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The-Last-Word

Safety motivation wanted

I learned yesterday that my mother’s cancer has returned, with a vengeance.  She had fought hard, and won the battle a few years ago,  but this go-around there is no hope to overcome the disease.  I felt devastated by the news.

This morning, I gained some perspective.  When researching my column topic I stumbled on a news story about Hannah, a five year girl who has lost her battle with cancer and whose mother is taking her home from BC Children’s Hospital to die. I still feel devastated, but it is now more difficult to wallow in self-pity.

Virtually all of us have been touched by the disease, with so many like Hannah and her mother clobbered over the head with a sledge hammer by it.  This has led to enormous financial resources being put into medical science while we anxiously wait for a cure, each of us singularly helpless to do anything more.

For some reason, though, when there is a cause of injury and death that each of us singularly can do so much to help eradicate, without putting forth one dollar of financial commitment, we seem to lack the motivation.

I am referring to road safety.  Thank you to the  Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police and the full, national participation of Canadian police services, for their annual initiative to help motivate us.

Canada Road Safety Week, timed in conjunction with the crash prevalence of the Victoria Day holiday weekend and the start of the summer holiday season, is not a pre-existing road safety bandwagon that the police have jumped onto.  It is a police initiative.  It is designed not only to prevent injuries and save lives, but also to remind people that these goals are an essential part of their enforcement function.

We need that reminder.

One of my pet peeves is our pre-occupation with traffic tickets.  Putting our driving focus on avoiding tickets does little to avoid inattentive driving, which has revealed itself as one of the most prolific causes of car crashes.

The only tool we give our police enforcement agencies to make our roads safer, though, is a set of driving rules and the ability to hand out tickets when those driving rules are broken.  It is helpful, and important, for the police to remind us and for the driving public to “get it” that it’s all about road safety.

The timing of Canada Road Safety Week, May 12 through 18, 2015, not only marks the start of a busy summer holiday driving season.  It happens also to fall exactly six months before the National Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims, on November 18, 2015.

Each and every one of us singularly have the power to pay our full attention to driving safely, and to encourage those around us to do the same.   May each of us direct the powerlessness we might feel about things we cannot control, like cancer, into things we most certainly can.  Together we can reduce the number of victims we remember six months from now.

This article is written by or on behalf of an outsourced columnist and does not necessarily reflect the views of Castanet.



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About the Author

Lawyer Paul Hergott began writing as a columnist in January 2007. 

Achieving Justice, based on Paul’s personal injury practice at the time, focused on injury claims and road safety.  It was published weekly for 13½ years until July 2020, when his busy legal practice no longer left time for writing.

Paul was able to pick up writing again in January 2024. After transitioning his practice to estate administration and management.

Paul’s intention is to write primarily about end of life and estate related matters, but he is very easily distracted by other topics.

You are encouraged to contact Paul directly at [email protected] with legal questions and issues you would like him to write about.



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The views expressed are strictly those of the author and not necessarily those of Castanet. Castanet does not warrant the contents.

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