The observation “five dollar head, five dollar helmet” used to be common in traffic law enforcement referring to motorcycle riders who wore beanie-style helmets that would provide little or no protection in a crash.
Today, that observation could be extended to those who choose to ride a bicycle with inadequate protection. What would that say about the value of a head that was not protected at all?
If you wear, or make sure that your children under the age of 16 wear a proper bicycle helmet when cycling you are following the law.
In either case, you will not be liable to a $29 fine and one of your most valuable possessions will be afforded some protection. That protection may apply equally to a crash that you cause yourself or a crash where someone drives or rides into you.
Too many rules in our society today? One should be able to choose to do what they want to, right?
To some extent you may be right, but if you expect society to look after you when you are injured in a cycling incident is it not reasonable to expect society to count on you to take steps to minimize the need for help from everyone else?
Unless you are exempt from wearing a bicycle helmet, think of it the same way you do your seatbelt.
That safety device has evolved from something few wanted to wear to a better-than-95-per-cent wearing rate in B.C. today. Attitudes can change if there is a good reason for the change.
My head is worth more than $5 to me, so I choose to wear a helmet when I cycle.
For more information on this topic, visit www.drivesmartbc.ca. Questions or comments are welcome by e-mail to comments@drivesmartbc.ca. Tim Schewe is a retired RCMP constable with many years of traffic law enforcement experience. His column appears Friday.