
Continue reading “How to Stop Auto Accidents by Buster Keaton”
Ungridlocked
By Nicole Gelinas, City Journal
Mayor Bloomberg’s transportation reforms have unclogged New York’s streets and made them safer.
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Though drivers in New York City are a minority, outdated traffic engineering long allowed them to reign unchallenged, with clogged streets and too many accidents the results. Over the past five years, however, the city, led by transportation commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, has devised ways to reduce that dominance. Through several new initiatives, mostly outside Times Square, New York has been rationally using its limited physical space to get more people moving more quickly—and that means not in automobiles. New York has achieved its improvements on the cheap. Better still, the changes have saved lives.
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Another way that New York has tried to relieve subway pressure over the last four years is installing more bike lanes. Today, the city has 270 miles of bike lanes, including 20 miles of lanes in which a physical barrier—a curb or a parking lane—protects bikers from drivers. Commuting by bike has risen dramatically, with 24,000 people pedaling into the core of Manhattan in 2010, compared with 15,000 in 2007. This makes good fiscal sense. It has cost New York City about $15 million, including federal funds, to create the new bike lanes. To give subway riders more room by building more subways, the city would have to spend billions.
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New York’s transportation policy isn’t just about getting people from Point A to Point B; it’s about keeping them safe from transportation-related injuries. The city is already doing a good job of this, with vehicle-caused deaths in the city plummeting over the last two decades. “The numbers speak for themselves,” says Sam Schwartz, the Koch-era traffic commissioner known to tabloid readers as “Gridlock Sam.” In 1990, accidents on New York City’s streets claimed the lives of 701 people, including 366 pedestrians—more than one per day. Over the next decade, though, the number of people killed in accidents fell 46 percent, and it fell another 38 percent between 2000 and 2011. Last year was the safest ever for New York drivers, passengers, and walkers, with vehicles causing just 2.8 fatalities per 100,000 residents. You’re more than twice as likely to be killed by a vehicle in Los Angeles as in New York; Atlanta is deadlier still.
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New York’s new bike lanes also enhance safety—not just for bikers but for pedestrians and auto occupants, too. Crashes on city streets that have bike lanes are 40 percent less likely to result in a death or serious injury, in part because the lanes force drivers to go more slowly. Bike lanes also lead drivers to pay more attention to the road. On Ninth Avenue in Chelsea, crashes have fallen 56 percent since the city installed bike lanes.
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https://www.city-journal.org/2012/22_2_nyc-transportation.html
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B’ Spokes: A very well written article, with lots of positive (and a few not as good as hoped) aspects. But what I get from this article is how traffic engineers once thought they had to set the "dial" to maximum driver accommodation on every single street, NYC is finding a lot of benefits on setting the "dial" to maximum for pedestrian accommodation or bicycling accommodation, even if it means taking away space from cars.
How far will we walk to go somewhere? It depends.
B’ Spokes: I have always contended that the [bike|walk]ability depends on what is on the side of the road as much as what is on the road and this post by Kaid Benfield seems to back me up (at least as far as walking goes.) We need planning and zoning that services people and not just cars. We need to pay attention to walk appeal as well as bike appeal. We need to lose the idea that people can/should always [begrudgingly] drive there and that’s all that needs to be done.
For more info and examples: https://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/kbenfield/how_far_will_we_walk_to_someth.html
Driver Education: ‘Bicyclists are a Source of Danger’
Today’s tangent comes by way of Commute By Bike’s article: https://www.commutebybike.com/2012/07/27/driver-education-bicyclists-are-a-source-of-danger/
Ted Johnson makes a point and maybe if we did stress to drivers that if you hit a cyclist or pedestrian you’ll end up damaging your vehicle so they might exercise more caution around us.
But my concern is there should be an agreed upon rules for both cyclists and motorists and in driver education is where things start to fall apart, seriously fall apart.
10% of the truth is worse then a lie. As the most insidious lies have some truth in them.
Like what is stated in the Texas Adult Drivers Education site:
Bicycles are required to ride to the far right of the road.
Using only 10% of the words of law law on what we are actually required to do is… errr… um…. well, really, really wrong, there is not that much fluff and extra words in legalese. So ignoring the seven exceptions to this as well as ignoring descriptive words such as “near” and “practicable and safe” that describes how far right we should ride when non of the seven exceptions apply is a very dangerous thing to tell drivers that we are required to obey this 10% of the truth and nothing more, or better stated, falsely stating we are required to obey this lie. (e.g. A police officer stopped a cyclist and demanded that they ride on the 4 inches of pavement on the other side of the fog line. When the cyclist complained the officer responded “You’ve got skinny tires, so what’s the problem?” – Like 4 inches makes a proper bike lane, sheesh! Stating we are required to ride far right just leads to too many problems, we need understanding and a agreed upon set of rules, not lies that further complicate things.)
Once upon time, there was little traffic and roads were built wide to accommodate drunks and trucks and riding to the right mostly worked out. But now there is more traffic as well as lanes that are narrow and there is just too little information out there that states “As a driver, most of the time you are going to have to change lanes to pass a cyclist, even if they are riding far right.”
Too often the unspoken desire of motorists is “We want cyclists to ride far right so we don’t have to bother to change lanes to pass.” I’m sorry but no you just can’t squeeze by and put a life at risk. But more to the point does the statement “Bicycles are required to ride to the far right of the road.” help or hurt the safe passing of cyclists by motorists?
I will strongly assert that human nature is such that we offer more courtesy to someone who is (in our view) lawful then one who is unlawful. Case in point: have you ever driven pass a jaywalker that was just standing on the double yellow line with just inches to spare? But if that person was in a crosswalk you would give a greater amount of space. Similarly a cyclist that is perceived as lawful will get more consideration then one that is not.
Can I give the Texas Adult Drivers Education site some credit in trying to address the above with “and they [cyclists and pedestrians] just do not know the law. … driver’s obligation to create a safe situation by yielding… even if the driver of the car might have the right of way by law.”? It’s rather insulting that they feel that they can incorrectly state the law for cyclists and then accuse us of not knowing the law. Something like the following might be better: “You are required to yield even if you think the cyclist is not obeying the law. The purpose of this course is not to make you an expert on bicycling law [and that’s a shame as well IMHO] but to stress safe driving so you are not a danger to yourself and others.”
I’ll note that too many of these “educational” materials come from national resources, effectively negating any local advocacy effort. So I will assert things like need more attention from ALL cycling advocates.
Two Mornings from Sierra Club National [video]
Two Mornings from Sierra Club National on Vimeo.
How Wealth Reduces Compassion
[B’ Spokes: Just the bit relevant to this blog but the whole thing is interesting.]
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By Daisy Grewal, Scientific American
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In one study, Piff and his colleagues discreetly observed the behavior of drivers at a busy four-way intersection. They found that luxury car drivers were more likely to cut off other motorists instead of waiting for their turn at the intersection. This was true for both men and women upper-class drivers, regardless of the time of day or the amount of traffic at the intersection. In a different study they found that luxury car drivers were also more likely to speed past a pedestrian trying to use a crosswalk, even after making eye contact with the pedestrian.
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https://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=how-wealth-reduces-compassion
Cops: Bikes help cut crime
[B’ Spokes: I would love to see more emphases on bike patrols in Baltimore.]
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byKristi Funderburk, Asbury Park Press
SEASIDE PARK — The borough’s police chief wanted a bicycle patrol to help improve the department’s ability to combat misdemeanors in the busier sections of town.
In two years, the patrol has been so effective the department is on track to generate more than $1 million in court revenue.
The borough’s bike patrol, established in 2011, has played a significant role in curtailing incidents from drug use to noise issues, borough Police Chief Frances Larkin said.
“They were very good at detecting marijuana smells, hearing disturbances and detecting underage drinking,” he said. “They were very mobile and able to cover a lot of the area without being detected.”
That has helped the department as a whole issue more citations. While the goal of the bicycle patrol was to improve quality of life, and Larkin feels it has, there has been a residual benefit in revenue.
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Continue reading “Cops: Bikes help cut crime”
CDC Report: Young Drivers More Likely to Die In Auto Accidents
by Laura G. Zois, Maryland Accident Lawyer Blog
In today’s age of texting and driving, it sadly should come as no surprise that young drivers are overrepresented in car crash fatalities. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported on the statistics for 2009, which is already out-of-date. Here are the stats:
* 34,485 motor vehicle deaths
* 22% of those who died in auto accidents were aged 15 to 24
* Motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death for people aged 15 to 24
* People aged 15 to 24 represent only 14% of the population
* Actual rates of young people’s deaths are lower in urban areas than rural areas
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https://www.marylandaccidentlawyerblog.com/2012/07/cdc_report_young_drivers_more.html
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[B’ Spokes: I can’t help but think that the lower urban death rate has to do with slower speeds and closer destinations. Think about it, your phone goes off and; 1) You are almost at your destination. vs 2) You still have a long ways to go yet. Wouldn’t you be less likely to start fiddling with your phone under scenario 1 then 2? I will contended that mixed use and compact development save lives besides making for a more active life style.]
DIY LED Bicycle Handlebars
Your Desk Is Making You Stupid
By Jessica Stillman, INC.
Your desk, scientists reported recently, is trying to kill you.
According to the New York Times, scientists discovered that when we sit all day, "electrical activity in the muscles drops… leading to a cascade of harmful metabolic effects," and sadly even getting regular doses of exercise doesn’t offset the damage. But now there’s new evidence of the harm of sitting. Not only is it making you fatter, it might also be making you dumber.
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https://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/be-smarter-get-up-and-walk-around.html

