Killer seatbelts are easily replaced – expert
Killer seatbelts are easily replaced –
expert
‘Killer’ lap seatbelts can be easily
replaced in many vehicles, but the process is hampered by
government red tape, according to a leading road safety
campaigner.
Dog & Lemon Guide editor Clive Matthew-Wilson, whose pioneering research on seatbelt upgrades was given an award by the Australian Police Journal, said that upgrading lap seatbelts is a relatively simple job.
“It’s usually less than an hour’s work to put in a new seatbelt mount and about a ten minute job to bolt in the new seatbelt.”
“The problem is not the upgrade, the problem is the draconian regulations. By requiring engineer’s certification for even simple modifications, Land Transport New Zealand has created an environment where killer seatbelts are left untouched, even though people are dying unnecessarily as a result.”
“You can’t make an old car as safe as a new car, but you can make it a hell of a lot safer than it is at present.”
“I have no problem
with engineers supervising seatbelt upgrades, but the
current system is unworkable. And please don’t fall for
the line that lives could be lost if the regulations were
simplified. There is clear evidence that lives are being
lost as a result of the current
regulations.”
“If Land Transport likes
regulations, it should recommend an import ban on any
vehicle with lap seatbelts.”
Two years ago, Huntly Coroner Bob McDermott also recommended that lapbelts be banned after the death of a 77-year-old woman in a crash on State Highway 1 near Wellsford. She was wearing a lapbelt which ruptured her internal organs on impact.
Matthew-Wilson added: “The government is still
allowing vehicles with lapbelts into the country. I know
lapbelts are deadly, the government knows that lapbelts are
deadly. There are now alternatives to lapbelts. Why are
vehicles with lapbelts still being allowed in and why is it
so hard to upgrade the ones that are already
here?”
• Hatchbacks and station wagons cannot
currently be upgraded from lap seatbelts because there is
nowhere to bolt the third point of the new
seatbelt.
• Suggested
reading:
http://dogandlemon.com/media/Safety%20PDF/A%20Tragic%20Lack%20of%20Restraint.pdf
ends