Posted on 07/08/2006 9:33:11 PM PDT by nutmeg
Driver: Gas Pedal Got Stuck
NEW LONDON, Conn. -- More than two dozen people were injured -- two of them seriously -- when a station wagon plowed through a crowd of people in New London during the annual Sailfest Saturday afternoon.
Twenty-seven people were injured and were taken to Lawrence and Memorial Hospital, officials said.
The incident happened around 3:30 p.m. near the Amtrak station.
Officials said the driver -- identified as Robert Laine, 89, of Wallingford -- was heading across the train tracks toward to the Fishers Island ferry when the car struck a pedestrian and lurched forward into the crowd.
Laine was not injured. There was also a female passenger in the car. She was not injured either.
Laine told witnesses the gas pedal stuck. Police said it is too premature to pinpoint a cause. They said the investigation is continuing.
Hospital spokesman Kelly Anthony said most of those hurt susffered cuts and bruises and were treated and released. The two most seriously injured, whose names have not been released, were still being evaluated Saturday night.
The waterfront city was holding its annual Sailfest, which brings thousands of visitors to the downtown area. About 200,000 are expected for the fireworks show Saturday night over the Thames River.
I have had to dodge at least three people in the last two months on the highway. ALL were 30-something females talking on their cell phones.
"If nothing else, drivers should be re-tested on a regular basis once they reach the age of 60."
Does anyone think it's scary that you think people should be tested once they reach 60. Does that include President Bush who is running a country? How about the majority of people in Congress who are responsible for running our country?
Sorry for the missing letters in my posts; for whatever reason my keyboard feels right, but on rereading I notice that I'm missing the rest of the word.
Anyway, the truth is that we can't simply deny a right or privilege based on age or assumed infirmity nor can we expect the world to be made free of risk, I guess we must stumble forward as best we can.
And no, there's nothing "scary" about requiring people to undergo periodic road testing after they reach a certain age. There isn't a single human body function that doesn't decline over time, and you'd probably be shocked at just how poor your typical retiree functions by any measure (vision, motor skills, mental sharpness, etc.) compared to people in the 18-50 age group.
. . . unlike his passengers, who probably went to their deaths screaming in terror.
Heh-heh.
However this is something the AARP crowd will fight to the end over, no matter how many of these incidents occur. Depriving someone of a driver's license is a blow to their independence. My dad lives out in the country for example; I've had to be the chauffeur ever since which he hates. But it's much better than having an accident.
That 18 year old may have better reflexes but he has a whole lot of hormones and almost no real-road experience. How many elderlies do you see wiping out at 100+ on a surburban street?
It is a problem with no easy answer. I work with my mother. She has been a good driver all her life and wants to continue. Driving at night is a no-no. We work out her routes to avoid the bad areas. Make three right turns and a left at the light instead of having to make a left across fast moving traffic where there is no light. Shop at Kmart instead of Walmart since the parking lot is so empty!
I've heard that what these people do is drive using both feet - left on the brake and right on the gas. Then when a split decision must be made they just plunge the wrong foot down. T'would be an easy mistake to make if you drive with both feet.
My brother recently told me he drives with both feet and I told him that's how those accidents occur and I think it freaked him out and he stopped doing it. At least I hope he stopped.
Most of the teenage accidents are where the foot is stuck on stupid and they plow through a car killing all three occupants of the other car.
Maybe older drivers just get lazy? I don't know. You're right though, you don't ever hear about teens plowing into crowds. Beats me. I'm just passing along what I've heard - and it seems to make sense.;-)
My dad was a great driver all his life, never had an accident that I can recall. It meant absolutely nothing in the end; he was playing russian roulette with his own neurology.
Yes. That is what I tell my mother. There are a lot of crazy bad drivers out there that will nail here at high speed and she no longer has the reflexes to avoid these dangerous drivers. It is really scarey what you see these out of control maniacs do.
Drivers over the age of 75 have the highest accident rate per mile of any age group except for the 18 to 25.
BTW, yesterday I was on a main thoroughfare in my town and some older lady stopped traffic in the middle of the road to ask a construction worker who was setting up cones around a manhole for directions. Just a related note
And I had to dodge a 40 something year old man yesterday who was talking on his cell phone. He never even knew he had almost caused a multi-car accident.
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