Re letter (Peter Wood, ACC)
We should all be disturbed by his response to my letter of last week, particularly by it's condescending tone and assumptions over older persons and boy racers. Nor could he get my name right. He also seems to have trouble understanding my intent.
As a motorcyclist, of course I am unhappy about those levies. That fight continues, but right now other sections of the motoring public face their own challenges over levies, and my letter was to draw attention to that issue.
In previous letters, I have warned of the impending loss of ACC as we know it, in terms of it becoming just another insurance company. Readers will have noticed PW’s title. Yet the new model for ACC is not insurance either. Insurance implies individual tailoring of a policy and choice of cover-type. Being risk-based on entire demographics, but ignoring fault and individuals, simply moves the inequities of the scheme in a new direction.
His so-called facts have all been debunked before, but his claims that older drivers can afford ‘better’ cars, and boy racers can’t, is another sad joke. What does age have to do with ability to afford? The term 'boy racer' is to do with behaviour, not the vehicle. And anyone who operates a vehicle is not necessarily the person who pays the registration.
As for fair? Risk mitigation through safety features is a poor substitute for driver behaviour. Vehicles packed with modern safety features are just as likely to cause injury to those not in that vehicle, such as the biker that the inattentive driver didn’t take care to notice. Pigeon-holing people according to their vehicle is totally inequitable. How does PW propose to know what anyone’s driving is like based on the vehicle to which a number plate is attached? What about bikers who protect themselves with good, expensive gear? Will cyclists soon be paying to use the road? I predict that soon there will be talk of levies being based on the number of seats in your vehicle – the more you can transport, the more you can injure.
Yet congratulations must go to recognising that reducing crashes is the way to go. Better drivers/riders through appropriate training. That is something we should all get behind. No matter what vehicle type we operate. Strangely enough, it was motorcyclists that got ACC onto this strategy.
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