Wednesday, 17 August 2022
OpinionSportBusinessRuralLifestyleDriven Motoring
Residential Property Listings
PhotosClassifiedsVideoWhanganui Midweek
DannevirkePalmerston NorthWhanganuiLevin
NZ HeraldThe Northern AdvocateThe Northland AgeThe AucklanderWaikato HeraldBay Of Plenty TimesRotorua Daily PostHawke's Bay TodayWhanganui ChronicleThe Stratford PressManawatu GuardianKapiti NewsHorowhenua ChronicleTe Awamutu CourierVivaEat WellOneRoofDriven MotoringThe CountryPhoto SalesNZ Herald InsightsWatchMeGrabOneiHeart RadioRestaurant Hub

Advertisement

Advertise with NZME.
Whanganui Chronicle

Mobility scooter users urged to slow down after Whanganui supermarket incident

27 Jun, 2021 05:00 PM4 minutes to read
A mobility scooter advocate advises Whanganui users to take care and slow down in busy pedestrian areas. Photo / File

A mobility scooter advocate advises Whanganui users to take care and slow down in busy pedestrian areas. Photo / File

Liz Wylie
By
Liz Wylie

Reporter

VIEW PROFILE

A Whanganui woman seriously injured in a collision with a mobility scooter is urging users to slow down in built-up areas.

The 89-year-old is still recovering from head and leg injuries she suffered while doing her grocery shopping at a central city supermarket on April 13.

Bev, who asked for only her first name to be used, said she didn't press charges against the woman who caused her injuries; however, she would like to urge scooter users to take more care.

"My daughter and I were in the foyer area of the supermarket when a woman came in through the sliding door on her scooter.

"We had nowhere to go to get out of her way and expected her to brake and let us by but she kept coming. She knocked me down and ran over my legs and my daughter Debbie also had her shoulder wrenched out of the socket when the scooter hit the trolley she was holding."

Mother and daughter said the woman on the scooter stopped after the accident and was checked by St John staff who said she was uninjured.

"She said she expected us to move out of her way but we had nowhere to go and mum can't move that fast anyway," Debbie said.

Bev, who uses a walking frame to aid her mobility, spent several weeks in hospital after the accident.

Advertisement

Advertise with NZME.

Mobility scooter user Noelene Lane, who established the Whanganui group Pedestrians on Wheels, said an accident like that should not happen.

"It is a matter of being courteous and behaving as a pedestrian among other pedestrians," Lane said.

Related articles

Jump in demand for Whanganui Covid testing after Wellington scare

25 Jun 05:00 AM
New Zealand

Whanganui Covid-19 vaccination rollout leading NZ

25 Jun 05:00 PM

Hundreds of 'Boredom Boxes' for Whanganui Hospital

25 Jun 05:00 PM
New Zealand

New Zealand or Aotearoa: Out with the old and in with the older?

25 Jun 05:00 PM

"The standard advice is that we should not be travelling faster than the average person walking in high-usage pedestrian areas."

Lane said although scooters had a maximum speed of 15km/h, users should not be travelling that fast in built-up areas and shops.

"Business owners are not able to ban mobility scooters from their premises so it is up to users to be courteous.

"While some users have the ability to park their scooters and walk short distances, some of us can't do that so we have to be considerate in the places we visit. You can set your scooter on a low speed and that's what I do when I'm in the supermarket."

Noelene Lane said consideration is an important component of mobility scooter use and all pedestrians should share spaces. Photo / File
Noelene Lane said consideration is an important component of mobility scooter use and all pedestrians should share spaces. Photo / File

Lane said there was no training or licensing requirement for users and she wondered if there should be a proviso for that.

"Most people who use mobility scooters are careful and competent but there are always people who don't take good care when using any motorised vehicle.

Advertisement

Advertise with NZME.

"They are not toys and they can cause damage so be careful."

Read More

  • Company fined $500,000 after elderly man's mobility scooter death - NZ Herald
  • 'Cowardly attack': Northland police still investigating assault on Whangārei mobility scooter r...
  • Mobility scooter rider suffers serious injuries after being hit by car - NZ Herald
  • Elderly man killed while riding mobility scooter in Mount Maunganui - NZ Herald

Whanganui Police Sergeant Colin Wright said the accident that caused Bev's injuries was the first of its kind he had seen.

"Most often the mobility scooter user is the victim and we deal with situations where they have been hit by a car backing out of a driveway, for instance," Wright said.

"In [this] instance, we could have charged the person with operating the scooter in an inconsiderate manner but the victim didn't want to press charges.

"An incident like that would be an infringement and attract a fine rather than a court appearance."

NewsletterClicker

Bev said she was not "pointing the finger" at the scooter user at the supermarket or at people on mobility scooters in general.

"I see a lot of people riding them very considerately and I'm concerned that everyone on our streets and footpaths should be looking out for each other."

Advertisement

Advertise with NZME.

Latest from Whanganui Chronicle

Whanganui Chronicle

Warm, wet and windy weather expected

17 Aug 02:30 AM
Whanganui Chronicle

Whanganui records 60 new Covid-19 cases

17 Aug 01:20 AM
Whanganui Chronicle

Graeme Storm exhibition on now at Quartz Museum of Studio Ceramics

17 Aug 12:45 AM
Whanganui Chronicle

Cubs and keas converge on council

17 Aug 12:35 AM
Premium
Whanganui Chronicle

Theatre group reassured over landslide repairs

16 Aug 05:00 PM

Most Popular

Premium
Whitebaiting season drops from 15 weeks to nine, concerns spots could be crowded
Whanganui Chronicle

Whitebaiting season drops from 15 weeks to nine, concerns spots could be crowded

15 Aug 05:00 PM
Tariana Turia's grandson attempted to rob service station
Whanganui Chronicle

Tariana Turia's grandson attempted to rob service station

11 Aug 05:00 PM
Premium
'It's like a grater on raw wounds': Mum, 35, says mesh implant cripples her
Whanganui Chronicle

'It's like a grater on raw wounds': Mum, 35, says mesh implant cripples her

09 Aug 05:00 PM

Advertisement

Advertise with NZME.
About NZMEHelp & SupportContact UsSubscribe to Whanganui ChronicleHouse Rules
Manage Your Print SubscriptionWhanganui Chronicle E-EditionAdvertise with NZMEBook Your AdPrivacy Policy
Terms of UseCompetition Terms & ConditionsSubscriptions Terms & Conditions
© Copyright 2022 NZME Publishing Limited
TOP