NEWS STORIES - 2007
Below are recent news stories about ATV safety. If you have seen any
news stories or developments you think we should post, please email us
at mail@safetynet.org.
[12.19.07]
Parents cautioned on ATV safety
Chattanooga Times Free Press
Middle Valley resident Lee Ann Flinn was shaken after her 5-year-old
son smashed his ATV -- a Christmas present -- into the side of a neighbor's
parked truck. Fortunately her son, Noah, was wearing a helmet during
the accident earlier this year and suffered no injuries, though the
family had to shell out $1,200 to fix the neighbor's truck, she said.
"It scares me to death," she said. "I will not let them
(on the ATVs) unless an adult's out there." Local toy safety experts
and doctors said that although all-terrain vehicles are marketed to
adolescents and children, parents should be aware that even the smaller
models designed for younger children may be a risky holiday gift. [ read more ]
[12.19.07]
Supervise kids riding ATVs, advocates say
Washington Post
Curtis James has spent the last couple of years collecting enough photos
of unsupervised children riding all-terrain vehicles to fill an album."To
me, it's criminal negligence," James said. "I'd like the district
attorney's office to take it seriously... Anytime a person lets their
child out on the road out on the four-wheelers, they're putting their
kids' safety and well-being in danger"
[12.14.07]
ATV deaths and injuries
Lawyers and Settlements
When Sue Rabe read an article about a 10-year-old boy in Wyoming whose
Yahama Rhino rolled over on him this week while he was doing chores
on the family farm, she commented, "It's typical for kids to be on these
adult size things on a farm." That boy survived but Sue and Tom Rabe's
son Kyle, aged 10 also, wasn't so lucky. Their family's ATV flipped
and fatally pinned him underneath on May 6, 2002. The Rabes live in
rural Oregon on 170 acres of farmland and the area kids visit each other
by riding ATVs on a network of dirt and gravel road and through farmer's
fields. Tom Rabe fills in the details of the accident.[
read more ]
[12.11.07]
Local Mother Pushes for More ATV Safety Regulations
Las Vegas Now
Riding an all-terrain vehicle can be a fun but dangerous sport. Three
people were killed this year while off-roading in the Las Vegas Valley.
Some argue that there are not enough regulations to protect riders.
For example, Nevada doesn't require helmets. "Life without him is not fun," said Joyce Turkington, whose
son, Freddy, was killed in an ATV accident. She wants to warn other
parents to think twice before letting children ride an ATV. [
read more ]
[12.10.07]
ATV injuries increase
The Patriot-News
In about 10 months of 2007, doctors at Penn State Children's Hospital
treated more kids injured in all-terrain vehicle accidents than they
did in all of 2006. Despite industry and rider claims that ATVs are
safer than ever, the number of children injured locally matches the
highest year on record at the Hershey hospital. [
read more ]
[12.9.07]
Miss. still lacks ATV safety laws
Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
Despite the number of injuries and deaths from all-terrain vehicle
accidents, Mississippi remains one of five states that does not have
safety regulations for ATV riders. Nine bills that addressed ATV safety
were introduced by the 2007 Legislature. None came out of committee.
State Sen. Gray Tollison of Oxford said he had hoped to pass a safety
bill out of committee in the last session.[
read more ]
[12.2.07]
Serious Injuries Among Kids Driving ATVs Rising
News 92.3, KTAR (Phoenix, AZ)
The Consumer Product Safety Commission plans to make mandatory the
restrictions ATV manufacturers voluntarily follow governing the sale
of age-appropriate engine sizes. Dr. Dale Woolridge, a pediatric emergency
physician at University Medical Center, has seen a steady stream of
bumps, bruises, broken bones and head injuries from ATV crashes in his
five years here. "My personal experience is that it is a huge problem
and that it is increasing," Woolridge said. Local authorities do not
track ATV accidents separately from other non-car crashes, but nationally
the number of serious injuries and deaths is up sharply in recent years. [
read more ]
[11.27.07]
Researchers issue warning about kids and ATV's
Newsday
Parents are being warned once again to think twice about buying their
youngsters an all-terrain vehicle for Christmas or any other special
occasion. But manufacturers of the popular off road vehicles respond
that they can be safe when riders are prudent. Researchers at the Unversity of Arkansas said that, based on 500 case
histories of young people treated after ATV accidents, youngsters under
16 should be barred from riding the vehicles.
[11.25.07]
Some rural residents of Yuma call for ATV safety restrictions
Yuma Sun
The Consumer Product Safety Commission plans to make mandatory the
restrictions ATV manufacturers voluntarily follow governing the sale
of age-appropriate engine sizes. Dr. Dale Woolridge, a pediatric emergency
physician at University Medical Center, has seen a steady stream of
bumps, bruises, broken bones and head injuries from ATV crashes in his
five years here. "My personal experience is that it is a huge problem
and that it is increasing," Woolridge said. Local authorities do not
track ATV accidents separately from other non-car crashes, but nationally
the number of serious injuries and deaths is up sharply in recent years. [
read more ]
[11.22.07]
All-Terrain Vehicles For Children Recalled
Washington Post
An all-terrain vehicle marketed for children as young as 12 was recalled
yesterday because it might harm riders. [
read more ]
[11.08.07]
Serious ATV injuries are on the rise here
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Children's Hospital reached a milestone yesterday it never wanted to approach -- already this year more children have been admitted to the Oakland facility for serious and sometimes life-threatening injuries sustained in all-terrain vehicle accidents than in all of 2006.[ read more ]
[11.07.07]
Keep kids off ATVs, Massachusetts lawmaker says
Boston Globe
For Katie Kearney, a legislative effort to stop children from riding all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles is more about improving parenting skills than it is about punishing kids. Under proposed legislation, Massachusetts would have the toughest restrictions in the nation on ATV and snowmobile use by children. The measure sets the minimum driving at 14 and aims to hold parents accountable.[ read more ]
[11.04.07]
Deaths, injuries rise from ATV use
Reno Gazette-Journal
Although it agrees with taking steps such as registration, the American Academy of Pediatrics wants to go further by requiring licenses to operate ATVs and a ban for kids younger than 16. ìATVs are motorized vehicles and need to be regulated as such,î Dowd said. ìGetting these things downscaled (to match a riderís size) doesnít work because youíre not getting to the main risk factor, which is the riderís age. You have 10-year-olds who are big enough to drive a car but we donít let them because they donít have the proper judgment yet.î
[11.03.07]
ATV owners negligent in girl's death
Palm Beach Post
Ever since their 13-year-old daughter Sara was killed when she drove a friend's ATV into a tree, Duane and Cathy Hennarichs wanted to save other children - and their parents - from a similar fate. On Friday, a Palm Beach County jury helped their cause by finding that the family that owned the four-wheeler Sara rode to her death in September 2003 was negligent and ordered them to pay the Hennarichses $3.6 million.
[10.31.07]
New study looks at financial impact of ATV accidents
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Keri Brown: WV has the nation's highest all-terrain vehicle death rate.
Eleven people died in all-terrain vehicle crashes last month, which
was a record high in the state. A new study released by a non profit
group in D.C. takes a closer look at the costs of ATV accidents. (4:52) [ listen ] [ transcript ]
[10.29.07]
Laws, other factors contribute to high ATV death rate
The Herald-Dispatch
While millions of ATV riders focus on the thrill and excitement of riding fast through trails, ATV riding has proved to be a dangerous activity that claimed the lives of 11 people in September and 43 so far this year.[ read more ]
[10.23.07]
ATV is too dangerous for child to operate
Newark Star-Ledger
ATVs are particularly dangerous for children under the age of 16. This age group accounted for more than 40 percent of total ATV related injuries and deaths in 2000. Children who are not licensed to drive a car should not operate off-road vehicles.
[10.19.07]
ATVs hospitalize more kids: number rose 70 percent in four years, study
says
The Charleston Gazette
The number of children hospitalized because of ATV accidents has increased
by at least 70 percent, and probably more, since 2000, said the director
of the injury control research center at West Virginia University.
[10.07.07]
September deadliest yet for ATV deaths
Charleston Gazette
Although ATV deaths in West Virginia are down compared to last year, there were 11 ATV-related fatalities in September ó more than any month since records started being kept in 1990, officials say.
[10.02.07]
Families should be concerned about kids' safety on ATVs
The Orange Leader
On its Web site, Concerned Families for ATV Safety has published a map showing where children have been killed while riding all-terrain vehicles. Orange made that map this month when 13-year-old Forest "Eddie" Ray died after wrecking his "four-wheeler." Weíre concerned more Orange County children could lose their lives in the same way.[ read more ]
[10.02.07]
New law boosts ATV safety
Statesman-Journal
SALEM - Four bills aimed at legislating ATV safety were stopped dead in their tracks before all the sponsors came together and rewrote a fifth bill that will result -- during a period of five years -- in all ATV operators passing a safety test, or meeting an alternative means of qualifying for an operator's card.
[10.01.07]
Group aims to raise awareness about ATV dangers: Concerned Families
for ATV Safety spearheading a billboard campaign.
The Shreveport Times
Kim Smith and the Concerned Families for ATV Safety, a national group
started by three mothers whose sons were killed on ATVs, are spearheading
a billboard campaign to raise awareness about the dangers of ATVs. The
advocacy group has been working to educate parents and lawmakers across
the country about the dangers that ATVs pose to children.
[09.30.07]
Geared for conflict: ATVs are injuring
riders as laws remain lax
Magic Valley Times-News
MAGIC VALLEY-- The last time Tyler's mother, Gail, saw her boy at the
hospital he was writhing in pain, legs kicking like he was riding a
bicycle, she said. Gail reached down and touched the ankle of her son
for the last time. She said she thought Tyler knew she was there, but
she can't know for sure. She simply hopes. After the last-ditch effort
to save Tyler's life had failed, an emotional surgeon told Gail, "Never
let anybody you know or love get on an ATV."[ read more ]
[09.26.07]
ATV injuries on the rise for children
Today's THV
Driving an ATV can be a dangerous trip, especially for children. In the past 2 weeks, two children died in ATV accidents. [ read more ]
[09.19.07]
Local woman hopes to raise awareness of ATV dangers
Frederick News Post
MIDDLETOWN -- No one should suffer from an accidental loss of a child. That's why Karen Thompkinson decided to take action after learning her friend's son, Dominick Gonzalez, died in an all-terrain-vehicle crash.[ read more ]
[09.18.07]
Protect kids from dangerous ATVs
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
As a parent who lost a child in an all-terrain vehicle accident, I would like to extend my deepest sympathies to the Steger family of East Avon, who lost their 9-year-old son in an ATV accident.
[09.04.07]
Girl, 13, who went missing on ATV found dead in Ariz. mine
Associated Press
A 13-year-old girl who disappeared while riding an all-terrain vehicle was found dead in a mine shaft early Sunday, and her 10-year-old companion was rescued with serious injuries, authorities said. [ read more ]
[09.04.07]
ATVs aren't child's play
The Boston Herald
On Aug. 8, 2004, my family was devastated to learn that our 14-year-old son, James, had been killed while on vacation with a friend when he lost control of the all-terrain vehicle (ATV) he had been driving.
[09.02.07]
Safety Agency Faces Scrutiny Amid Changes
The New York Times
In March 2005, the Consumer Product Safety Commission called together the nation's top safety experts to confront an alarming statistic: 44,000 children riding all terrain vehicles were injured the previous year, nearly 150 of them fatally.
[08.31.07]
Letter: Writer takes issue with ATV article
The Farmington Daily Times
As the parent who lost a child in an all-terrain vehicle accident, I would like to take issue with The Daily Times' recent article on this topic ("Officials continue to warn of ATV dangers," Aug. 21). Unfortunately, this story really missed the mark in explaining the full extent of the dangers ATVs pose to children.
[08.27.07]
3-year-old child killed in ATV accident
The Burlington Times News
A 3-year-old Vermont boy was killed Friday night when the 4-wheeler he was riding on with his grandfather flipped over.[ read more ]
[08.21.07]
ATV accidents are increasing
The Trenton Times
Emily Marshall was 12 when the all-terrain vehicle she was driving rolled over on her, pinning the young girl beneath its nearly quarter-ton bulk. The accident that killed the West Amwell girl on Friday has left her father shattered, wondering how to cope with the loss of his child.
[08.16.07]
More kids die on ATVs than bikes, study says
The Bend Bulletin
The death toll of children killed riding all-terrain vehicles, known as ATVs, now exceeds the number fatalities of kids riding bicycles, according to a new analysis released by Concerned Families for ATV Safety. Although many more kids ride bicycles than ATVs, the analysis conducted by Dr. Jim Helmkamp, director of the West Virginia University Injury Control Research Center, found that from 2000 to 2004, ATV-related accidents killed an average of 171 per 100,000 children 15 or younger each year, compared with 152 killed in bicycle-related accidents.
[08.12.07]
More kids killed on ATVs than bikes
Associated Press
CHARLESTON, W. Va. -- Children under the age of 16 are seven times more likely to ride bicycles than all-terrain vehicles, yet ATVs cause more deaths among youngsters than their peddling counterparts, according to a new study.
[07.31.07]
Death Rate Up, Study Says
CBS News
The death rate of kids using all-terrain vehicles in the United States increased significantly during a recent five-year span, according to one report, adding fuel to efforts by a parents' group to restrict and ultimately ban the use of the machines by anyone under 16.
[07.24.07]
State must strengthen laws regarding young ATV riders
The Herald-Dispatch
The rising tide of injuries from all-terrain vehicles is a familiar topic for our region, but the issue is getting national attention as well. West Virginia and Kentucky have led the nation in ATV fatalities in recent years, with 138 and 143 deaths respectively between 2002 and 2005, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Considering the relatively small populations of our states, the numbers are even more troubling.
[07.18.07]
Grief motivates parents to push for ATV legislation
Gannett News Service
Fourteen-year-old James Anderson was having the best summer of his life. The fun-loving boy with the infectious smile and wavy golden hair was a star pitcher for his pony league team and had just finished playing a tournament in New Hampshire. Afterward, James and seven of his teammates went to a friend's lakeside vacation home where they planned to swim, go boating and goof off.
[07.05.07]
Yamaha Takes Hard Line Against Injured Victims in ATV Brake Defect Case
PR Web
Over three years after issuing a Safety Recall Notice with respect to its 660R Raptor ATV and related rear brake failure, Yamaha Motor Corporation continues to deny customer's claims of injury. [ read more ]
[06.28.07]
Makers, doctors differ on ATV-riding age
Tulare Advance-Register
Though the ATV industry suggests that children as young as 6 years of age should be allowed to ride ATVs, pediatricians agree that young children are not emotionally or physically equipped to handle them. Dr. Christine Nelson, a pediatrician at Kaweah Delta Hospital in Visalia, California, points out that the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that children under the age of 16 should not ride an ATV because they lack maturity and judgment.
[06.01.07]
ATV deaths spiked over Memorial Day
Seattle Post Intelligencer
Over Memorial Day weekend, 18 people -- including 5 children under the age of 16 -- were killed on ATV accidents. This Seattle Post Intelligencer article explores the reasons why children are unable to safely ride ATVs.
[05.29.07]
Concerned Families: No kids on ATVs
The News Journal
Dr. Kate Cronan, chief of the Division of Emergency medicine at duPont Hospital in Rockland, Delaware, discusses the dangers ATVs pose to children, and suggests that children younger than 16 ought not use ATVs.
[05.20.07]
Overturned ATVs, dead kids
The Oregonian
It's a mountain -- a mountain of evidence that adult-size ATVs are killing children. All the carnage linked to ATVs, nearly 8,000 deaths and 2 million serious injuries, cannot be ignored or dismissed any longer. The Oregonian's four-day series "Deceptively dangerous" was a powerful call to action that must be heard over the persistent roar of the ATV lobby.
[05.18.07]
Concerned Families: No kids on ATVs
Raw Story
The group Concerned Families for ATV Safety has released a web video urging new safety standards that would keep children under 16 years of age from operating All-Terrain vehicles, or ATVs. [ read more ]
[05.18.07]
Web video highlighting need for ATV safety
Concerned Families for ATV Safety
Concerned Families released a new video about the Senate Commerce Committee's recent hearing on ATV safety. The video highlights the urgent need for common sense safety standards to keep children under 16 off powerful and deadly ATVs.
[ read the release ]
[ watch the video ]
[05.16.07]
Riders throttle safety legislation
The Oregonian
After her 10-year-old son, Kyle, died on the family's all-terrain vehicle five years ago, Sue DeLoretto Rabe formed a group of moms who had lost kids on ATVs to push safety measures in Congress and states.
[05.14.07 issue]
Kids & All-Terrain Vehicles: Dangerous Mix
ATVs are cool to ride, but thousands of kids are getting hurt, and some are dying.
Newsweek
It was supposed to be fun. hanging out with his cousin on a sunny Texas afternoon in 2005, B. J. Smith, then 15, decided to go for a spin on his uncle's new all-terrain vehicle.
[05.11.07]
ATVs: Deceptively Dangerous
The Oregonian
This four-part Oregonian series reports on the dangers of ATV use and the lack of adequate standards. [
read the whole series ]
[05.09.07]
Victims' families, manufacturers at standstill over ATV safety
McClatchy Newspapers
Despite decades of debate over how to curb deaths and injuries caused by all-terrain vehicle accidents, safety advocates and manufacturers said Wednesday that they've reached only modest common ground. [
read the whole series ]
[04.17.07]
Strange Logic From ATV Industry: Faster Machines Will Make Vehicles Safer
Safety Groups Oppose, Say Move Will Only Help Industry Bottom Line
The Wall Street Journal
Despite warning labels, size restrictions and state laws,
more than 40,000 children are seriously injured each year riding all-terrain
vehicles.
[04.16.07]
Girl Killed in Tarrant Co. ATV Accident
KXAS-5, NBC (Dallas-Fort Worth)
An 8-year-old girl was pronounced dead Saturday evening
after an all-terrain vehicle crash in Tarrant County. [ read more ]
[04.02.07]
14-month Old Killed in Georgetown County ATV
Wreck
WLTX-19, CBS (Columbia, SC)
Authorities say a 14-month-old Georgetown County boy
has died after the throttle on the four-wheeler he was riding on with
his grandfather got stuck and crashed into a vehicle. [ read more ]
[08.17.06]
Safety Experts Say ATVs Too Dangerous for Kids
Safe Kids Kansas reminds parents: no children under 16 on ATVs of any size.
Topeka, Kan. - Each year, in the United States, more than 100 children
ages 16 and under are killed and approximately 45,000 are injured on all-terrain
vehicles.
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