Providing Motorcycle
Support/Escort Services
For
three years in a row I provided motorcycle escort service to the Texas
MS-150 bicycle run as well as others bicycle events such as the Katy
Flatlander.
I have
stopped doing so.
When
riding motorcycle escort for such an event you make available your
self, your motorcycle, your CPR/First Aid training and kits, your CB
radio (and HAM radio, if you have one), your time, and your judgement.
You
ride the route constantly looking for bikers that are in trouble.
Those that have taken a spill, those that have suffered heat stroke,
or worse, those that are having mechanical problems and those that are
riding unsafely (across the center line, for example.)
If a
rider is down you might well have to provide EMS-like services until
help can get to you. The reason for having a CB and/or HAM rig is to
request that help.
Sounds
like a wonderful way to demonstrate a social consciousness, and make a
contribution to a good cause, I'm sure. So why have I stopped doing
it?
Well,
let me describe some of what happened this weekend at the 1996 MS-150
run as an example. During the 8 hours I was on the course there were
lots of bicyclist injuries, no less than four were serious enough to
require a hospital visit. One of these was either a heart attack or
heat prostration. One was a severely lacerated chin (from a fall.) Two
were crash victims with STATIONARY vehicles, both required being taken
away on stretcher-boards by ambulance. And these were only the few
that I personally saw on the 94 mile first-day leg of the course.
There were others.
But,
you say, isn't that exactly why you were out there? Indeed it was
(although not this year - I quit providing escort services last year.)
No, it was what was happening behind the scenes that I have yet to
tell you about that led me to my decision.
Let me
describe the accident which involved the two stretcher-board victims I
mentioned earlier. A bicyclist took a spill and had severely cut her
leg. One of our Motorcycle Support Team (a woman named Sharon) was
first on the scene. She parked her bike at the side of the road
immediately behind the victim, dismounted and began providing first
aid services. Another member of the Motorcycle Support Team was next
to arrive and parked immediately behind Sharon. Shortly thereafter a
young male bicyclist drove around the last motorcycle, turned in, then
ran right into the back of Sharon's motorcycle! He was the first one
that needed a stretcher-board. Within seconds TWO more bicyclists had
run into that down bicycle and were down. One of them was the second
stretcher-board case.
The
weather was perfect (90 degrees and clear), and the road condition was
also perfect. What accounts for this series of accidents? Carelessness
and the fact that there were over 6,000 bicyclists on the road.
Carelessness
is rampant amongst this group of bicyclists. Upwards of 5% of them
casually and constantly road their bicycles to the left of the center
line in the road! The Motorcycle Support Team and motorcycle policemen
that were working the route were completely ineffective in keeping the
riders on the right side of the road - but not for lack of trying.
This
year there were twice as many roving SAG vehicles as there were the
year before (these are used to pick up exhausted riders and their
bicycles along the route.) Unlike last year, none of these vehicles
was radio controlled (ie, dispatched via radio.) Thus, when we found a
person that needed a SAG we were unable to get one - they simply had
to wait until one happened to pass by.
This
year, like last, the ambulances were radio dispatched. But just like
last year, the odds of 'hitting' an ambulance with your radio (they
refused to use HAM rigs and relied only on CB's) was about zero! The
course was 94 miles long, after all.
THAT is
a disaster waiting to happen! I have been at the scene providing first
aid and been unable to reach medical help for about 20 minutes in the
past. That scared me more than any near miss on my motorcycle. It
caused me to rethink about MY liabilities while
providing these services.
That's
when I found out that many insurance companies will not honor a claim
if you are providing support services to an event like the MS-150.
That is, many of them specifically EXCLUDE acting in a 'police
capacity'. Some of these companies have decided that you are acting in
a 'police capacity' if you do any 'traffic control'. Others require
that you be compensated in some way before their definition applies.
Let me
describe the typical activity of a Motorcycle Support Team member
while proving escort services. At least half the time we are on the
road we are on the WRONG SIDE OF THE CENTER LINE! These roads are not
restricted from normal traffic and there is plenty of it. Clearly,
dangerous.
Further,
if we happen to see an intersection that is clearly dangerous for the
bicyclists to negotiate by themselves, assuming it does not have an
actual policemen directing traffic there, we will do so.
(Let me hasten to add that we do NOT park our motorcycles in the
middle of the road and do this - we park them off the road and do
traffic control while on our feet. Thus, there is a question if your
motorcycle insurance has any relevance at all.) Nevertheless, it IS
traffic control.
None of
us is 'compensated' for our work - we are volunteers. Well, we each
receive a free T-shirt and a free meal. Hmmmm. Might an insurance
company conclude that we are being 'compensated' after all?
Let me
go back to the scene of the two motorcycles parked at the side of the
road only to have three bicyclists run into them and sustain severe
injuries. A police report was not taken! Drivers license and insurance
information was not exchanged! About 100 sympathetic bicyclists (all
potential witnesses against the motorcyclists) were at the scene. What
happens if one or more of those injured bicyclists decides to sue? (Or
worse, happens to DIE?)
We (all
of the volunteers) were told that the official sponsors of the MS-150
have provided a 'blanket policy' to cover the volunteers. NOT ONE
PERSON I KNOW OF WAS SHOWN THAT POLICY OR HAD DESCRIBED TO THEM
EXACTLY WHAT THE NATURE OF THAT INSURANCE WAS. (It probably really did
exist and may well have been excellent coverage, but who knows.)
So now
you know my fundamental concerns about providing motorcycle support
services:
It is dangerous - riding on the wrong side of the center line with
traffic coming at you is an invitation to disaster.
A substantial (about 5%) percentage of the bicycle participants are
careless to the point of being dangerous. I personally witnessed
half a dozen of them PASS an automobile that was itself partly
riding across the center line, ON THE LEFT!
It is almost impossible to get medical assistance in a timely
fashion relying only on CB communications on a course covering 94
miles.
I was not shown, nor did I have a detailed description of, the
'blanket policy' (that might not even exist) covering the
volunteers.
Directing traffic is not what I had agreed to be doing when I
volunteered, and insurance companies specifically identify that
activity as sufficient to void their coverage. (Mind you, we are
told NOT to do traffic control by the organizers of the event, and
we could have simply ignored the hazards. But ignoring the hazard is
diametrically opposed to why we were there to begin with.)
I have
the utmost respect for my fellow riders that continue to provide
motorcycle support services to these worthy events. If you elect to do
so, please:
Be sure to determine exactly what your personal insurance status is.
Be sure to determine EXACTLY what any group coverage for you might
be, preferably get a copy of it.
Treat an accident like any other accident you might be involved in
(exchange license and insurance information.)
Do NOT do traffic control. That's a 'police activity', by
definition.
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