Community Corner
Motorcyclist Fatalities Down In North Carolina: Report
Despite thundering opposition from motorcyclists, efforts to require helmets by all motorcycle riders are gaining traction.

NORTH CAROLINA β Thereβs some good news tucked in with the bad news about motorcyclist fatalities in the United States: Motorcyclists are still dying at a much higher rate than other motorists, but fatalities decreased in 2017 compared to 2016, when deaths hit an eight-year high. That downward trend holds true here in North Carolina, as well, where motorcycle fatalities decreased 7 percent during the period.
Preliminary data from the Governors Highway Safety Association showed that 141 motorcycle fatalities were reported in North Carolina in 2017. That compares with 152 fatalities in 2016. Overall, 4,798 people were killed in motorcycle crashes in 2017, compared to 5,251 the year prior, an 8.6 percent decrease, according to the report.
A variety of factors contribute to motorcycle fatalities, including poor decisions by the operator and hazards created by other motorists, the weather and wildlife, but a big contributing factor is helmet use. (For more news like this, find your local Patch here. If you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app; download the free Patch Android app here.)
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Only 19 states and the District of Columbia require all motorcyclists and their passengers to wear helmets. Another 28 states require helmet use by younger riders, and three states β Illinois, Iowa and New Hampshire β have no helmet laws at all. North Carolina requires helmet use for all riders.
Helmet use is about 37 percent effective in preventing motorcyclist deaths and about 67 percent effective in preventing brain injuries, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
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Pro-helmet forces, including insurance groups, doctors and accident survivors, have beat back recent efforts in some states to loosen helmet laws, drowning out the thunder of freedom-loving motorcyclists who want to ride bareheaded.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says laws requiring all motorcyclists to wear helmets would be βthe single most effective way for states to save lives and save money,β a position backed up by public research.
Still, itβs an uphill battle.
The American Motorcyclist Association βstrongly encouragesβ the voluntary use of helmets and other personal protective equipment, including gloves and sturdy footwear, but stopped short of endorsing a mandate for universal helmet laws.
βThe AMA believes that adults should have the right to voluntarily decide when to wear a helmet,β the group said in a position statement. βThe AMA does not oppose laws requiring helmets for minor motorcycle operators and passengers.β
TELL US: North Carolina requires helmet use by all motorcycle riders. Do you think the law should be changed, or is it sufficient as currently written?
Helmet use isnβt the only factor in motorcyclist deaths. Alcohol use plays a big role, too, according to the Governors Highway Safety Association. The groupβs report shows that in 2016, riders were legally drunk in 25 percent of all fatal motorcycle crashes β the highest percentage of alcohol-impaired drivers among all vehicle types.
Additionally, 37 percent of riders killed in single-vehicle crashes in 2016 were legally drunk. Statistics for 2017 werenβt available.
In the past, younger, less experienced riders have been overrepresented in motorcyclist fatalities, but that is changing. Over the last four years, riders over age 40 comprised the greatest share of motorcyclist fatalities nationwide, and several states reported increases in older driver fatalities in 2017.
Riders in that group comprised 55 percent of all riders killed in 2013 and 54 percent in 2014, 2015 and 2016. The average age of riders killed in motorcycle crashes in 2016 was 43, compared to 42 in the three years prior.
Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images
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