BTA Oregon Provides Free Online Bike-Ped Curriculum

By
Jeremy Grandstaff
on April 30, 2010

imageTeaching the next generation about the benefits of bicycling and walking just got easier for Oregon educators.

The Bicycle Transportation Alliance (BTA) and Oregon Safe Routes to School have partnered to develop and produce the Neighborhood Navigators curriculum, and they are now distributing it online, free of charge to educators.

Focusing on efficient and healthy transportation choices, pedestrian safety, and community and neighborhood design, the curriculum includes age-appropriate lessons and skill practice activities for students in kindergarten through eighth grade.

For more information and to access the Neighborhood Navigators curriculum, visit BTA at https://www.bta4bikes.org.

Image from Neighborhood Navigators Grades 4-5 Curriculum
Article courtesy of Jacob Knight

Continue reading “BTA Oregon Provides Free Online Bike-Ped Curriculum”

Let’s get everyone on the same page on bike safety OK?

Re: WJZ Pedestrian & Bike Accidents Rise In Baltimore Co.report

According to the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) there are three Es of highway safety Engineering, Enforcement and Education. And in regards to the last two, this report is a miserable failure. I would hope at least during National Bike Month some attention to educating the general public about bicycle safety would have some priority. But when the police cannot even properly summarize the bicycle laws and imply that a vehicle that was rear ended was at fault via made up rules… well I am outraged as they are doing a great public disservice.

Do we say that a motorist that rear ends another motorist is not at
fault because the other driver was not wearing a seat-belt (which is
required by law)? Why then is a cyclists not wearing a helmet (which is
not required by law) relieves the rear-ender of fault? How can the lack
of a helmet cause
an accident? There are better ways to say riding with a helmet is
recommended then implying cyclists are at fault if they are not wearing
one.

As far as the cyclist riding in the middle of the lane and the Baltimore County Police implying that it is illegal to do so  Maryland Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee issued a resolution to advise State Police on their policy of reporting bicycle fatalities which I quote in part:

2. If it is necessary to ride in the main roadway, the Maryland law that generally
requires riding as far to the right as practicable does not apply if the lane is too narrow to accommodate both a cyclist and a motor vehicle passing the cyclists safely. Under such circumstances, the cyclist has the right to ride in the center of the travel lane and it is often a good practice to do so. …


3. Public statements by law enforcement personnel about bicycle-motor Vehicle crashes while an investigation is still ongoing should be even-handed. If a public statement mentions a possible fault by the cyclist, it ought to mention possible fault by the motorist. Statements about laws that may have been violated should also mention the possibility that a statutory exception is applicable.

Even MDOT’s bicycling safety video recommends riding in the middle of the lane when the lane is too narrow to share (which most lanes
are.) You can find this on One Less Car’s web site https://www.onelesscar.org/page.php?id=182

Which
has a link to The Law Officer’s Guide to Bicycle Safety as well as
Maryland’s Department of Transportation Competence & Confidence: A
Bicycling Guide for Adults video (in 5 parts) and I will strongly
recommend watching the Roadway Riding section.

Propagating false and misleading information with an anti-cycling bias during National Bike Month is unconscionable in my book. I am not trying to imply cyclists are angels but neither are motorists (ever heard of the problem of distracted driving?,) we are all human both good and bad. So far I have observed In locations where police are
trained in bike laws the “at fault” statistic comes out to be nearly matched between cyclists and motorists. And there is an ever increasing evidence where the “at fault” statistic is skewed toward cyclists it is because of an anti-cycling bias and the police are making up rules as shown in this report. All we ask is to be treated fairly when it comes to enforcing the laws and when making public statements about cyclists.

In the past when I have written under my former capacity as the Advocacy Chair of the Baltimore Bicycling Club the Baltimore County Police have responded favorably, I hope that trend continues. I have coped the International Police Mountain Bike Association so you can find out more about their training and perhaps contact your officers that have completed this training and get their assessment of this unfortunate crash. Even Baltimore City is considering:

09-0175R
Police and
Bicyclists
Calls for training of
police officers to respond to
bike accidents in informed manner, to systematically file reports on
bike-involved accidents and to foster improved relations between BPD
and the
bicycling community.

Is such a thing really too much to ask of Baltimore County and Baltimore County Police?

In the spirit of National Bike Month and the soon to be Bike to Work Day some effort to clarify cyclists rights and duties would be appreciated including cyclists right to ride in the middle of the lane. If we could just get everyone to take a chill pill and realize a few seconds is no big deal and focus on being considerate of one another rather then trying to constantly assert my hurry matters more then your hurry, things would vastly improve for
everyone.

Thanks,

Continue reading “Let’s get everyone on the same page on bike safety OK?”

Jewish Baltimore on Wheels

Sunday, May 30, 2010 – 10:00 – 14:00

(Please note this RESCHEDULED date! The event on 4/25 was postponed due to inclement weather.)

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!

Jewish Baltimore on Wheels
Bicycle Tour

10:00 a.m – 2:00 p.m.
JMM members and non-members: $20.00

See Baltimore from a new vantage point as we cycle through streets that were once quintessentially Jewish, and discover how they’ve changed over the years. We’ll stop in at some 19th century synagogues, some still used for worship, and others now used in different ways. The trip concludes with a visit to the JMM and a tour of our historic synagogues. Lunch is on your own at Attmans, the oldest remaining Jewish deli on Lombard Street. 

The tour leaves from the JMM at 10 a.m. Free parking is available. The tour is approximately 12 miles and is mostly flat. Participants must be at least 12 years of age. Pre-registration and advance payment required.

Laws give pedal power to the people

Like it or not, bicycles are here to stay – deal with it

By Michael Dresser – Baltimore Sun

Michael Harris of Catonsville is a serious bicycle enthusiast, 56 years old, who races with an Annapolis team and trains on a 33-mile course in the Baltimore suburbs. After reading last week’s column about bicyclist-motorist interactions, he sent me this account of a recent ride on semi-rural Landing Road in Howard County:

As I was approaching the intersection of Ilchester Road a group of young men in a 4-door Jeep came within 6 inches of my handlebars. One jerk yelled in my ear an obscenity as the vehicle passed by. I could hear the laughs as they came to a halt at the intersection.

As I found out later when I caught up to (another) group of racers, a few of them were abused in the same fashion as the car blew by. Are our driving schools, these kids’ parents not educating the young about sharing the road?

udging by some of the reaction to last week’s column, no. In fact, parents might be a big part of the problem. Many older motorists, it seems, have some quaint but somewhat delusional ideas about life, logic and the rules of the road. The young gentlemen in the Jeep could very well have cultivated their attitudes about bicyclists while sitting in the passenger seat of the family car.

Quite a few readers objected to the column’s suggestion that motorists quit bellyaching and learn to give bicycles the 3-foot berth required by a newly passed bill. Several recounted anecdotes about occasions when they witnessed misconduct by bicyclists and attributed that behavior to everyone on a bike. Their conclusion: Bicyclists should be banished from roads that just happen to be near where these motorists live and drive.

Let us apply that reasoning to the circumstances encountered by Harris: Young men in a Jeep misbehaved on a country road. Therefore all Jeep drivers – no, make it all SUV drivers — are hooligans. So let’s ban all SUVs from country roads. Ridiculous? Absolutely. But many folks in cars seem perfectly willing to apply that tortured logic to bicyclists.

Continue reading “Laws give pedal power to the people”

Turning battered bikes into forensic dramas

By Patrick May

And each little scar on the mountain bike’s tortured frame is a clue for the bike detective trying to solve this mystery: How exactly did the guy riding this thing through a San Francisco intersection come to die?
"This bike is a little snapshot of time," says LaRiviere, 52, a self-taught, self-described "bike nut" who has built a national reputation reconstructing bicycle accidents in legal cases. Through a prism of scrapes, nicks and tire bruises, he sees this particular tragedy on instant replay: "The cyclist saw the semi-truck turning in front of him. He had three-quarters of a second to turn the bike to the right. The truck driver didn’t see him."
The witness who said the bike ran into the truck was wrong, says LaRiviere, taking another midafternoon sip of his Coors Light. Evidence at the scene and damage to the bike contradict that. As the trucker cut him off, the cyclist "was pedaling for his life."
Turning battered aluminum and shredded rubber into plot points in forensic dramas, LaRiviere has worked on more than 700 cases in the past 28 years, testifying before juries, fact-finding his way through product-liability claims, and helping his clients piece together that split-second chain of events leading to a bicycle-involved injury or death.

Continue reading “Turning battered bikes into forensic dramas”

Driver Revved Up Engine To Hit Cyclists a Second Time

Bicyclist Says Woman Tried To Run Him Over
Witnesses Corroborate Cyclist’s Story, Saying Driver Revved Up Engine To Hit Man Intentionally

By Vince Gerasole

CHICAGO (CBS) – She hit him with her car, backed up, and went after him again. That’s how a local bicyclist describes what happened to him when he got into an argument with a woman on the road. Tonight, his bike is just a warped pile of metal. As CBS 2’s Vince Gerasole reports, police have a license plate number, but the driver’s still out there.

His bike may be in pieces, but Tim Heath is lucky he’s not.

"When someone is clearly, intentionally revving up to run you over, that’s really intimidating," said Heath.

As Heath tells it, he got into a spat over lane space with a female motorist at the corner of Milwaukee and Diversey.

"She had already tried to cut me off earlier," said Heath.

The twisted story of what happened next seems classic road rage.

"At that point, she got really aggravated, and started yelling and screaming, and threatening that she was gonna run me over," said Heath. "She came blasting forward, and luckily I had this bike between me and her, and the bike took the beating."

Continue reading “Driver Revved Up Engine To Hit Cyclists a Second Time”

Um, bike infrastructure is a funding priority….right? So please attend.

Baltimore City Council Taxpayers Night

will be held on

MONDAY, MAY 10, 2010

6:00 pm

at the

War Memorial Building

(Enter from Lexington Street, just east of Gay.)

 

Citizens are invited to sign-in and speak-up

about your funding priorities.

Sign-in usually begins at 5:30 pm.

(Please be sure to have picture ID.)

 

Metered parking is available “under the Expressway,”

at Gay & Saratoga, where the Sunday Farmers Market is held.

 

Thanks.

Mary Pat

 

Baltimore cyclists at City Hall applaud bills, tell horror stories . . . and search for bike racks?

via Baltimore Brew

Bike locked to handrail outside Baltimore City Hall during Thursday’s bike bill hearing.

story and photos by FERN SHEN

Baltimore bicyclists packed City Council chambers Thursday afternoon to support five pending bills designed to make Baltimore friendlier toward bikes . . . and to tell them some grim anecdotes to illustrate why city cyclists need such help.

“A couple of drivers were yelling and so angry at me — they were threatening to get out of their car and physically push me off the road,” said Rachel Wilkinson, who said when this happened she was riding her bike on a presumably safe stretch of 33rd Street, a place where there was a “sharrow,” one of those cyclist silhouettes on the road surface.

“They were screaming and hollering and pulling their car up, as if to hit me,” Wilkinson said, outside the hearing. “It was terrifying. If I hadn’t been a woman, I think, they would have beaten me up.”

The hearing itself was a good illustration of how far Baltimore has to go before it is a bike-y city: there were so few bike racks outside City Hall that bikes were locked to park benches and outdoor stairway handrails.

Thursday’s meeting of the Community Development Subcommittee was chaired by Council member William H. Cole IV and prominently featured the bills’ chief sponsor, council member Mary Pat Clarke.

The bills are:

Bike-safe Grates (09-0431) – This would require that any street projects involving new drainage grates use bike-safe grates, ie., the kind with openings set at an angle so bike tires won’t get stuck in them.
Bike Lanes (09-0430) – This would standardize the lane size and surface markings and signage for bike lanes and establish a $50 fine for parking in a bike lane.

Parking for Bicycles(09-0429) – This requires bike racks in new developments and allows developers to reduce the vehicle parking spaces in return for installing bike spaces.
Police Issues (09-0175R)- A resolution calling on city police to work with the council to improve relations with the cycling community, including encouraging them to file reports on bicycle-involved crashes.
Complete Streets (09-0433)- A resolution calling for the city to adopt a nationally recognized set of principles for urban planners known as “complete streets,” which means designing for pedestrians, public transportation and bicyclists, as well as cars.

During bike bill hearing, the two racks like this outside City Hall were full…….

….so cyclists had to park like this! (photo by Fern Shen)

Clarke said she was glad to see a big turnout from the bike community; they have collected more than 1,000 signatures in support of the bills. Bicycle advocates have made gains lately, with the passage of the three-foot bill in Annapolis during the past legislative session.

But Clarke was none too thrilled – and some cyclists’ jaws dropped – at the news that Segways and motor scooters might, under state law, have to be allowed to use the bike lanes. Clarke asked a representative from the city law department to try to draft language of the bike lane bill so that it does not explicitly allow Segways and scooters.

Jamie Kendrick, the city’s deputy transportation director, said encouraging bikes was part of his department evolving to be more “multi-modal” and cited their establishment of a new position for a “pedestrian and bicycle planner” (Nate Evans), their installation of 42 new bike racks around the city this year and progress on a bicycle sharing program.

Spokes-people spoke

Bike advocates were generally eager to applaud the bills and convey to all how committed they are to a bike-powered lifestyle.

“I’ve lived here since 1994 and I commute to downtown every day, all year long, in every kind of weather,” said Joanne Stato, who estimated that her daily three-mile round trip commute saves her $100/month in parking fees. “It’s good to get exercise. It’s wonderful for my state of mind.”

What Stato doesn’t like, she said, are the people who do not respect the bike lane at the Inner Harbor: “taxis, police and emergency vehicles, motorists and clueless people who park in the bike lane.”

She also complained about a weird situation the Brew flagged back in November: the weird bike AND BUS lane on Pratt Street. “I don’t know who ever thought of bicycles and buses sharing a lane,” Stato said, “but it’s crazy, it’s scary, it’s dangerous!”

Amanda Meyers said she moved to Baltimore 15 months ago from New York City and sees making the city safer and easier to bike in as an urgent need for Baltimore “if we have any hopes of attracting young professionals.”
“I have so many friends who have moved to the city and are on the fence about staying here and bike lanes and things like that are actually important to them,” she said.

Bike people being used?

Perhaps the only person who came to the meeting with anything negative to say about the bills was Joan Floyd, of the Remington Neighborhood Alliance. Floyd buttonholed Clarke before the hearing and said the bike rack bill, 09-0429, “has big problems.”

The issue? Floyd was strongly opposed to the bill’s “offset” provision, the formula which would allow developers to reduce the number of vehicle parking spaces in exchange for bike rack spots.

“This bill looks like it was written by developers,” she said. “The bicycle people are being used.”

The issue never got aired out because, indeed — as Floyd said before the hearing, and Cole pointed out during the hearing — the bill essentially proposes a change in zoning law which means it must be advertised as such (it wasn’t) and approved by the Planning Commission (it hasn’t been. So it was yanked from consideration for the moment.

Continue reading “Baltimore cyclists at City Hall applaud bills, tell horror stories . . . and search for bike racks?”