Ghost Bike for John R. Yates

Most of you know about the bicyclist that died this week at the corner of Lafayette and Maryland. A memorial Ghost Bike will be place at that intersection this Sunday, 8/9, a bit after 6:00 PM. For info on the memorial, go to www.ghostbikes.org

All are welcome. The ghost bike is currently at Velocipede… but all involved consider this a gesture from the bicycling community and the larger Baltimore community, not from a single group.

Portland’s Bicycle Brilliance

And I’ll think to myself: What does Portland know that Vancouver hasn’t yet quite learned?
Why is it that, while a city like Portland has bridges backlogged with bike traffic-jams, Vancouver remains choked in car traffic, and I, nearly alone on my bike route to work? A mere 2,700 cyclists trickle into Vancouver’s downtown every day, while over 9,000 daily cross over Portland’s bridges.
[Interesting stuff about Portland’s bike history.]
Continue reading “Portland’s Bicycle Brilliance”

AMTRAK BICYCLE SERVICE SURVEY

Currently, there is limited opportunity for bicycle transportation on Amtrak’s Capitol Limited route, which parallels the Great Allegheny Passage and C&O Canal Towpath between Washington, DC and Pittsburgh, PA. This brief survey attempts to determine how much consumer interest there is for Amtrak to expand upon its bicycle service on the Capitol Limited route. We appreciate your time in completing the survey.
Continue reading “AMTRAK BICYCLE SERVICE SURVEY”

Terrible Crash, another perspective

Last year my friend was dragged to death at the age of 29 by the back wheels of a commercial vehicle while crossing the street legally as a pedestrian in a pedestrian-friendly town. Two links:
https://www.thebostontraveler.com/graduate-student-killed-crossing-the-street/
https://chemiche.blogspot.com/2008/03/killer-truck-backwheels-where-poor-man.html
As you can imagine, we spent a great deal of time investigating the death, and the following are my conclusions.

Trucks have no idea what the back end of their vehicle is doing. They don’t know exactly where the back wheels go, they don’t know if they have struck someone with their back wheels, and they really can’t be held responsible for that. The issue has nothing to do with people valuing the life of a bicyclist or favoring cars.

Perhaps the conclusion is that, given how little control drivers have over their rear wheels, 18 wheeler container trucks have no business driving on most city streets near pedestrians. Businesses could use smaller delivery trucks or get their deliveries at night.

Realistically, they won’t stop using 18 wheelers at least not in the near future. It’s left up to everyone else to stay far far away from these behemoths.

Bicyclist killed by truck in Charles North; driver sought

A 67-year-old bicyclist was killed Tuesday morning in Baltimore’s Charles North neighborhood after he became entangled in the rear wheels of a white box truck, said a city police spokesman.

Police, who said the truck driver left the scene and was probably unaware of the accident, are seeking the truck with unknown tags.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the truck was southbound on Maryland Avenue at 11:38 a.m. and was making a right turn onto West Lafayette Avenue when the biker, who was directly behind the truck, struck the truck’s right rear wheels and became entangled in the wheels.

Agent Donny Moses, another police spokesman, identified the bicyclist Wednesday as John R. Yates of the 2800 block of Maryland Ave. in Baltimore. Medics pronounced Yates dead at the scene. He suffered massive trauma to his abdomen area and to his left leg, according to Moses.

Anyone with information is asked to call the city police accident investigation unit at 410-396-2606.

Continue reading “Bicyclist killed by truck in Charles North; driver sought”

The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of Bicycle Police

I ran across this interesting paper and I thought I would share. I have heard reports of how effective bike patrols are from IPMBA and other sources but I had no idea that Baltimore was one such experiment.

"Baltimore started experimenting with bicycle patrols in March 1972 because police cars had difficulty traveling through narrow alleys. Crime dropped 50% in six months of the four beats patrolled by bike from 8 AM to midnight (Bigart, 1972)."

I also found this of interest:

"Technology-dependent police officers became isolated from the communities they served.

A study by the Kansas City Police Department attempted to evaluate the effectiveness of randomized patrolling in marked police cars. They study found that increasing or decreasing the frequency of patrols had no significant impact on the level of crimes believed to be deterred by police patrols and the change in levels of patrolling was not noticed by citizens."
*************************************************************************************************************************************************************
We feel police are isolated from the communities they serve and is crime a problem. Gee I wounder what ever can we do to solve these issues?
Continue reading “The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of Bicycle Police”