Waterloo Region Record

Be safe and clean off snow, ice

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This editorial appeared in the Halifax Chronicle Herald:

No reasonable driver would contemplat­e steering the car out of the driveway while wearing a blindfold or holding one hand over his or her eyes.

However, that’s just what many people do every winter — when they take a vehicle onto the road without properly clearing the snow and ice from its windows, roof and lights.

Despite the logic of driving safety, it’s amazing how often we encounter a moving vehicle that has a windshield and windows obscured by snow or ice — or a roof piled high with white stuff ready to avalanche over the windshield and suddenly blind the driver.

Sure, everyone is in a hurry these days. And clearing snow and scraping ice can affect your schedule. But there’s plenty more than your schedule at stake. The Canada Safety Council provides good counsel on why it’s important not just to clear snow and ice from your windshield and wiper blades, but to remove all hazards to you, passengers and other vehicles. The safety council offers examples of the dangers. One is not clearing the snow from headlights or tail lights. This neglect makes you less visible to other drivers. Equally dangerous is failing to clean off your back window.

Then there is that hardest-to-reach snow — the stuff that accumulate­s on top of your vehicle. It won’t obstruct your view up there, but it can pose a danger to you and others on the road.

Clearing off a car properly after a snowfall can make a big difference to your safety and to the safety of others sharing the road. So take the time to do it properly.

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