Record year for deaths and injuries prompts spring ATV safety campaign

An alarming increase in all-terrain vehicle deaths and injuries has prompted the Saskatchewan All-Terrain Vehicle Association (SATVA) to launch a province-wide campaign this spring to promote the use of helmets for ATV drivers and passengers along with other general safety measures.

John Meed, general manager of SATVA, said there were eight fatalities involving ATVs in this province last year and in five of those deaths the rider of the machine wasn’t wearing a helmet. He said this is a “record” mortality rate in Saskatchewan, so SATVA feels they have to remind people of the dangers of operating the vehicles without taking appropriate safety precautions.

Wearing a helmet “can obviously save your life,” said Meed. “It can save you from serious brain injuries and we think it is a message that needs to get out.”

Meed said it is the law in Saskatchewan to wear a helmet when riding an ATV on public property. He said a person also has to wear goggles when operating an ATV if the helmet doesn’t have a face screen.

“We’d love people on their own property to wear their helmet too,” he said. “We know that the farming community is one that rides a lot on their own property, on their own land, and we’d like to promote that they wear their helmets as well.”

Along with eight deaths involving ATVs in 2013, there were also 47 injuries resulting from ATV accidents. This was the second highest injury rate in 14 years.

Since 2000, 50 people have been killed and 442 have been injured while riding an ATV. There has already been one death and injury in the province involving unsafe ATV use in 2014 after a 40-year-old man was killed and his 14-year-old passenger injured in what is believed to be an alcohol-related accident near Togo earlier this month.

Meed said an ATV tends to be a more bumpy and rocky ride than what someone experiences in a car, so people need to be in control of their faculties when driving the machine. He said a wrong decision or wrong reaction could cause the vehicle to flip over or hit something resulting in a bad injury or death.

Proper ATV training is also important for any riders of the machines. Meed said this can be accomplished through taking either the SATVA training course or one offered by the Canadian Safety Council.

To read more please see the May 19 print edition of The Davidson Leader.