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Teenagers

Parenting teenagers has its ups and downs. Get advice from Mumsnetters here.

Teenage son won't wear a bike helmet

56 replies

JustSaying71 · 10/04/2017 16:06

Hi – Turning here given desperation - or more exasperation. My son, recently turned 18, has been working as a Deliveroo bicycle dispatch rider for about 5 months now. I was OK with him getting the job. He showed initiative in getting it, it’s better paid than the shop work he had been doing and cycling around for 4 or 5 hours keeps him fit. Against that was the risk of cycling amidst the buses, taxis and city centre crowds where we live. So I insisted (as did his Mum) that he wear a bike helmet. This I think he did – at least initially. However, in recent weeks when I have asked him about it having seen numerous Deliveroo riders without helmets, I got the impression that he hasn’t been. Saturday, he called by my flat between jobs without helmet. I asked him about it, he said that he’d left the helmet with his bike down stairs. However, I saw from my window when he was leaving that he was lying as he didn’t have one on. A telephone call to his Mum confirmed that he hasn’t been wearing a helmet for weeks, despite her imploring him to do so.

Two things here. One is that it’s another unfortunate bi-product of Deliveroo (and other ‘gig economy’ companies) not having employees, but hiring self-employed riders. Therefore, they can’t insist on their employees wearing particular kit as a condition of the job. Two, what to do as a parent? One could take the view that he’s no longer a child, he’s a young man, it’s unfortunate but ultimately his life, his decision. The other is to continue to be a controlling parent, threaten to stop paying for his iPhone until he consents to wear one. Or someway, somewhere between these two things. Like I say, the silliness (‘I KNOW I won’t fall off Dad’) and dishonesty are really annoying me. What would others do?

OP posts:
Vegansnake · 18/04/2017 21:56

TBH,I actually wish the government would make it illegal to not wear one

Rudymentary · 18/04/2017 22:01

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Rudymentary · 18/04/2017 22:02

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

BarneyRumbleton · 18/04/2017 22:07

Tricky one. I have just locked my DS BMX away as he's insisted on taking the brakes off and refusing to put them back. But he's 14. Not sure if I could do that when he's 18.
I do understand your concerns though.

confuugled1 · 18/04/2017 22:50

I reckon that they provide them so that if anything happens they can turn around and say that they provide them - but they're perfectly happy that the way things seem to go the riders don't like to wear them - which means they can claim the moral high ground and yet at the same time they don't need to fork out for loads of helmets.

Can't remember - do their adverts show the riders wearing a helmet?

They have a uniform and they make their delivery riders wear it - if they wanted to make them wear a helmet as part of that they could. They should.

Maybe reply to that effect and start a twitter campaign to the effect of being surprised that they don't require helmets to be worn, copying in any cycling or health/safety groups you can think of...

paganmolloy · 24/04/2017 23:28

I wear my helmet and hi-viz gear. I feel vulnerable without it. A helmet MAY lessen the effects of an accident but hi-viz will lessen the chances of an accident happening in the first place as most accidents happen because other road users don't see the bike or rider. Until they make helmets a legal requirement all you can do is advise.

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