[B’ Spokes: It often comes up or assumed that cyclists are more likely to be at fault in a crash then motorist.]
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By Robert Hurst
THE EFFECT OF CHILD BICYCLISTS ON BIKE-CAR COLLISION STATISTICS IN NORTH CAROLINA, 1997-2008
When looking at accident statistics for a community or state’s entire cycling population, we are really looking at two very different worlds, the kids’ world and the adult world, which operate under completely different rules and circumstances. Mashing both data-sets into one huge ball of statistical mash means we won’t be able to learn anything from either of them. Any number that combines both disparate populations, with their vastly different behaviors and outcomes, will be meaningless.
For example, it is a commonly held and oft-repeated belief that bicyclists’ own law-breaking is the primary cause of most of their suffering on the roadways. But this is just a misapprehension caused by looking at data for the entire population of cyclists, including little kids, which shows that the majority of car-bike collisions can be blamed on the bicyclist. A closer look reveals that adults are far more likely to be riding legally than illegally at the time of a collision, while child bicyclists are much more likely to be riding illegally — so much more likely, in fact, that it blows up the entire business.
It’s striking how the numbers shake out in N.C.
https://www.pedbikeinfo.org/pbcat/_bikequery.cfm
Child bicyclists (15 and under) accounted for 61% of reported Bicyclist Failed-to-Yield Midblock collisions (789 out of 1301 total).
Child bicyclists accounted for 60% of Bicyclist Failed-to-Yield Sign-controlled Intersection collisions (698 out of 1159).
Child bicyclists accounted for 24% of Bicyclist Failed-to-Yield Signalized Intersection collisions (129 out of 537).
Adding these up, child bicyclists 15 and under accounted for a massive 54% of all reported Bicyclist Failed-to-Yield collisions in North Carolina from 1997-2008 (1616 out of 2997). That’s right, most of the reported incidents involving bicyclists’ failure-to-yield were caused by kids.
In contrast, child bicyclists made up only 13% of Motorist Failed-to-Yield Midblock collisions, 15% of Motorist Failed-to-Yield Sign-Controlled Intersection collisions and 13% of Motorist Failed-to-Yield Signalized Intersection collisions. Child bicyclists were involved in 13.8% of all Motorist Failed-to-Yield collisions, but over 30% of all reported collisions.
To put it mildly, kids are hugely over-represented in bicyclist at-fault crashes. A lot of the little offenders haven’t even removed the training wheels yet.
Looking only at the adult bicyclists, we see a starkly different pattern. In fact, we see the opposite pattern. The mirror image.
Considering the propensity of adult bicyclists everywhere to take liberties with the traffic laws, running lights and stop signs, we might expect to see a pattern of scofflaw bicyclists getting served their just deserts in the police reports. There is certainly some of that. However, the numbers clearly show that lawful adult bicyclists, at least in N.C., suffer substantially more from motorists’ failures-to-yield than unlawful adult bicyclists suffer from their own failures-to-yield.
Looking at the cohort of bicyclists aged 25-49, we see that this group reportedly caused 209 Bicyclist Failed-to-Yield Midblock crashes from 1997-2008, but suffered 325 Motorist Failed-to-Yield Midblock wrecks over the same period. They caused 183 Failed-to-Yield wrecks at sign-controlled intersections, but suffered 451 Motorist-caused wrecks at signed intersections. They caused 191 wrecks by running stoplights — sweet justice! — but 121 lawful riders were creamed by light-running drivers over the same time.
Overall, the entire bicycling population of N.C., in eleven years, caused 2997 failure-to-yield collisions, and suffered 2014 failures-to-yield at the hands of motorists — looks fairly damning when you see it like that. Bicyclists primarily at fault. Now, just look at the adults. Bicyclists aged 25-49 caused 583 crashes after failing to yield, but were on the business end of 897 motorist failures-to-yield. More than 3-to-2 in favor of motorist at-fault. A very different perspective.
The greatest danger to the adult bicyclist is not his or her own scofflaw behavior, as one might mistakenly conclude from looking at the whole cycling population, including little kids. The greatest danger facing the adult bicyclist is being overlooked by a driver while riding lawfully.
This is a crucially important fact which should be conveyed not just to cyclists but to police and courts — all those who become the caretakers, directly or indirectly, for injured or deceased cyclists, many of whom can’t speak for themselves. Bicycling advocates, if they are to live up to that label, must work to correct the misapprehensions of the past and convey the truth, even if that truth runs counter to long-held biases and assumptions. It’s much more difficult for adult cyclists to get a fair shake when they are judged largely by the actions of little kids riding out of their driveways or off the sidewalks at the ends of their blocks. But that’s exactly how adult cycling is judged these days, by planners, advocates and onlookers. It’s wrong, it’s silly, and it needs to stop.
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[B’ Spokes: BICYCLE SAFETY – What Every Parent Should Know https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20110207122918306 ]
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A comment: I’ve looked at a number of years of crash stats for Portland, and if you eliminate the child cyclists, you find approximately a 60:40 motorist:bicyclist split in fault determination for adults only; if you include the child cyclists, those numbers are essentially reversed.
Continue reading “The effect of child bicyclists on bike-car collision statistics in north carolina, 19”
Interview with Bob Mionske, the author of Bicycling and the Law
To be honest I could not get through the whole interview but it starts with Bob saying “Most of the enmity or disregard for cycling that I see doesn’t come from the fact that we are scofflaws, it comes from the fact…”
Let’s just say it’s worth hearing how Bob Mionske finishes that.
Listen to the audio track here: CDM Cyclist
ERROR – Encourage Restricting Right On Red
From Jeffery Marks
Your column is convincing me that right turn on red should be greatly restricted. Your argument that allowing right on red leads to a continuous flow of traffic that makes it dangerous for pedestrians, cars, and bicyclists to cross is excellent. I can relate to that on Pk Heights. I find it much easier and safer to cross Pk Heights at Clarinth (whether on bike, foot, or car) during the school day when Fallstaff has no right turn on red than after 4pm when rights on red are permitted. I agreee with you. One needs gaps in traffic to cross Park Heights. Traffic engineers tend to only think about whether allowing right on red causes crashes at the intersection and neglect the dangers to traffic trying to cross the main street a block or two away.
Reference: "Dangerous" NYC intersections for peds are tame by Maryland standards https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20110322171239729
People Are Awesome: This Guy Scuba Dived Into the Tsunami to Rescue His Wife and Mother
from GOOD by Cord Jefferson

…
Akaiwa rushed to high ground and immediately called his wife of two decades. When she didn’t answer, Akaiwa ignored friends’ pleas to wait for a military rescue, instead rummaging up some scuba gear and diving into the dark, cold, debris-filled tsunami. Hundreds of yards of swimming later, Akaiwa found his wife struggling against the 10-foot current that had overtaken the couple’s Ishinomaki home.
…
With his family accounted for, Akaiwa hasn’t rested on his laurels. Rather, he’s spent the past two weeks heading into Ishinomaki in search of other trapped survivors. Armed with a backpack, a flashlight, a Swiss Army knife, and some water, he rides his bike around the wreckage and makes his own destiny.
Continue reading “People Are Awesome: This Guy Scuba Dived Into the Tsunami to Rescue His Wife and Mother”
Share the Road PSA – Dont Cut Off The Bike [video]
This is from DC but equally valid in Maryland:
Who cares about miles/gallon when you can have heart pumping miles that let you pass other cars like they are standing still
The wrong answer
The right answer
Jump off from Ad Nauseam Double Feature: Safe Subaru vs. Deadly Dodge which makes another good point.
Moving right along– Legislation
From Adiva Sotzsky, member of the Bike Maryland Task Force
We are now ready for the next stage of our efforts to enact
Manslaughter by Vehicle or Vessel – Criminal Negligence
The Bill has passed the House — today– Thursday March 24,
2011 vote was 137-0
We will now address the Senate. I have 2 action items below.
A) Please begin your contact ‘trees’ to have people
call/email their State Senators.
As we all know– they only need to say that they want
Manslaughter by Vehicle or Vessel – Criminal Negligence —
supported. It is HB363 and has passed the House
If they are unsure of their Senator, they can find this
either —https://mdelect.net/electedofficials/
or by name, or county or district at https://www.msa.md.gov/msa/mdmanual/05sen/html/sen.html
B) Well also want to focus on members of the Judicial
Proceedings Committee
By all means, if they are your Senator – contact them
If you want to set up a meeting to talk with them about
the bill — go for it!
Continue reading “Moving right along– Legislation”
Car Companies Vie for Supremacy in Distracted Driving Arms Race
from Streetsblog New York City by Angie Schmitt (highlight)
We’ve engineered our entire transportation system around an activity which requires increasing amounts of unproductive time, unless you are distracted. – Keri at Commute Orlando
Continue reading “Car Companies Vie for Supremacy in Distracted Driving Arms Race”
Say hello to your new bicycle themed restaurant
From The City That Breads
Well that settles it, Bill’s Lighthouse Inn had its transfer of license approved the other day and new owner Marla Streb (the Strebinator, as I call her) will be occupying the space for South Baltimore’s second attempt at a Bicycle themed restaurant – hehehehe get it?

At any rate, seems like the establishment will now be named Cafe Velocity and will feature some sort of cycling theme, as the owner is a professional mountain biker and probably a triathlete and/or Parkour expert or something. Whether or not the joint will be bicycle themed “in name only” much like The Bicycle, the failed defunct wine bar / restaurant where Centro Tapas now resides, remains to be seen. Beyond that, the neighborhood where Bill’s sits is a bit rough around the edges, to the point where prior ownership often times had to bolt the doors shut to keep drunkards out. Yeesh. Beer Baron Steve Fogleman noted “She’s a tough woman. I mean really tough,” so it’ll be interesting to see how this whole thing flies – er, pedals.
And being that I am personally an expert on all things restaurant, here are my suggestions for the upcoming Cafe Velocity that will enhance the experience, the cycling ambiance, the essence of biking:
- When customers enter the restaurant, rather than having some sort of little bell or beeper to alert the staff there are customers, the door should set off a bike ringer, alternatively the full length version of Queen’s “Bicycle Race.”
- Everything on the menu must absolutely somehow work bicycles into the title. Perhaps a fried onion strips app called “Onion Spokes?” Or a burger called “the Lance Armstrong,” made with beef from a cow that survived cancer and later dumped its wife for a pop star?
- Replace all of the barstools with bike seats, really thin bike seats.
- Actually, replace all chairs and stools in the establishment with really thin bike seats.
- NEVER, EVER refer to Cafe Velocity as a “biker restaurant” or you may get some undesirable clientele.
- Servers should, on occasion, deliver plates of food to tables on unicycles. Or maybe tiny trick bikes.
- Absolutely, positively jury rig one or two bike helmets to function as Foam Domes for happy hour. You’ll thank me later!
Am I missing anything? Who’s got some other suggestions?
Continue reading “Say hello to your new bicycle themed restaurant”
The Talk: A Baltimore bicyclist’s manifesto
From the Baltimore Sun – Second Opinion
The story of Nathan Krasnopoler, a Johns Hopkins student who has been in a coma since being struck by a motorist while riding his bicycle in a designated bike lane, has sparked a significant reaction from other Baltimore bicyclists who are upset that the driver was not charged or fed up in general with rude and dangerous behavior by motorists. (The latest is that his parents are suing the driver, Jeanette Marie Walke, alleging that she violated multiple traffic laws.)
Del. Jon Cardin wrote in last week to protest the lack of charges against the driver, saying it goes against the intent of the General Assembly.
Katharine W. Rylaarsdam disagreed, saying the accident was a mistake but not a crime.
Jeffrey H. Marks says the problem is a failure of city officials to educate cyclists and drivers alike about how to make safe right turns.
And yesterday, Julie Gabrielli wrote an open letter to Baltimore drivers, setting out the code of conduct she will adhere to on her bike — and what she expects of motorists in return. (Hint: It doesn’t involve honking your horn.)
Continue reading “The Talk: A Baltimore bicyclist’s manifesto”
