Motorcycle Industry Council and Specialty Vehicle Institute of America Generate Thousands of Letters Against the Ban on Youth ATVs and Motorcycles IRVINE, Calif. – Thousands of letters to Washington legislators and regulators have been generated by the powersports industry since the ban on youth motorcycles and ATVs began one week ago. The Motorcycle Industry Council and the Specialty Vehicle Institute of America staged a letter-writing campaign at Dealer Expo 2009 in Indianapolis over the weekend, calling for exclusions from the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. All Expo attendees were encouraged to sign letters and send e-mails on behalf of the industry and its customers. The letters will be delivered to the Consumer Product Safety Commission today and copies will be sent to congressional leaders, urging them to support the MIC and SVIA requests for exclusion so that youth models can continue to be sold. The act is cutting off access to appropriate-sized models for children 12 and under, and ruining sales at many dealerships nationwide. “This was just part of an all-out effort to exclude ATVs and motorcycles from this overly broad regulation,” said Paul Vitrano, general counsel for the MIC and SVIA. “For weeks, we’ve been urging the CPSC to grant our petitions and for members of Congress to support our requests. We’ve worked on a lot of media coverage and we’ll be delivering a lot of mail, from constituents nationwide, about this legislation being bad for both families and business as it pertains to the powersports industry.” By Monday at noon, 4,390 Expo attendees had signed letters. And more letters were sent directly to representatives, via the Web site of Americans for Responsible Recreational Access (ARRA) at www.arra-access.com
Apparently The MIC Is Better At Running A Letter-writing Campaign Than It Is At Organizing A Road Racing Series
Apparently The MIC Is Better At Running A Letter-writing Campaign Than It Is At Organizing A Road Racing Series
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