[Note the limited scope of this study.]
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Oct 13 – The results of a single-center study suggest that bicycle injuries in the US have become more severe, with a marked increase in chest and abdominal injuries. Moreover, despite greater public awareness, helmet use has not increased and head injury rates have not fallen.
"There is a paucity of studies looking specifically at bicycle injuries," lead researcher Dr. Jeffry Kashuk, from the University of Colorado, Denver, told Reuters Health. In the last several years, greater environmental awareness, economic downturns, an emphasis on fitness, and other factors have pushed towards greater bicycle use in the US.
On Tuesday at the 2009 Clinical Congress of the American College of Surgeons in Chicago, Dr. Kashuk report on a study of 329 patients with bicycle injuries who were admitted to the Rocky Mountain Regional Trauma Center in Denver from 1996 to 2006.
He and his colleagues found that the median injury severity score increased significantly over the study period, and the number of chest injuries rose by 15%. Over just the last 5 years, abdominal injuries increased threefold.
Emergency room documentation of helmet use improved during the study period, yet actual use did not appear to have changed significantly, based on their findings in the 118 patients (36%) with significant head injuries, Dr. Kashuk said.
The rise in injury severity likely reflects an increased rate of "motor vehicle associated injuries, which might suggest, along with a trend towards older age, that the injuries occurred in commuters more frequently than the past, as opposed to recreational riders," Dr. Kashuk said.
The findings, Dr. Kashuk believes, could have important implications for cycling infrastructure in the US.
"Although the public is very enthusiastic about bicycle use as a means of transportation, we think that infrastructure has lagged behind in the US," he explained. "The government is pushing bike days, and rebates for bike use. Communities are putting in bicycle kiosks." However, there is only limited data to show that "we have bikeways to support this increase in bike use."
Continue reading “Bicycle Injuries in US (Maybe) Becoming More Severe”
October MBAC Meeting
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2009
6:00pm – 7:30pm
DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING CONFERENCE ROOM
417 E. FAYETTE ST, 8TH FLOOR
PLEASE BRING YOUR BIKES INSIDE!
WE’LL PREP FOR FRIDAY’S VERY IMPORTANT CITY COUNCIL HEARING! !!!
Please plan to attend if you would like to contribute on Friday.
Deadly car vs. bike accidents: Should they be a crime?
Susanne Scaringi died after her bicycle slammed into the side of a van that abruptly pulled in front of her. The driver had failed to yield.
The driver wasn’t drunk or using drugs, and didn’t commit a crime under state law. But should it be a criminal offense to commit a traffic infraction that results in someone’s death?
That’s one question the Cascade Bicycle Club wants to ask Wednesday during a Traffic Justice Summit to be held at City Hall. The club is proposing a new state law that would aim to protect bicyclists and pedestrians, and is inviting victims and the public to weigh in during the two-hour discussion.
The advocacy group is pushing for a "Vulnerable User Bill," which would expand Washington’s negligent driving law to include traffic infractions that result in death or serious injury to a cyclist or pedestrian, such as a fatal failure to yield. Such infractions then would become gross misdemeanors, punishable by up to a year in jail.
The proposal is the club’s top priority for the 2010 legislative session, said David Hill, Cascade’s advocacy director.
…
The appellate court overturned the law after ruling that it didn’t mesh with a state law that decriminalizes most minor traffic infractions.
"This isn’t about acts of God or things that are generally unavoidable. This is about when people deliberately ignore the parameters we have established for safe operation of what is a very dangerous appliance and it results in seriously bodily injury or death," he said.
Continue reading “Deadly car vs. bike accidents: Should they be a crime?”
Bikes and the bad-for-business rap (or not)
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As long as cities have been planning for bicycle traffic, business owners have complained that bike lanes, bike parking, and other bike-related facilities hurt their business. The thinking goes like this: Car access equals business success. Do anything to decrease that access — like remove car parking, narrow or remove car lanes for bikeways, or install traffic calming measures like medians or speed bumps — and the result is less business.
However, there are recent academic and real life examples that seem to prove that bike access is good for business.
A study based in Toronto and published by the Clean Air Partnership in February found that the removal of car parking and installation of a bike lane did not negatively impact merchants. The executive summary of that study stated:
“The spending habits of cyclists and pedestrians, their relatively high travel mode share, and the minimal impact on parking all demonstrate that merchants in this area are unlikely to be negatively affected by reallocating on‐street parking space to a bike lane. On the contrary, this change will likely increase commercial activity.”
…
Continue reading “Bikes and the bad-for-business rap (or not)”
Police search for dump truck driver after fatal hit-and-run
[Interesting comments compared to Baltimore’s fatal hit and run which supposedly was the cyclists fault.]
REDWOOD CITY — A 58-year-old woman was killed Wednesday morning after trying to squeeze past a truck making a right turn in Redwood Shores.
The cyclist, Mary Yonkers of San Mateo, died at the scene. Police are looking for the truck driver, who left the scene and likely entered the freeway.
“It’s unknown at this point if he’s even aware he struck anyone,” said Redwood City police Sgt. Kathryn Anderson.
Police received two 911 calls at 7:51 a.m. reporting the accident at the intersection of Shoreway Road and Holly Street.
Witnesses said Yonkers was riding southbound on the right side of the road alongside the truck on Shoreway Road.
As the vehicle, alternately described as a dump truck and a tractor-trailer with red paneling, began to turn right onto Holly Street, Yonkers attempted to squeeze past, Anderson said.
“The back part of the vehicle knocked her over and some part of the vehicle ran over her,” Anderson said.
The maneuver, while legal, was unsafe, she said.
“It depends on the length of the vehicle. Some have wide turning access. It’s a dangerous move,” she said.
Continue reading “Police search for dump truck driver after fatal hit-and-run”
America’s Transportation Leaders Embrace the East Coast Greenway
This week, our East Coast Greenway began to move from a solely grassroots initiative to a project also backed by the most important transportation institution in the country. We have great relationships with many of the state Departments of Transportation (DOTs), but achieving federal partnership interest will effect a huge leap in our ability to make our route safe and accessible to all.
It all started last week when our Mid-Atlantic Trail Coordinator Mike Oliva emailed a note to US DOT Deputy Secretary John Porcari. The note congratulated the Deputy Secretary on his appointment by Obama and mentioned that we would love to discuss our project with him. Deputy Secretary Porcari served as Secretary of the Maryland DOT before his federal appointment, so he had familiarity with our project and even worked with our Boardmember David Dionne in the state.
Porcari emailed us back the next day with an interest to meet. He saw the potential of the DOT supporting the East Coast Greenway as a pilot for establishing an interstate trail network nationwide. This past Monday, I got a call during a work trip in Rhode Island that the meeting was set for the next day, from 2:45-3:15 in the afternoon. The meeting grew to include Assistant Secretary of Policy, Polly Trottenberg, as well as DOT Chief Economist, Jack Wells.
Mike Oliva and I raced down to Washington Tuesday morning in our suits, enjoying the East Coast Greenway signs along The Mall on our way to the DOT West Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE. Once in the building, we were escorted up to the Deputy Secretary’s conference room.
Since Porcari had familiarity with sections of the East Coast Greenway in Maryland and of our overarching vision, he asked for an update on our progress and then we jumped into a brainstorming session on how the US DOT can get involved to ensure success for the project. This was inspiring. Obama had clearly hired a great crop of transportation leaders. They understand our transportation system must play its role in reducing carbon dioxide and other emissions, lowering our expensive dependence on foreign oil, and decreasing obesity rates that are hurting our people’s health.
Continue reading “America’s Transportation Leaders Embrace the East Coast Greenway”
Google – Your world, your map
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The best part about this new dataset is that we’ve been able to add a lot of new, detailed information to Google Maps – information that helps people better explore and get around the real world. For example, college students will be pleased to see maps of many campuses; and cyclists will now find many more trails and paths to explore. Soon we even plan on providing you with biking directions to take advantage of this new data.
Continue reading “Google – Your world, your map”
73mph "bicycle"
Bike Baltimore E-Newsletter, October 2009
Bike Baltimore ,
Vol. 1, Issue 4
Thank you for subscribing to the BIKE BALTIMORE e-newsletter distributed by
the Baltimore
City , Department of
Transportation. Here you will find the latest information regarding the
city’s efforts to make Baltimore
a safer and more enjoyable place to bike.
NEWS!
The Baltimore City
Council will conduct a hearing on
the
Equal Rights for Bikes Task Force
Friday, October
23rd at 12:30 pm.
Du Burns
Council Chamber, 4th floor, City Hall
While this Task Force is a good idea, the Department of
Transportation (DOT) and Mayor’s Bicycle Advisory Committee (MBAC) are
already fully engaged in many of its goals. DOT has since submitted a
list of other laws that would help improve cycling in
Baltimore : Complete Streets, mandatory
bike parking, Cyclists’ Bill of Rights among others
Please attend this important hearing to make
Baltimore a better place
to bike!
- The Mayor’s Bicycle Advisory Committee
will hold its next meeting on Tuesday, October 20th at 6pm in the Department
of Planning Conference Room ( 417
E. Fayette St , 8th Floor). If you want to have comments submitted to City
Council on the 23rd, please attend this MBAC meeting!
- The Baltimore Metropolitan
Council has completed the BICYCLE COMMUTER
RESOURCE GUIDE for the Baltimore Region. The guide
contains an array of information road rules, outfitting your bike, and
where to ride. The guide also contains information for employers on
how to encourage employees to commute by bike. The guide is now
available online.
- A map of the Park Heights Bicycle Network will soon
be availabe at the Bike Baltimore website.
- The on-street bike parking in
Charles Village will return
after St. Paul Street
is resurfaced within the coming months. Along with the bike
parking’s return will be new bike lanes!!!
- The bike lanes on Fallsway will be unavailable for a
couple days over the coming weeks as they will undergo
“improvements.”
- The biking community of
Baltimore welcomes Richard
Layman as the new bicycle pedestrian planner for
Baltimore County !
Richard will be developing the Western County Bike & Pedestrian Plan
as well as focused planning in the Towson
area.
BIKE EVENTS
- Tour du Port, Baltimore ‘s
premier bicycle event, took place October 4th with nearly 2000 riders!!!
Congratulations to Carol Silldorff and ONE LESS CAR on
the Tour’s success. All
proceeds from the Tour go directly to advancing the programs and advocacy
efforts of One Less Car, a non-profit dedicated to walking, bicycling and
mass transit in Maryland .
-
Baltimore‘s first CYCLOVIA
event will be Sunday, October 25th in Roland Park!!! Sponsored by
the Roland Park Civic League, Roland
Ave will be transformed into a temporary park
from 8am – 1 pm between Cold
Spring Lane and
Northern Parkway . For more
information or to volunteer, email Mike McQuestion at mike.mcquestion@gmail.com
- The
Southeast BIcycle Network
will be unveiled Wednesday, October 28th 6:30 pm at the Southeast Anchor
Library. See what new bike facilities will be coming to
Highlandtown, Canton ,
Fells Point, Little Italy and points in between.
- The
annual Baltimore Halloween Bike Ride
(Critical Mass) will take place on Friday, October 30th starting at the
Washington
Monument at 7pm.

These events and more can be found on the Bike
Baltimore website at www.baltimorecity.gov/bike


