I'm of the camp that wears a helmet. I'm keeping the one I trashed this winter 
when I slipped and washed out on the slime of condensation and salt drippings 
from cars in the parking garage at work. I was rattled but fine to go on, when 
home and examining the helmet, it clearly snapped at an energy level not 
transferred to my noggin. You need no clearer motivation than evidence you can 
see and hold in you hands.

If response times and attitudes to vehicle versus bike incidents, anecdotal or 
my own, are a barometer, I question the data beyond that collected at fatal 
events based on that  on-scene behavior and reporting. Information is a 
powerful thing, particularly when omitted or ignored. 

Andy Cheatham
Pittsburgh

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