helmet
stays in place during a crash. Recent tests of novelty helmets which are not DOT
certified showed they fail to meet current DOT performance tests.
“As our testing has shown, these ‘novelty’ helmets do not have the energy
absorbing capacity to protect a rider in a highway crash,” said David Kelly,
Acting NHTSA Administrator. “A DOT-certified and labeled helmet, as proposed
today, will help consumers make more knowledgeable decisions when purchasing a
helmet.”
The proposed rule announced today will help mitigate the yearly increases in
motorcycle fatalities and injuries that have plagued the nation for nearly a
decade, Secretary Peters said. Fatalities have more than doubled since
1997--increasing by 144 percent. Yet new data indicate that nearly one in five
motorcycle riders in states with helmet laws wear a non-compliant helmet.
In 2006, helmets saved an estimated 1,658 lives. If everyone worn a helmet, an
additional 752 lives would have been saved, the Secretary said. During the same
year, 4,837 motorcyclists were killed; of those, more than 40 percent weren’t
wearing helmets, she said.
Once published in the Federal Register, the agency will seek public comment for
60 days. Click
here to view the proposed rule.
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