Category Archives: Advocacy

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Helmet Laws a bad thing?

As anyone that has ridden with the OGRE’s will already know, we do advocate the use of helmets, particular on the roads in a ‘sport’ or ‘recreational’ usage, but we fully agree that mandatory helmet laws for all bike usage, including path, and transportation uses are counter productive to expanding bicycle growth and usage, as well as having no discernible statistical value in reducing head trauma occurrences. Yes a helmet can reduce the amount of damage in an accident, but the use of a helmet also increases the risks cyclists (and drivers) take while wearing them.

Either way, read the article. Good food for thought.

Truth or Bullshit: Cyclists don’t obey the rules of the road

We all hear it. It is the first thing out of every anti-cyclist screed. So how does it fair in honest evaluation?

Drivers love to complain that cyclists are constantly breaking the law by rolling through stop signs and running red lights. Does it happen? Sure. Cyclists do it, and I sometimes do it too. When it comes down to it though, motorists, bicyclists, and pedestrians are all people going places, and they all break laws in their own ways. After all, that speed limit sign? how often do you treat it as a minimum? If the regional studies are accurate, the number of cars at or under the posted speed limit is < 25%. In addition, studies have shown no meaningful difference in the percentages of law breaking between groups. Pedestrians jaywalk. Cyclists roll through stop signs and run red lights. Motorists speed, tailgate, fail to signal, fail to stop before turning right, drive while drunk, drive while distracted, and others. In other words, yes, cyclists don’t obey the laws, but then again, neither does anyone else.

One group breaking laws does not justify another doing the same. You do not hear anyone saying that car drivers do not deserve to be on the roads because they break the laws, that is reserved for drivers who have made egregious errors in judgement that have typically cost lives before they are removed from the roads. It is not that cyclists break the laws any more often, only that because they are different, drivers cling to that as a reason to vilify them. Breaking the rules is something many people do regardless of activity.

On a scale of truth to bullshit, let’s call this truth as a front for bullshit.

As the old saying goes, People in glass houses shall not throw stones.

Real Sports – Bike Wars

Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel – Bike Wars

Last week on HBO, Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel ran what can best be described as an informational piece on Bike Wars. The presentation is that the bikers are fighting for space against “everyone else”. There are some interesting specifics. 60% increase in bike commuting in 20 years. Increase in deaths per day to 2 per day.
It presents some interesting tidbits, but let is talk reality check time. This is a clash that has been a long time in coming, and it is one that is going to get one hell of a lot worse before it gets better. Car culture is simply too deeply ingrained into the American lifestyle and psyche.

In general, I think Real Sports does a good job of reporting, but this one, they muffed. Short version, the presentation misses some really obvious questions, and has the same fatal flaw that most discussion of cycling in the US does. There are three distinct types of cyclists that are currently on the roads and fighting this battle. Two of them are closely related, the third is another beast altogether. Recreational and transportation cyclists are the first two, while the sport cyclists are the other. By lumping them all together, it is trivial to paint all cyclists into a very bad light.

So looking at the Bike Wars piece, they spent a good bit of time painting a picture about cyclists behaving above the law and as hooligans. They are right, it happens. But they also focused on a couple of other bits. One, video footage of a cyclist hitting a pedestrian (who stepped into a traffic lane from behind a van, not in a cross walk). That accident occurs car or bike, so it is not a good indicator. Interestingly, those situations really aren’t addressed by many bike infrastructure designs used in the US today either. The other was a pair of fatalities in NYC’s Central Park, citing excessive speed. Absolutely a problem. The question to ask however is why cyclists are in central park riding at these speeds? They are being made unwelcome on the roads. They find themselves in a no mans land unwelcomed in either location and it becomes trivial to single out these instances.

So, before we get too far into the discussion of the specific instances, we need to understand the difference in usage, and why the question of differences in usage need to be addressed. This is no different than the discussion of cars and road designs, so we are not talking about a special case here.

In the story, there are a couple of major concepts to address that are to put it simply, ignored, or skirted around.

Cycling, in the US, is a term that is most often used to describe the sport side of the equation. For the most part, the casual recreation and transportation riders don’t enter into the discussion. Some of this is a numbers thing, some of it is a visibility thing. It all stems from road usage and location. Outside dense population centers, bicycles and their riders tend to be of the sport variety. They are travelling at speeds over 15 mph, sometimes in excess of 40 mph. They are ridden on roads that lack infrastructure, and are the prime examples of rage inducing ‘slow downs’. When you look at many of the road rage instances in the last year of car/bike conflicts, these are the primary protagonists, these suburban sport cyclists. They are also the ones frequently involved in car/bike interactions. In urban settings, the typical cyclist is no longer the sport cyclist. Speeds are lower and the nature of the riding is changed. Infrastructure is often mixed, which presents a huge challenge in itself.

I recently spent a week in Salt Lake City, UT. Great urban area, with a lot of good cycling infrastructure, and most of it, wasted. Why? The sport cyclists used the infrastructure to get out of town, while the in town transportation riders? Fully 3/4 of them rode on the sidewalks, for fear of the cars. I had to ask around, because it was driving me crazy seeing all these bike lanes with cyclists riding on the sidewalks right next to them.

There is a lot of effort being put forth to paint the cyclists as the problem, and to a degree, they are. However, the problem remains that to the average American, a road is for cars, and they do not respect any other users. Road rage is normal towards other cars, much less motorcycles, bikes, runners and walkers, yet we fail to place the ownership of this mindset where it belongs.

Cars are the problem that needs solving. Distracted, angry, fast, selfish driving is the norm. You don’t need to even consider bikes in this equation.

And then there is the next bit of conversation. They go to Copenhagen and Amsterdam where bikes have supplanted cars. They show all of the infrastructure, and it is great. It comes however, at the expense of cars. In order to support that infrastructure, they have reduced the car volume. There is the other bit. The parking situation, which they also focus on. Yes, there are a lot of bikes, many parked illegally.

Consider this however. In the US, most cars are single occupant. Imagine that many cars parked in a city. Now you understand why the problem must be solved, sooner than later. You cannot build enough infrastructure to support that many cars. That is the reality that Amsterdam and Copenhagen have both come to grips with. Unfortunately, our car first culture is so deeply rooted, that we need a piece of news to tell us that bikes are the problem and the cure all without once owning the reality that the car problem has to be solved.

So, while I think the piece represents a starting point for a discussion, Real Sports has presented a deeply flawed case that does more harm to the discussion than help.

“It’s Dangerous”

I love this statement. Last night during a new rider/low speed group ride, the group went slow up a pretty harsh little climb and yes, traffic stacked up a little behind the group. Riding in a sweep/control role, I was sitting on the back, slightly into the road to create space for the less experienced riders in front of me (and to limit stupid passing). Limit is the right word too, because you can’t stop stupid.

This is a good place to pass you think.

This is a good place to pass you think.

The evidence? white Lexus SUV, female driver, estimated age mid 40’s. Decided that it would be a good idea to pass the group. Uphill. Into a blind corner. Within a quarter mile of a stop sign. With traffic at the stop sign that held her long enough that the entire group arrived at the stop sign about the same time she did.

During her pass, an oncoming car made her dive back into her own lane, right into the middle of the group. Fortunately we were communicating in the group and no one was placed in harms way, but it could have been a deadly situation. At the stop light, she rolled down her window and yelled at us about how dangerous that was. While I would love to discuss the matter with her, she was clearly not in the frame of mind to handle it, so I waved, smiled and said have a nice day.

She is right, it was dangerous, but it was not the bicycles that made it dangerous. 15 bikes riding single file, as far right as possible. On a rural suburban ‘back road’, with a 40mph speed limit. A road that is designated by the city it sits in as a bike route. What made this dangerous? the impatience of a driver. That right there is when I realized the crux of the truth.

We have become so blinded to the dangers our cars represent and so invested in blaming others for our failures that we use the phrase “It’s Dangerous” towards bikes legally using the road legally to imply that the bikes are at fault when what we are really saying is that our actions as drivers make it dangerous.

She did not need to make that pass on any level, and she lives in the area, she knew this. She made the choice to make it dangerous when there was absolutely no need to do so. When the situation went from risky to imminent danger, she rationalized that the bikes were at fault because they were traveling slower than the speed limit and ‘made her pass them dangerously’.

This is what we have to change. “Share the Road” doesn’t cut it. We have to get it into the open and discuss it.

Calling Bullshit

Obviously I spend a lot of time cycling, but also more than a little reading and listening to cyclist rants. If there is one thing cyclists do well, it is bitch about how cars, cities, and non-cyclists treat cyclists. Sometimes I contribute, sometimes I listen and nod. Today, I’m calling bullshit on a couple of common refrains that I hear in the cycling world.

Running Stop Signs

Talk to cyclists and you will hear all manner of reasons why they don’t stop at stop signs and red lights. No, not all cyclists, but enough of them that there is a legitimate gripe against them as a whole. Yeah, seriously it is time to call bullshit and get our collective attitude straight. Yes, a bicycle can slow to a near stop, look both ways and move through a clear space. However, you cannot legislate a ‘near stop’ and expect uniform enforcement. In a car, it is a California Stop, on a bike it is legislatively the same. There are a hundred reasons, I’m going to dissect a few:

I can see what is coming on a bike

Of course you can. You slowed down, you head checked both sides real quickly and are still travelling too fast to make a stop if you see something even a little late.

The red light won’t sense my bike

You are probably right, it won’t. But it will sense that car behind you, or across from you. If those aren’t there, you can waddle over to the pedestrian crossing button. If that isn’t an option, and you’ve stopped, you can check all directions completely, and proceed.

It is dangerous to stop and clip in mid intersection

That is like saying a manual transmission shouldn’t stop at a stop sign because it might stall mid intersection. I don’t think this one works all that well. If it is a problem, I encourage you to, oh I don’t know, practice clipping in until it isn’t an issue.

Cars don’t stop why should I

Apparently we are in kindergarten again. Joey did it, why can’t I? Such a compelling argument point, I think I’ll respond the same way my mom did. Just because Joey jumps off a building doesn’t mean you should. Let us all stop justifying our own bad behavior because of someone else’s bad behavior.

There are plenty of others, but let us stop here.

At the end of the day, I am calling bullshit on all of the cyclists playing fast and loose with the rules. As someone with many miles in the legs, there are times for doing things that violate the letter of the laws, but are in keeping with the spirit of the laws. What I am really trying to say is this. When out on the roads, honor the one cardinal rule:

Don’t be a jerk.

It really is that simple, regardless of your conveyance.