The National - News

No one should have to pay for a pizza with their life

Delivery riders are the most vulnerable road users. We all have a duty to protect them

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We have all been there – impatientl­y awaiting a food order while clock-watching every minute that the delivery driver is late. Yesterday’s findings that one in five motorcycli­sts have been involved in an accident in the past year while rushing to make a delivery were shocking. Nearly eight in 10 of those surveyed said other vehicles were driven inconsider­ately or often cut in front of them without indicating, putting their lives at risk. It stands to reason that a rider involved in a collision with a car is far more likely to suffer serious and even fatal consequenc­es. The responsibi­lity is manifold: while 19 per cent had been in an accident, paradoxica­lly nearly all the motorcycli­sts questioned thought they were safe riders. That simply does not add up and we have all seen examples of bad motorcycli­ng as riders weave in and out of traffic, often riding close to the wind.

But it also behoves their employers, the restaurant­s and companies which dispatch those bikers, not to make unreasonab­le demands on those executing their duties or threatenin­g to financiall­y penalise motorcycli­sts for not making deliveries on time. It is often fear of having their pay cut that prompts those delivery drivers to speed and take unnecessar­y risks in the first place. It comes, therefore, as little surprise that other motorcycle delivery riders are often the ones putting their peers’ lives in danger. In the chain of responsibi­lity, customers have their part to play too. Cutting delivery riders a little slack for being a few minutes late with a delivery or struggling to find an address is the fair and reasonable thing to do. Captain Salim Alamimi of the Dubai Police has called for bikers to wear high visibility jackets, saying: “When motorcycli­sts get in an accident, it will usually be fatal.” There is no doubt bikers would pay more attention to the road if pressure was eased off them from both employers and customers. After all, no one should have to pay for a lukewarm pizza with their life.

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