九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

John MacDonald: Motorcyclist ACC levies a human rights issue? Really?

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Fri, 13 Dec 2024, 1:24pm
Photo / Getty
Photo / Getty

John MacDonald: Motorcyclist ACC levies a human rights issue? Really?

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Fri, 13 Dec 2024, 1:24pm

Even as a scooter rider, I think these motorcyclists who are kicking up a fuss about their ACC levies going through the roof don鈥檛 have a leg to stand on. 

It鈥檚 quite possible too that the motorbike guys will think that someone who rides a 2-stroke Vespa isn鈥檛 even a real motorcyclist.  

And they鈥檙e free to think that, but even though the ACC levy is going to increase by almost 80% over the next three years, you won鈥檛 find me running off to the Human Rights Commission.  

I鈥檓 not joking there either, because that鈥檚 exactly what Motorcycle Advocacy Group New Zealand has done.   

So here are the numbers: in three years鈥 time the ACC levy for anyone who registers a motorbike will be $532. At the moment, it鈥檚 $297. So, yes, a truckload more money. It鈥檚 an increase of nearly 80%.  

And the motorbike people think they鈥檙e being unfairly targeted when you consider that the ACC levy for car drivers in that same three-year time period is going to go from $42 a year to $64 for drivers of petrol cars. For EV drivers, the levy will go from $42 a year to $122 a year.  

So the motorbike people have lodged a complaint with the Human Rights Commission, saying it isn鈥檛 fair that they鈥檒l be paying more than $800 a year when car drivers will only be paying a maximum of $122 a year.  

They say it would be much fairer if everyone just paid a flat rate of $140, but I disagree.   

In their complaint to the Human Rights Commission, they say that as a minority group of New Zealand citizens, motorcyclists are being unfairly singled-out and the increases will particularly affect people on low incomes who rely on motorbikes as an affordable form of transport.  

Here鈥檚 a quote from their submission: 鈥淎lthough motorcyclists only account for only 0.26 percent of all ACC accident claims, they bear a disproportionately high financial burden.鈥  

So you look at that stat, and it could be very easy to think that they have a good point. If so few ACC claims are being made by motorcyclists, why are they paying way more than other people on the road? But it鈥檚 not about the number of crashes - it鈥檚 about the severity of the injuries.  

For me, it comes down to the fact that 鈥攚hen you鈥檙e on the road on two wheels鈥 you are at so much more risk. And I don鈥檛 have a stat to back this up but I bet you that when a motorcyclist is involved in a crash, chances are they require a lot more medical care than someone in a car.  

That鈥檚 what ACC itself says too 鈥 it says the cost to the country of motorcycle accidents is extremely expensive.  

This is because of the kinds of injuries someone can get if they鈥檙e on a motorbike and get involved in a crash.  

And, unfortunately, a lot of the time those crashes aren鈥檛 caused by the motorcyclists themselves, they鈥檙e caused by muppets in cars and other vehicles.  

If you鈥檝e ever ridden a motorbike or a scooter, you鈥檒l know how key it is to make sure that other drivers have seen you. Example: when you鈥檙e heading down the road on your motorbike and there鈥檚 a car approaching an intersection on your left.  

You can never be sure they鈥檝e seen you unless you catch their eye. I do it every time, try to make sure I catch their eye. Always have. Because, quite often, what I find is that the car driver at the intersection is actually looking beyond you.   

They鈥檙e looking out for larger vehicles and they can completely miss you.  

Not that us motorbike and scooter riders are completely innocent, either. I don鈥檛 know how many times I鈥檝e given into the temptation 鈥攚hen traffic鈥檚 at a standstill鈥 to undertake, and ride through the space to the left of the built-up traffic.  

I don鈥檛 know how many times I鈥檝e said to myself I鈥檓 never doing that again and I have done it again.  

Nevertheless, riding a motorbike or a motor scooter is not compulsory. It is a choice. It is a choice that motorcyclists make knowing full well that riding on two-wheels is way riskier than riding on two wheels.  

And, because we acknowledge that risk, we also need to accept that if we come to grief, chances are we鈥檙e going to need more support from the health system.  

And, because of that, we have no reason to complain about paying higher ACC levies than other road users.  

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you