Alcohol & Impaired Riding Policy

Tellico Riders Alcohol & Impairment Policy

“The consumption of, or being under the influence of, alcohol or legal or illegal substances that can impair skills and judgment are not permitted while operating a motorcycle during any club ride including Show-Up ridesRide Captains and/or Leaders have the responsibility to ask you not to operate a motorcycle or vehicle in the group if you have been drinking alcoholic beverages or seem otherwise impaired. Ride Captains/Leaders will end the ride if the rider is unwilling to leave the group. The purpose of this policy is to increase the safety of all riders in the group and is consistent with many other motorcycle organizations policies. The MSF article “Alcohol_Awareness.PDF” located below provides information about the effects of substances that impair judgment.”

Effective February 10, 2022

 

The MSF has provided the following information about the effects of impaired riding upon motorcycle operation:

QUICK TIPS: The Importance of Riding Unimpaired by Alcohol or Other Drugs Theory: Alcohol And Motorcycles Are Incompatible  

  • At a BAC* of 0.01 to 0.04%, judgment begins to lessen, the drinker is less critical of their  own actions, reaction time is slowed, and indications of mental relaxation may appear.  
  • At a BAC of 0.05 to 0.07%, judgment is not sound, thinking and reasoning powers are  not clear, and the ability to perform complex skills is lessened.  
  • At a BAC of 0.08% or above, judgment and reasoning powers are severely hampered, and the individual cannot complete common simple tasks without error.  

Proof: Statistics From Recent Studies (by NHTSA, Florida, Kentucky, and Australia)  

  • Having any alcohol in one’s body increases the chance of crashing by five times.  Having a BAC greater than 0.05% increases the risk of crashing about forty-fold.  46 percent of all motorcyclists killed in crashes were using alcohol.  
  • One fourth of all fatal alcohol-related motorcycle crashes involve motorcyclists running  off the road, overturning, or falling from the motorcycle rather than striking another object. 

Explanation: Alcohol Affects Your Ability To “SEE”  

SEEsm is the acronym for MSF’s strategy to help motorcycle riders maintain a safety margin as  well as remain ready and able to respond properly to traffic situations. SEE stands for:  

  • Search for hazards that might lead to trouble.  
  • Evaluate how the hazards might interact to create risk; prioritize multiple hazards to deal  with one at a time.  
  • Execute an action to maintain a margin of safety.  

Alcohol affects these three human elements of safe motorcycle operation by impairing your  vision (Search), judgment/decision-making ability (Evaluate), and coordination/reaction time  (Execute).  

Recommendation: Plan Ahead  

  • Riders should never mix alcohol with riding. Even low, legal limits of BAC increase your  risk while riding a motorcycle.  
  • Riders who are away from home and decide to drink should either (1) wait until their  BAC has returned to zero before riding, even if it means staying overnight, or (2) leave  the motorcycle in a secure location and find alternate transportation home.  

*BAC = Blood Alcohol Concentration www.msf-usa.org 9/06