This past July, the Herald News in Fall River, Massachusetts,聽 the Somerset police were handing out $5 ice cream gift certificates to kids cycling with helmets on. With the ice cream came the following admonition:
While the ice cream giveaway if fun, the effort also came with a stern reminder from police of what is required: 鈥淲e would like to remind you that any person 16 years of age or younger operating a bicycle or being carried as a passenger on a bicycle on a public way, bicycle path or on any other public right-of-way shall wear a helmet. Said helmet shall fit the person鈥檚 head, shall be secured to the person鈥檚 head by straps while the bicycle is being operated.鈥
The next day, one of the happy ice cream recipients, a 6-year-old boy, was :
The day before the fatal crash, Somerset police spotted the boy bike riding with his father and gave him a gift certificate to a local ice cream shop because he was wearing a helmet.
鈥淚 guess it's kind of ironic in a very sad way,鈥 said Somerset Police Chief George McNeil. 鈥(It鈥檚) just a tragic accident.鈥
This was 鈥渏ust a tragic accident,鈥 really? No. This was a 鈥攁nd it was one that was . Indeed, after the crash, local residents went and .
As for irony, well, it鈥檚 one thing to dismiss tragedies as 鈥渋ronic鈥 while you鈥檙e doing bong hits on the couch; it鈥檚 quite another when you鈥檙e the chief of police and a motorist has just killed a child. the police chief appears to be invoking:
a (1) : incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the normal or expected result
It鈥檚 almost impossible to imagine a law enforcement officer blithely throwing up his hands in any other situation in which a child has been killed鈥攂ut, of course, when the death is caused by a driver it鈥檚 just a simple 鈥渁ccident,鈥 nothing to see here, please move along. That a motorist killed a child on a bicycle despite the fact that he was wearing a helmet is in no way ironic. Indeed, given our ass-backwards approach to road safety, it鈥檚 very much the 鈥渘ormal or expected result.鈥 If anything, handing out ice cream cones instead of addressing glaring infrastructure problems, then calling the death of a child 鈥渏ust a tragic accident鈥 is way more negligent than it is ironic. It also fits one colloquial definition of insanity, which is this:
Trying the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
Yes, giving away helmets and/or delicious reinforcements for wearing said helmets is a time-honored tactic when it comes to politicians and municipalities who wish to create the illusion they鈥檙e actually doing something to protect children. New York State Senator Simcha Felder has also , though when it comes to actual policy, he's聽attempted聽to and . All across the country, local governments and organizations dispense free helmets by the thousands聽in ostensible displays of concern and munificence, to the extent that no matter where you live, it鈥檚 just as easy to score a gratis foam safety hat as it is a complimentary gluten-free mac and cheese sample while browsing the aisles at Trader Joe鈥檚. Yet here we are, when it comes to the number of kids who still ride bikes.
Unfortunately, when it comes to encouraging kids to ride bikes and keeping them safe, helmet giveaways are the ultimate cop-out. They鈥檙e a symptom, not a cure, and tossing free helmets at our deadly driving epidemic is like throwing your empty pistol at the advancing Terminator android before turning tail and running away. And it鈥檚 doubly insulting when the agencies giving away the helmets are the same ones that聽are directly responsible for street safety鈥攜our local transportation department or police precinct foisting a helmet on you is like your restaurant server presenting you with a barf bag along with your food order.
It鈥檚 no coincidence that the safest countries for cycling have the : this is because . In fact, there鈥檚 plenty of evidence that . Want to keep kids on bikes safe? Give them more safe places to ride and encourage them to do so. Instead of giving them ice cream for cycling in helmets, why not just give them ice cream for cycling? Instead of giving them free helmets, why not just give them free bikes? As it is, giving away free helmets is a great way to make no difference whatsoever, if not actively make things worse. At this rate, by 2050 children will no longer ride bicycles but there will be a polystyrene island the size of Maui floating around in the Pacific.
But don鈥檛 worry, there鈥檚 still a great use for all that foam: free helmet giveaways for motorists! After all, . And if helmet giveaways prove as effective in promoting driving as they have in promoting cycling, we should see the end of cars within a generation.
Illustration by聽Taj Mihelich