[B’ Spokes: I will strongly assert if you use the finger you are admitting being powerless, think and act differently!]
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Biking in Baltimore
[B’ Spokes: I will strongly assert if you use the finger you are admitting being powerless, think and act differently!]
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…What: Trail Maintenance/Invasive Plant Removal/Native Planting Workshop at Loch Raven Reservoir, sponsored by Recreational Equipment, Inc. (REI).
When: July 31st, 8:30-1:30 pm. FREE WORKSHOP!
Why: Our goal is to offer a hands-on learning experience within Loch Raven Reservoir on the proper techniques of trail maintenance, (such as rolling grade dips to prevent sediment erosion and improve water quality), and on an invasive removal and native planting project by Dr. Sonja Schmitz of Biology from the Catonsville Community College of Baltimore. A bonus educational
presentation on the history of Loch Raven Reservoir and the water supply system by the Baltimore City Gov. Watershed Manager will also be offered.
This FREE event is made possible by a conservation grant from Recreational Equipment, Inc., a new partner with Gunpowder Valley Conservancy (GVC), and partnerships forged with the City of Baltimore Reservoir Natural Resources Section and the Watershed Rangers, the Mid-Atlantic Off Road Enthusiasts, Sierra Club, and the Prettyboy Watershed Alliance.
Who: No Experience is necessary! We are looking for middle, high, and college level students, REI employees, community businesses and residents, scouts, and trail users who care about our drinking water, our watershed, and the Chesapeake Bay! Do you like being outside in nature and don’t mind working hard? Do you want to receive community service hours? Then join us, and help improve the quality of our drinking water and the environment!
(Ages 12 and up.)
Continue reading “The Gunpowder Valley Conservancy is in need of 20 more volunteers for Saturday, July 31st!”
by washcycle
From Kojo Nnamdi yesterday. It starts at 30:00.
A woman called in who had been ticketed after a crash with a parking enforcement officer. She claimed that all of the witnesses agreed that the driver was at fault, but the officer cited her instead and threatened to write her a ticket for not wearing a helmet. Then she asked, with Kojo’s help, what the MPD was doing "for sensitivity training towards bicycles for officers?"
[ Cathy Lanier: Bicycles, and the pedicabs and segways are becoming a bigger and bigger issue in the city. We do do bicycle enforcement. There are regulations for bicycle, just like there are traffic regulations, the bicycle regulations are enforced by the officers. So sometimes we enforce against the bicyclists and sometimes we enforce against the motoring public because there are violations on both sides. But, y’know, this is a rapidly expanding pedestrian-style neighbor… community. All of Washington, DC. The number of bicyclists and segwayists and foot traffic around the city is just really skyrocketing, so we all have to all kind of work together here and build some tolerance for each other and I would say in terms of the officer’s rudeness, if you are ever not satisfied with an interaction with a police officer I would encourage please to reach out to us and let us know and you can do that through our website also or through a District commander.]
Sort of a non-answer, but later around 35:00 she talks about how low traffic fatalities have been and the challenge of protecting pedestrians and bicyclists…and then distracted bicyclists.
Continue reading “MPD Chief Cathy Lanier on Bicycle Sensitivity Training for Officers”
Patrols have been upped since robberies, assaults along Northeast Branch Trail
by Elahe Izadi | Staff Writer
Cyclists aren’t letting a spat of June crimes on a trail that runs through Riverdale Park deter their biking habits.
Three incidents in June where pedestrians and cyclists were robbed or assaulted along the Northeast Branch trail have caused Maryland-National Capital Park Police to increase patrols and community members to encourage others to use the trails more frequently.
The trail starts in College Park and ends near the Hyattsville/Edmonston border.
Scot Brown, a member of the Hyattsville Bicycle and Pedestrian Committee, organized a safe ride June 26 as a "show of force that the community cares and we’re going to show up and we’re going to respond."
About 35 residents, as well as Hyattsville officials and park, Hyattsville and Riverdale Park police, biked and walked portions of the trail as part of the safe ride and information about trail safety was handed out to residents.
"I wanted to promote the trails as a safe natural resource and a great community resource for everyone in this area," Brown said. "I also wanted to put out there the idea that the more heavily used these trails are the more safe they are."
…
Continue reading “Cyclists keep riding Northeast Branch trail despite spat of crimes”
[B’ Spokes: It’s really cool that they took this bicycle theft seriously (just wish it was the norm) but I really have to question why negligent driving fines are considerable lower: Negligent driving resulting in serious injury = $140 https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20100206071517726 Negligent driving resulting in death =$287.50 https://www.baltimorespokes.org/article.php?story=20091203212215600 ]
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Bike Thief Guilty
OCEAN CITY – A Delaware man arrested in May for swiping a bicycle in West Ocean City because he was “tired of walking” pleaded guilty last week in District Court to theft under $100 and was placed on probation and fined.
Around 1:20 p.m. on May 27, the Maryland State Police received a call about a stolen bicycle. The victim told police she saw an identified man take the bicycle from her property on Old Bridge Rd. in West Ocean City without her permission. The victim provided police with a description of the suspect and the stolen bicycle, which was broadcast to local law enforcement agencies.
About 15 minutes later, a Maryland Natural Resources Police (NRP) officer reported he had located the possible suspect and the stolen bicycle at St. Louis Ave. and North Division Street in Ocean City. The officer identified the suspect as Ethan Cord Truitt, 18, of Georgetown, Del.
Meanwhile, the MSP officer who handled the original complaint heard from a witness who said he saw the suspect take the bicycle from the victim’s residence and start riding it down Old Bridge Rd. while carrying a skateboard. The witness told police he called for the suspect to stop, but the suspect dropped the skateboard and continued down Old Bridge Rd. on the stolen bicycle.
Shortly after 2 p.m., the MSP trooper transported the victim and the witness to the area in Ocean City where Truitt was being detained and they positively identified the suspect as the individual who had stolen the bicycle. According to police reports, Truitt apologized to the victim and told her he stole the bike “because he was tired of walking.”
The stolen bicycle was returned to its rightful owner and Truitt was arrested and charged with theft under $100. Last week, Truitt pleaded guilty and was placed on probation for one year and fined $300.
Continue reading “Stealing a bike = $300 | Killing a cyclists = $287.50”
by: awessendorf
Heads up to commuters taking the Guilford Avenue route. My husband was attacked this week by a group of young men (probably preteen to early teen). They kicked his back tire, punched him in the side, and grabbed his shirt.
He was able to get away and we have no idea if the purpose of the attack was to steal the bike or simply to harass. But be careful if you are taking this route.
Continue reading “Guilford Avenue Route”
[B’ Spokes just the crimes that involve bikes listed.]
Frisby Street 3000 block at 6:30 p.m. July 8. Assailant pushed bicyclist off bike and stole it.
Springlake Way 5000 block, between 1:50 and 1:55 p.m. July 10. Bicycle stolen from open garage.
Union Avenue 1300 block, between 8:30 p.m. July 8 and 8:30 a.m. July 9. Blue Kames Koda bicycle with bell and purple flower stolen from unlocked shed.
Continue reading “Crime Log, Baltimore County”

I have been very critical of the local Street Smart campaign due in part of an over emphasis on responsibility (duty?) of pedestrians to avoid being hit by cars. Even in the above pic IMHO the coffee cup should be in the drivers hands not the pedestrians, which is not to say we don’t have idiot pedestrians here but when bikes and peds are treated as second class roadway users by too many of the motoring public and with distracted driving being a major problem, we need motorists to wake up and realize roads are used by all types of people and no ones hurry maters more then someone else’s hurry.
So I have in part an apology to make, they are producing material for drivers, below is “Day 2 email blast.” (Though their web site should be more descriptive then this.):

and tips for drivers around cyclists (titled Day 4 Email blast):

And finally tips for cyclists (titled Day 3 Email blast):

[B’ Spokes: It really irks me when judges get the law wrong.]
by Ben Fried
A federal judge yesterday upheld NYPD rules which effectively outlaw bicycle rides with 50 or more cyclists that proceed without a permit. The case is closely associated with police crackdowns on Critical Mass but affects any group ride of sufficient size.
In his 54-page decision in favor of NYPD and the city of New York [PDF], District Court Judge Lewis Kaplan, a Staten Island native who holds a JD from Harvard Law (Class of 1969), dismissed the case put forward by the Five Borough Bicycle Club, Columbia history professor Kenneth T. Jackson (who organizes educational nighttime rides for students), and several Critical Mass participants. The cyclists’ attorneys argued that the NYPD permit rules violate First Amendment rights to free speech and assembly, and that police have selectively issued citations to cyclists who have not broken any traffic laws.
Judge Kaplan rejected these claims across the board. One of the more fascinating aspects of Kaplan’s ruling is his application of local traffic law to cyclists’ behavior, and the way his judgments about traffic safety influence his judicial opinion. In concluding that NYPD’s 50-person limit on group rides justifiably advances public safety, for instance, Kaplan writes:
Large groups of cyclists may well be more visible than individual cyclists and may take up less space than large groups of vehicles, but countervailing factors such as their lack of predictability and their tendency to try to stay together in a moving column, even if this means going through a red light, nevertheless endanger other travelers and disrupt orderly traffic flow. Their presence may add traffic volume that otherwise would be absent.
This reality was borne out by a video clip of the September 2007 Manhattan Critical Mass ride shown… at trial. As the Court noted at the time, the clip shows a cyclist engaging in dangerous behavior by pulling out and to the right of a motor vehicle that itself was in the process of pulling out of the bike lane to its right. The biker comes up from the motor vehicle driver’s blind spot and passes the motor vehicle on the right just as the motor vehicle begins to pull to the right and out of the bike lane. I find that the video demonstrates the danger of the cyclist’s actions.
According to a court transcript obtained by Streetsblog, Kaplan is in fact referring to video shot in July, 2007, which appears beginning at the :37 mark in the above YouTube clip. It depicts a cyclist traveling south in the Broadway bike lane at 19th Street. When he encounters a BMW SUV partially obstructing his path, he bikes into car traffic and passes the SUV.
This behavior, in Judge Kaplan’s estimation, is the cause of safety hazards and a reason to give legal standing to NYPD regulation of group rides. As for the motorist blocking a bike lane with his multi-ton SUV before merging back into traffic, without much seeming awareness of the cyclist approaching from behind, Kaplan’s opinion gives no indication that such carelessness registers with him.
In another passage, on page 47, Kaplan interprets state law as requiring cyclists to ride as close to the right-hand curb as practicable if they are traveling at “less than the speed of normal traffic.” It’s a rather restrictive take on the legality of taking a lane, and omits the fact that the rule in question applies only to two-way streets. At no point in his decision does Kaplan mention the NYPD’s reliance on section 1234 of the New York State traffic law to issue violations to Critical Mass cyclists, which plaintiffs cited as evidence of discriminatory enforcement. Section 1234, which requires cyclists to ride in the right hand curb, does not apply in New York City.
The Five Borough Bike Club says it is disappointed in Kaplan’s ruling and will review the decision with other plaintiffs. No word yet on whether an appeal will be filed.
Continue reading “Judge’s Decision on NYPD Parade Rules Tinted By Windshield Perspective”
Tuesday, July 20th 6pm
Baltimore City Department of Planning
417 E. Fayette St, 8th Floor
(Please bring your bikes up to the 8th Floor)
RSVP at SOCIALZR
Agenda Items include:
Continue reading “Mayor’s Bicycle Advisory Committee July Meeting”