An organization that works to prevent unintentional injury to children welcomed the government鈥檚 effort in Tagaytay City to prohibit children from riding motorcycles and encouraged other local government units to draw up similar road safety measures.
鈥淢otorcycles are not a very safe vehicle. We discourage children from riding motorcycles and, if possible, they should be put in a more protective vehicle,鈥 said Marte Perez, executive director of Safe Kids Philippines (SKP), an affiliate of the Safe Kids Worldwide.
Perez, in a phone interview on Thursday, said this in reference to an existing law in Tagaytay City that prohibits the carriage of children below 7 years of age on motorcycles, scooters or bicycles.
According to the Tagaytay city ordinance, riding these type of vehicles 鈥減oses a clear and imminent danger to the life and safety鈥 of a potential young victim.
鈥淭agaytay is a child-friendly city. And due to the number of road accidents that involved motorcycles, especially at night, this (ordinance) is a preventive measure to protect the children,鈥 said Tagaytay鈥檚 city information officer Lani Diesta.
The ordinance covers all city and national roads within Tagaytay and imposes a penalty from P200 to P1,000 and six months of imprisonment.
It has been in effect since November last year as approved by Mayor Abraham Tolentino.
In Manila, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority recently established motorcycle lanes to address the increasing number of motorcycles and related road accidents.
Tagaytay City is the only city with a clear mandate against children riding motorcycles, while the province of Cavite, to which Tagaytay belongs, issued in 2010 guidelines that prohibit children, 10 years old and below, from riding motorcycles, according to the SKP and local officials.
Chief Inspector Joel Jucutan, chief of the police Highway Patrol Group (HPG) in Cavite, said this could be the reason there were 鈥渇ewer鈥 motorcycle-related accidents since the middle of last year in Cavite.
鈥淐hildren are prone to fatal injuries. Even if they wore helmets, their bodies are still very fragile,鈥 Jucutan said.
Still, according to the HPG鈥檚 records in Calabarzon [Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon], the most recent fatal accident along this line was in December in Rizal province when two boys, aged 7-9, met an accident while riding a single bicycle. One of the boys died in the accident.
Perez said that while they support all efforts to protect children from motorcycle injuries, including a similar bill pending in Congress, their group actually recommends no age requirement on children riding the motorcycles.
To SKP, children would be safe provided the child reaches the motorcycle foot pegs, the child is big enough to hold his arms around the driver鈥檚 waist, and if helmet is worn during the ride.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not a matter of age but the child鈥檚 physical capability,鈥 Perez said.
She too warned that the longer the drive is, the more the child would be prone to falling off the vehicle, due to tendencies of falling asleep during the ride, based on SKP鈥檚 recorded incidents.