Ride Safe, Stay Alive
COMMANDER’S CORNER: WITH RESPECT AND THANKS - PAGE 3 Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado Thursday, June 9, 2011 Vol. 55 No. 27 Ride safe, stay alive by monica mendoza According to the Air Force Safety Center, 21st Space Wing Public Affairs staff writer Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., motorcycle fatalities have risen 150 percent from January to March 2011, compared to the same period last year. The safety reports indicated that all PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. -- incidents had two common causal factors: the More than 80 Airmen and civilians from the absence of automobile involvement and the 21st Space Wing donned their leather jack- rider losing control of his motorcycle. ets, pants, boots and safety gear and hit the “These losses are unacceptable for our highway June 2 for a 90-mile motorcycle ride Air Force,” said Gen. Philip Breedlove, Vice that hit all the Air Force installations in the Chief of Staff, in a May 2011 memorandum Colorado Springs area. to Airmen. The ride was part of Motorcycle Safety Day, Motorcycle safety is always a challenge, said hosted by the 21st Space Wing Safety Office. Darron Haughn, 21st Space Wing Safety Office Col. Nina Armagno, 21st Operations Group flight safety manager. Riding motorcycles is commander, kick started the event with a exhilarating, but also has a higher level of safety message and then joined the caravan, inherent risk. Even if a motorcycle rider fol- which left from Peterson AFB and took riders lows all the rules, motorists often have trouble to Schriever AFB, the U.S. Air Force Academy seeing motorcycles and reacting in time.
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