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La. bill could kill helmet law
04:48 PM CDT on Tuesday, May 6, 2008
BATON ROUGE, La. -- Louisiana should stop forcing adult motorcyclists to wear helmets, but begin requiring that new bikers undergo safety training before getting a license, a House committee voted on Tuesday.
WWL-TV
A law in the La. Legislature could kill helmet laws.
The House Transportation committee voted 10-5 to send the bill to the House floor.
Among other things, the safety course will teach future bikers of the importance of wearing a proper helmet, instead of plastic "novelty" helmets that offer far less skull protection than authorized helmets, Smiley said. Combined with the training course, he said passage of his bill would mean the state will produce better trained and better equipped bikers.
"More people will start wearing helmets and they'll be better educated than they are now," said Smiley, R-Port Vincent, who is a motorcyclist.
Louisiana is one of 20 states that require all motorcyclists to wear a helmet, a statute that safety activists say saves lives in accidents.
Smiley's bill moved forward despite opposition from James Champagne, former head of the Louisiana Highway Safety Commission, who mocked Smiley's position as "tantamount to believing in the tooth fairy."
Champagne compared the motorcycle helmet requirement to mandatory seat-belt laws, speed limits, red lights and stop signs, all of which are imposed to improve safety. He said a helmetless biker is a good bet to be killed or wind up incapacitated, a drag on society.
"If you get into a crash, that helmet may be the one thing that saves your life or saves you from a serious injury," Champagne said.
Champagne's former position was as an appointee of the governor, but was removed from the job earlier this year -- a dismissal he attributes to Jindal's support for repeal of the helmet law. Louisiana had a mandatory helmet law until Gov. Mike Foster, a motorcyclist, backed its repeal. The helmet law was reinstated under Gov. Kathleen Blanco.
Jindal, a Foster protege, included in his campaign for governor last year a pledge to support the law's repeal, saying bikers should be able to decide for themselves whether to wear a helmet.
The instructional course on motorcycling would go into effect after July 1, 2009, to be taught by the Department of Public Safety.
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