Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Road deaths rising

- BY BALFORD HENRY Observer senior reporter balfordh@jamaicaobs­erver.com

WITH road traffic fatalities already close to 150, there is a growing fear that the figures could rise above last year’s more than 400 figure.

Local traffic czar Kenute Hare, who heads the Island Traffic Authority (ITA), says that while the 146 road deaths is five more than the figure at this time last year, there is growing concern about the multiple deaths being recorded.

For example, five people died and several were admitted to hospitals, after a public-passenger minibus suffered a blown out tyre and landed on a median on April 12. Four more people were killed, when a vehicle taking them home, more than three hours after the nightly curfew came into effect, on April 25.

He added that 35 people have been killed in road traffic crashes which occurred after curfew hours have started.

“So, 146 people have died. The figure should be far less than this. But it is a perennial problem; speeding and flouting road etiquette is the main problem. Therefore I am again beseeching our people to stop taking road safety as a joke: It is not,” Hare commented.

“The COVID protocols are there to be adhered to, and we are appealing to our people to work with the programme. They are doing some things that are not right, and they need to shape up and work with the protocols,” Hare added.

He said that another issue that needs to be highlighte­d is the fact that the vast majority of people who die from these crashes are men.

“I would like to appeal to all male road users to be more careful on the road. Think about your family,” he said, pointing to the fact that only 19 were females were included in the 146 deaths.

“We need to be safe for the family. We cannot continue like,” Hare emphasised.

He noted that Trelawny and Westmorela­nd were the dominant parishes in terms of road deaths with a joint total of 46.

Turning to motorcycli­sts, Hare said that while the road safety apparatus, including the National Road Safety Council (NRSC), the Road Safety Unit (RSU) at the Ministry of Transport and Mining and the Island Traffic Authority(ita) have high levels of motorcycle deaths.

Another problem, he noted, was that the area between St Elizabeth and Clarendon, where 14 motorcycli­sts have died since the start of the year, is responsibl­e for 31 of the 49 motorcycli­sts who have died since the start of the year.

Hare says he is also annoyed with the motorcycli­sts who insist on driving on the white line, which runs down the middle of major roads.

“There is a mindset among some motorcycli­sts that the white line is theirs. That’s the philosophy they have and that is very dangerous,” he noted.

Hare said he was also appealing to motor vehicle passengers, especially those travelling in private vehicles, to be careful because 46 people were killed in private motor vehicles, 17 of whom were passengers and 29 were drivers.

“A lot of them were not wearing seatbelts. But, you know seat belts give you only a fighting chance to survive the accidents. However, high levels of kinetic energy will cause your demise even if you are wearing seat belts,” he pointed out.

Hare said that the ITA is appealing to drivers to check their vehicles, as well as the fitness issues which might lead to crashes.

“Check the motor vehicle fitness to see if the mileage on the fitness is close to that on the speedomete­r,” he said, as he appealed to drivers to seek to keep their vehicles in the best of conditions to help reduce the number of road deaths.

TOTAL Jamaica yesterday officially launched the country’s first automated car wash, Total Wash, at Total Portmore Pines, Greater Portmore, St Catherine, immediatel­y attracting residents of the Sunshine City, who wasted no time in utilising what the morning’s first customer described as the convenienc­e of getting his vehicle washed in less than 15 minutes.

“I used it because I wanted to save time. I did the Classic Wash and was through before I finished a telephone call. I have a meeting this morning. If I had gone to a normal car wash, I would have been there for an hour, or an hour-and-a-half,” he pointed out.

The fully automated process begins with the simple purchase of a car-wash ticket inside the service station, indicating one of six options, priced from a low of $600 for a Quick Wash to the $2,000 Lotus Wash, which includes wax and polish services. Customers can opt for a drive-thru experience, should they desire, or they can watch the process from the comfort of covered seated areas.

Total Jamaica’s Managing Director Christophe­r Okonmah said the multinatio­nal energy company was thrilled to introduce the first automated car wash to the Jamaican market.

“Despite what the country, and the world, is experienci­ng with the coronaviru­s pandemic, we are happy to bring this service to Jamaica.

 ??  ?? Police investigat­ors check this minibus as part of their probe into a deadly crash on a section of Highway 2000 on April 12.
Police investigat­ors check this minibus as part of their probe into a deadly crash on a section of Highway 2000 on April 12.
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