Skip to main content

Mask or no mask, kids are back in school this fall

Be aware when driving


McHenry auto repair

School boards around McHenry County are making decisions about whether to require students to wear masks as the school year begins. But, what we haven’t heard yet, are decisions to keep the kids at home for another school year.

Certainly, this is good news to parents and children. It also means that the school busses will hit McHenry County roads again. It also means that children will appear on or near the roads.

Some children are too young to appreciate the risks involved with automobiles. We can’t count on them to take appropriate actions to avoid auto-vs-pedestrian accidents that inevitably work out worse for the latter. In fact, we can count on children to often behave erratically around roadways.

Most children have never seen what happens when a one-and-a-half-ton automobile strikes a flesh-and-blood pedestrian. They have no way of fully comprehending the harm or the pain.

When drivers can’t count on children to take appropriate precautions, it’s up to drivers to take extra precautions to safeguard children near and on the roads.

Children have their focus on other things. They like to play catch and they don’t always make the best throws or do a good job of catching what they’re throwing. An errant throw can go out in the street and, without checking, without considering the possible repercussions, they may run into the street after it.

Children also like to play tag. Sometimes, it’s a rough spontaneous game of tag. They’re laughing. They’re having fun. But they’re not paying attention to traffic.

Often, children have to cross the street to reach the side where the school bus stops to pick them up. If they’re late, they may dash across the street with a focus on getting to the bus before it leaves without them.

In these instances, the bus will usually have the ‘STOP’ sign out. It’s a major offense to drive past a school bus when the lights are flashing and the ‘STOP’ sign is out. But, if a driver isn’t paying attention, they may miss the sign and the legal consequences can be severe even if they, hopefully, don’t hit a child with their car.

The point is that, as schools open, it’s a good idea to remind ourselves to watch for children on or near the roads whether in McHenry County or elsewhere.


McHenry auto maintenance


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Is your antifreeze safe from freezing this Richmond winter

You still have time to have it checked Well, there’s no denying it – winter tends to get chilly here in Richmond. We have to deal with snow and ice on the roads, scraping the same off our windows and windshield, and staying warm while we drive. Of course, you had your antifreeze checked before winter rolled into town. What?! You didn’t have your antifreeze checked before winter clamped down on Richmond? So, how’s your antifreeze doing?  If you haven’t had it checked, there’s really no way of knowing, is there? This car has overheated in the middle of a Richmond  winter. But, on the other end of the spectrum, the antifreeze can also freeze if it's not up to its job. Hopefully, you haven’t had a serious problem with your antifreeze already. If you did, you’d probably know. When antifreeze fails, it’s a potentially catastrophic condition for your vehicle’s engine. You could have hoses that have burst because of freezing antifreeze. Worse than that, your engine block may have crac...

Blocks of ice falling from cars in McHenry could cause accidents or damage

We’ve all seen those blocks of snow falling from behind the rear tires of a car when the snow rolls into McHenry . Fortunately, they’re just packed snow that will disintegrate under your vehicle’s tires as you simply drive right through them, right? Don’t count on it. Those blocks of snow are often packed so tight, condensed by the thaw-and-freeze cycle, that they’re anything but oversized snowballs . They’re often more like boulders.  Hit one of those blocks and the collision between the block and one of your tires could send you careening off the road or into oncoming traffic. In some cases, they’re so solid you could pound them with a sledgehammer with little effect. They truly can represent a serious road hazard. The problem is that it’s difficult to tell how solidly they’re packed when you see them on the road, left their unwittingly by another driver. Either way, your best bet is to try to avoid them. But you want to be careful dodging blocks of ice in the road, too. You need...

Timely maintenance is even more important with your Johnsburg Electric Vehicle

Even if you have an electric vehicle in your Johnsburg driveway, maintenance is still critical. You pull out of your Johnsburg driveway and you watch the gas stations go by as you smile from behind the wheel of your EV – Electric Vehicle. Of course, at some point, you will have to stop and charge the battery but you still take some comfort that you’re not standing next to your car as the fuel pumps into your tank. One of the true comforts you take with your EV is that the mechanics of your vehicle are simplified. You don’t have to worry about the engine breaking down anymore, and we all know how costly that can be. But there’s more to your EV vehicle than you may have considered when you first parked it in your Johnsburg driveway.  Many of the parts found on gasoline-driven vehicles are also present on your EV. These require the same maintenance as your gasoline-powered vehicle. For instance, you EV still has: Tires and Wheels Brakes Steering and Suspension Windshield Wipers and So...