WOF changes will end in tears - expert
WOF changes will end in tears -
expert
Changes to the vehicle WOF system
will result in more road deaths, says the car review
website www.dogandlemon.com.
Dogandlemon.com
editor Clive Matthew-Wilson – who is an active road safety
campaigner – says:
“Despite what people have
been conned into believing, the current six-monthly WOF
check is a major lifesaver. To dispense with this system
will inevitably result in more deaths and
injuries."
Matthew-Wilson dismisses government
claims that few accidents are caused by vehicle defects and
that the six-monthly WOF is therefore an unnecessary
expense:
“When the police investigate accidents,
then tend to blame driver behavior. Therefore, they often
miss vital factors that might have prevented the accident
occurring.”
“Take a typical situation where a
child runs out in front of your car. Whether or not that
child gets killed may well depend on the state of your
vehicle’s brakes and shock absorbers.”
Tests by
the German vehicle inspection agency TUV found that
a vehicle with one worn shock absorber stops two metres
slower than a car with all four shock absorbers working
properly.
Brakes and shock absorbers are currently
checked every six months on most vehicles. That time will
double when the WOFs are moved to 12
months.
Australian vehicle accident expert Chris
Coxon, who co-founded Australia’s ANCAP crash test
program, says:
“The New Zealand government
scientists appear to have deliberately excluded research
that didn’t support the government
position.”
Matthew-Wilson adds that the
government’s WOF changes have been very deceptively
packaged.
“The government has done a brilliant
job of presenting the changes to the vehicle licensing
system as a measure to save ordinary motorists time and
money. Actually, the average motorist will save very little
and may lose a
lot.”
ENDS