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    Right of Way


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    Most news outlets carried the story of the car plowing through a Critical Mass bike event in Porto Alegre, Brasil. 15 were injured, eight severely. There are some very graphic videos posted on youtube if you search for Massa Critica Porto Alegre.

    The police tracked the man suspected of being the driver, Ricardo José Neis, 47, to a private psychiatric clinic that he checked himself into on Tuesday. On Wednesday he was placed under detention there on suspicion of deliberately driving into the riders.

    The city’s police chief, Rodrigo Pohlmann Garcia, said he expected Mr. Neis to be moved to a prison in the next few days.

    “We found him in a hospital last night, and doctors told me he was emotionally unstable and suicidal, so we are keeping him in a psychiatric institution for the time being,” Mr. Garcia said.


    Neis now claims that he acted in self-defense. Critical Mass bicycle activist rides take their name from the organic flow of auto vs bike traffic in Beijing, but their rides disrupt traffic and often lead to violent confrontations with drivers or police in the West. Neis raised the bar, however.

    We just had a cyclist accident in town:

    Investigation pending in accident that critically injured bicyclist

    City police are stressing that the investigation into an accident that critically injured a Johns Hopkins University student who was riding a bicycle near campus is still pending. Nathan Krasnopoler, 20, was hospitalized after being struck Saturday by a vehicle being driven by an 83-year-old woman. ...

    The student was riding his bike in a marked bike lane on West University Parkway at the intersection with West 39th Street when he was hit by a vehicle trying to turn right, police have said. When officers arrived, Krasnopoler was trapped under the vehicle, according to a police report.


    They're stressing that because the local cycling community is incensed at early reports that the cyclist was found at fault, which happens with depressing regularity. Bike Baltimore responds by citing the law:

    § 21-1209.(d) Yielding right-of-way – Unless otherwise specified in this title, the driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to a person who is lawfully riding a bicycle, an EPAMD, or a motor scooter in a designated bike lane or shoulder if the driver of the vehicle is about to enter or cross the designated bike lane or shoulder.

    A few weeks ago, I sat in on a meeting of the Mayor's Bicycle Advisory Committee. I've been following the Bike Baltimore blog for over a year, almost since it started. Bike Baltimore recently started a Facebook group, which I joined, which got me invited to the meeting. I dithered a bit but the office building is only a short walk from the office. Even though the snow had been cleared from the roads, I was leery of black ice, so I had been walking to the light rail stations. I walked past the red light block on Baltimore Street, where some fellow told me I was passing up the finest show in town. Everyone else at the meeting came by bike, and were allowed to bring them up to the office.

    They all seemed to know each other, except for the the invited guest, Police Major Tony Brown, who seemed ill-at-ease at first, but asked very direct questions about what we cyclists felt were the biggest problems facing us. Some of the others offered a few complaints about being harrassed by aggressive drivers at certain locations. I was thinking that we were not addressing the real issue, but being new, I decided to be more of a listener. Someone blamed cyclists that disregard the law, and others blamed bicycle messengers, the buccaneers of pedaling, for pissing off drivers.

    I see reality a bit differently. We build roads for traffic. Often the roads have sidewalks. According to the letter of the law, trucks, cars and bikes are supposed to use the roads, and pedestrians and perhaps children on trikes are supposed to use the sidewalks. The law varies as to how bikes may use the road. The old standard was that bikes stay to the right, while newer laws entitle a bike to full use of a lane.

    That last part is the fundamental disagreement. Auto drivers don't even want to slow down for other cars, much less to follow bikes. They don't even want to change lanes to pass bikes, and cyclists don't want to be forced into the curb by cars passing in the same lane. But trying to claim the entire lane really ticks off drivers.

    One solution is to build separate bike lanes, but even if money can be found, taxis and even city officials park in those lanes. Another is to require that autos and trucks stay at least three feet away from bikes, but enforcement seems unlikely. In some respects I think this will play out like the situation with LGBT rights. I don't think American drivers will tolerate bikes until more and more of them have cyclists in their family, or in their workplace, or in some way identify personally with cyclists.

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    Well as to bicycle paths. I ride here: (God no it is not always this sunny, but it is most often incredibly beautiful)

    It is completely separate from the road as you can see, but regardless of that one morning on my way to work I was hit. Shwack! down I went. I had a witness of course, my commuting partner, but there were countless times I did that ride alone.Still do actually, I was lucky I think, but drivers need to learn to be more tolerant of us, because just as they are, we are only trying to get to work.

    Oh and here if a car buzzes a cyclist now, if they harass us in any way and the cops catch them it is a wreckless endangerment ticket. They get better when it costs them a substantial amount of money.

    Nice blog I could rant about this for hours.


    Man, I'm jealous. I live in a supposedly bike-friendly town, and it's the best place I've ever lived in with respect to bikes, but in practice it still leaves a lot to be desired. For example, we have lots of unconnected bike lanes that suddenly end in the middle of a street. (sigh)


    It is beautiful isn't it. The entire city has bike lanes on every single road, marked, not all are as great as that one, but we have several like that,

    Here is one along the Duwamish which is georgeous and no cars can go there either,

    Or there is this, which is which is what they look like all through the city.

    we have great resources here, we are very lucky, it is one of the reasons people want to move to Seattle and never leave. Well, that is me anyway.

    And here is our big bicycle map, which is great.

    http://www.cityofseattle.net/transportation/docs/bike100221_mainmap.pdf


    Oh and I forgot this, we cross i-90 on this which was built specially for cyclists and runners, it is also quite fantastic, and was planned in the 1970's, I used to use it daily when I worked on Mercer Island. We really are quite lucky and bicycle friendly here. There is no way a car can come close to a cyclist here, no way at all.


    I was literally ran over and driver sped off. One witness followed him to get the license plate number and a good look at his face. So he turned around and went back. Unfortunately for me, he got back before paramedics and police arrived so he wasn't ticketed for hit-and-run. Just failure to yield right of way...$90. A few years later, I saw someone use the bike path/parking shoulder as a passing lane on a main thoroughfare in a residential area...the speed limit on the road was posted for 45 mph.

    In Europe, there isn't a worry. Driver's here make every effort to give a bicyclist more than enough room even if it means following the them for miles. They wait for the right time when it's safe. Also, bicyclists have a responsibility to pull over at rest stops along the way to let traffic pass too.

    It will take the price of gas climbing so high, people resort to bicycles before any serious decisions to enforce fair use of the road are considered by police and the courts. So $5 a gallon is a bicyclist's best friend.


    If biker safety is one's concern, then one has to really reflect on Critical Mass events which tend to do nothing but create more hostility between the car people and the bike people.  When I lived in Portland, I never came across anyone who shifted their way of thinking because of these protests.  I think one would be hard pressed to find someone anywhere who would say "I really hated sharing the road with cyclists until I got caught behind a Critical Mass ride trying to get home from work last Friday night. Causing me to get home a half hour later really made me see the light."  As we watch protests unfold in Wisconsin and elsewhere, the value of protests based on confrontation has to be considered on a case by case basis, and the protesters have to ask themselves are they really making the world a better place with their confrontational tactics.


    I suppose one could ask the same thing about the many colorful LGBT marches that made the evening news over the past few decades. How many people saw guys in leather chaps and suddenly decided to support gay rights? Or when the farmers or the truckers drove into DC and shut down traffic. Part of the rationale behind protest is that people are tired of being silent and being intimidated.


    Yes one could say the same thing about gay pride parades.  It would be hard to say that guys in leather chaps helps convince opponents to gay adoption more likely to see the other side's point of view.  Which is not to say that one shouldn't have Critical Mass rallies or gay pride parades.  Only that people reflect on the consequences and be realistic as one can about what will the outcomes be.

    As someone who spent a lot of time putting together rallies to stop clearcutting in the old growth forests, while I would never stop someone attending the rally from coming as they are, I also knew the press would inevitably take the photo of those who most fit the sterotypical treehugging hippies to place in the article.  Chances are most people were trying to convince to join in with us to stop the multinationals on this front would just read the headline and look at the photo and miss the messaging, such as while logging jobs were decreasing, timber production was increasing, or that most of the logs were being exported to other countries to have value add production applied to them.  My dream was always to get everyone to show up in formal business wear because it would have undermined the preconceived notions of so many who were trying to reach.


    I am definitely partial to staring at men in leather chaps, as long as they have those great little behinds..

    Oh that is too much information, isn' it!!!! Hahahahaha

    O.T. Donal, I never got to ask before I left, is your wife doing better? I hope she is feeling better, I have been thinking about you both. I just wanted you to know I am concerned and pleast let A. know I hope she feels better soon and I also hope there is nothing seriously wrong with her.


    Despite coming home to face the results of my less intense apartment cleaning regimen, she's doing much better, thanks.


    I imagine with being so active in biking issues, you are aware of the NYC Greenways system, but just in case you aren't:

    http://www.nycgovparks.org/sub_things_to_do/facilities/af_bike_paths.html

    100 miles down, 250 to go. I see news of  it expanding in the Bronx often.

    The Greenway that runs around the edge of Manhattan grows ever more popular with tourists all the time There are easy bike rentals at points along the way and you totally avoid the anxiety provoking Manhattan traffic and get spectacular views of the skyline and things like the Statue of Liberty in the harbor and cand do things llike a trip over the Brooklyn Bridge to Brooklyn Greemways if you wish. It's also a good alternative to getting around to see different neighborhoods as opposed to having to go underground on the subway and not see anything while in transit or expensive cab fares. You have a choice of stopping along the way and locking your bike to walk a few blocks east or west to a neighborhood  and then returning to your bike to travel on, or if you are very brave, take it into and out of the streets.

    My thrity-something brother used a bike on his last visit and now tells everyone that they need to do the same, that you can't "get" New York in a visit without doing it, that he didn't "get" NYC until he did that, that before it was vast and what New Yorkers wrote and said about the city was a puzzle to him, and that now to him NYC is geographically small, quite graspable and he "gets" it. He did not chose the "lock the bike along the way and walk" option, he is a night owl and went riding allover Manhattan at night when the traffic is quite light in most places. With the bike he would go see the Empire State Building (open to midnight) and then run down to the East Village clubs in a few minutes, zip over to the Meatpicking District to see what was going on there, bring it home to the Bronx  at 4 am on the subway.


    Cover Story: Bikelash

    Not Quite Copenhagen

    The battle over bike lanes isn’t about bikes vs. cars, or borough vs. borough—it’s about competing ideas of what, and who, a city is for. Is New York too New York for bike lanes?

    By Matthew Shaer


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