-
Three charged with taking bribes to provide false French tests for residency cards
The charges relate to the test de connaissance du français. It is thought that more than 250 applicants could be involved in a region of west France
-
DHL strike hits Christmas deliveries in France
‘All packages will be delivered even if they are a little late’, says DHL spokesperson
-
French firm aims to cut food waste through 'upcycling'
Waste is taken from restaurants and turned into new products
Youngsters must wear cycle helmets or adults face €90 fine
But cycle users' group says children would be better protected if they learned to ride properly at school
Bicycle helmets are mandatory from today for under-12s and any adult accompanying a helmetless child – or carrying them on the back of a bicycle – may face a fine of €90.
Until now, cycle helmets had only been recommended but the Sécurité Routière made them obligatory as a ‘soft measure’ that would also encourage adults to start wearing them.
Helmets can cut the risk of a serious head injury by 70% and Emmanuel Barbe, ministerial delegate for Sécurité Routière, said they hoped children would start asking their parents why they were not wearing a helmet.
Last year cycle accidents rose 7% and, with 5.5million youngsters using bikes regularly, there are fears for their safety. From 2011 to 2015 there were 1,178 under-12s involved in reported bicycle accidents – with 26 killed and 442 hospitalised.
A blow to the head can be very serious at any age but a helmet drastically cuts the risk of being knocked out – falling from 98% at speeds of 10kph while helmetless to 0.1% for a child in a helmet – and protects against face injuries, reducing the risk by 28%.
However, the Fédération des Usagers de la Bicyclette said a better move would be for children at primary school to learn to ride in traffic properly – because a helmet does not prevent accidents.
Helmets with the CE quality mark can be bought from about €10 but those tested for road use will also have the NF EN 1078 mark. Decent ones cost between €35 and €50 and families that ski may find helmets with both NF EN 1078 and the ski-use NF EN 1077 mark.
Stay informed:
Sign up to our free weekly e-newsletter
Subscribe to access all our online articles and receive our printed monthly newspaper The Connexion at your home. News analysis, features and practical help for English-speakers in France