Bike advocate sees positive signs at MDOT

From Getting There by Michael Dresser

The Maryland Department of Transportation is becoming increasingly aware to bicycle riders’ issues and responsive to their concerns, according to a delegate who has been a champion of bike-related issues in recent years.

Del. Jon Cardin, a Baltimore County Democrat, told Bike Maryland’s annual Bicycle Symposium Tuesday, that he has seen positive policy moves coming out of the department and its agencies. Cradin said he has been informed that the Motor Vehicle Administration has decided to include six bike safety questions on the exam drivers must take to receive their licenses.

Cardin, himself a bike rider, also said the State Highway Administration has adopted a policy under which it will incorporate improvements for bicycles — bike lane additions, lane striping for bicycles or improved signage — in every road repaving project where its is not physically impossible.

We have calls in to the two agencies to see what they have to say.
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Auto manslaughter bill draws emotional testimony

from Getting There by Michael Dresser
Widows and parents of Marylanders who were killed on the state’s roads pleaded with state lawmakers yesterday to give the victims of future traffic crashes a measure of justice they believe was denied their family members under the state’s difficult standard for holding drivers criminally accountable for fatalities.

In an emotionally charged hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, survivors of crash victims urged passage of a bill that would create an intermediate offense between traffic charges a defendant can pay be mail and a full-blown prosecution for felony manslaughter.

The bill under consideration would create a misdemeanor offense known as “manslaughter by vehicle or vessel – criminal negligence” – with a potential penalty of three years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

Though the support from more than 20 witnesses was virtually unanimous, the bill’s sponsor was far from optimistic about its prospects. He noted that for many years virtually identical bills have been brought before the committee only to die without a vote in the drawer of Chairman Joseph F. Vallario Jr.

That history brought the most dramatic moment of the hearing as Ed Kohls, a Reisterstown man who lost his 15-year-old son Connor in a crash that resulted in a $1,200 fine for the reckless driver who killed him, expressed his anger directly to an impassive Vallario, a Prince George’s County Democrat.

“We are furious that this bill has not been allowed to come to a vote,” Kohls said. “It seems that you are telling us that Connor’s life is worth noting more than $1,200.”

Kohls was joined in supporting the bill by grieving survivors including Weida Stoecker, a northern Baltimore County woman whose husband was killed by a negligent 17-year-old driver in 2007, and Lori Moser, widow of a State Highway Administration worker whose husband was killed at a work zone near Fredrick that same year.

The drivers found to be at fault in both cases resolved their cases by paying traffic fines.

Also testifying were Tamara Bensky of Owings Mills and Kenniss Henry of Prince Georges County, whose husband and daughter respectively were killed by motorists while bicycling.

Bensky choked back tears as she told lawmakers about her final, routine goodbye to her husband, Larry Bensky, last April 6, the day he was hit and killed while bicycling along Butler Road in Baltimore County.

"Never in a million years did I think I would end that day as a widow — a mother alone with two little girls," she said. Bensky told the panel the driver of the vehicle that killed her husband paid a fine of $507.50 for traffic charges and received three points.

Also supporting the bill are prosecutors, bicyclists’ advocates and AAA Mid-Atlantic.

The challenge for lawmakers has been to find a formulation that gives prosecutors a tool to go after drivers whose driving lapses are more serious than typical traffic offenses but that do not rise to the level of “wanton and willful disregard for human life” – a standard that courts have restricted to cases involving drunk driving or extreme speeding.

“This is an impossibly high standard to meet in many prosecutions,” said Del. Luiz R. S. Simmons, the bill’s lead sponsor and a Montgomery County Democrat.

Simmons said his legislation explicitly states that common negligence alone would not be grounds for prosecution under the proposed statute. He said his bill would create a standard he called “substantial negligence” – defined in the bill as “a substantial deviation from the standard of care that would be exercised by a reasonable person.”

Simmons said Maryland’s current law is more lenient on drivers at fault in fatal cases than all but a handful of states. He said the language he is proposing has been in the books in 27 other states – including New York, Texas and Connecticut – for many years without being abused by prosecutors.

Despite the overwhelmingly favorable testimony on the bill, Simmons seemed pessimistic about the outcome.

“I don’t have any false illusions,” he said.

Continue reading “Auto manslaughter bill draws emotional testimony”

Mount Pleasant Bike Swap – DC

from TheWashCycle by washcycle
From the organizers:
"DC Bike Swap 2011 Saturday March 26th, Noon till 2pm.
We will be setting up in Lamont Plaza in Mount Pleasant DC.
Mount Pleasant Street and Lamont Street.
Across From Heller’s Bakery
There are no costs or overhead. There will be mechanics and others to assist your shopping. Feel free to bring bikes, tools, parts, accessories, bike art, food, books, movies, etc.
Please drop us a line (rhyswest@yahoo.com) to let us know if you intend to bring anything to swap.
(Tables and blankets are great for display).
Tell your friends, come get brunch, volunteer for the Farmers Market Bike Clinic
Coops (Bloomingdale, Glover Park, 14th and U, Mount Pleasant), The Bike House, DDOT’s Bike Ambassador or any other DC bike programs. Learn about Cabi, DC’s bikeshare (Biggest in the nation). Learn about local bike shops, great rides, etc.
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Nathan Krasnopoler March 6, 2011 Update 3:00 pm

Nathan continues to take very small steps of improvement. He is in a coma, but is in stable condition. Not much change in his responsiveness, but some small signs. The good news is that he was taken off the ventilator today and is breathing on his own! He does have a trach. collar to provide humidified and oxygen enriched air (sort of like an oxygen mask except around his tracheostomy).
— Mitchell

Contributory Negligence

From the TheLegislative Wrap-Up

Maryland’s current common law doctrine of contributory negligence standard bars a plaintiff from receiving any damages for an injury if the plaintiff’s own negligence contributed in any way to the harm. Maryland is one of five jurisdictions, along with Virginia, Alabama, North Carolina, and the District of Columbia, that retains this doctrine. Forty-six states follow the doctrine of comparative negligence, under which a plaintiff’s recovery can be reduced if the plaintiff was partially at fault. The Maryland Judiciary recently began a study regarding the process and consequences of changing the Maryland standard from contributory negligence to comparative negligence through judicial action.

An emergency bill, The Maryland Contributory Negligence Act (HB 1129), codifies the contributory negligence standard so that it remains an affirmative defense that may be raised by a party being sued for damages for wrongful death, personal injury, or property damage.
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This is sort of the official summary of the Legislative Session so far. I find it a bit strange that this got coverage and our HB 363 “Manslaughter by Vehicle or Vessel – Criminal Negligence did not.
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The conservative case for transportation is bifurcated and all mixed up

from Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space by Richard Layman

Second, myriad subsidies of automobile-oriented land use and automobile-use itself exist throughout the "market system" but are not acknowledged and identified but taken for granted by so-called market proponents.
For example, roads are subsidized to the tune of 50% from general funds, from funds other than those generated by automobile registration fees, federal and local gasoline excise taxes, and tolls.
Gasoline is subsidized to the tune of $4-$5/per gallon in terms of the development, environmental, and military costs that a separated use, automobile-centric transportation and land use paradigm imposes on the system.
Third, not paying for these subsidies is increasingly bankrupting government, and supports the rise of China and other countries at the expense of the U.S. As Thomas Friedman writes in the New York Times, in "If Not Now, When?":

Continue reading “The conservative case for transportation is bifurcated and all mixed up”

Subliminal messaging?

"Krasnopoler ran into the front passenger side of the car and landed in front of the car."

Reads one paragraph from the ABC news coverage. But don’t get so excited, if you take the paragraph above and remover the paragraph break it reads rather fairly:

"According to police, 20-year-old Nathan Krasnopoler was riding his bicycle last Saturday afternoon in a bike lane on W. University Parkway when an 83-year-old woman driving the same direction passed Krasnopoler and turned right into a driveway, crossing over the bike lane in the process. Krasnopoler ran into the front passenger side of the car and landed in front of the car."

I’m not sure there is a point to the errant paragraph break but without it it is a fair summary of the accident.

(Why do newspapers overly stress one sentence paragraphs anyway?)
Continue reading “Subliminal messaging?”

Cyclist Attacked After Asking Driver To ‘Put Phone Away’

DEKALB COUNTY, Ga. — A father and daughter are accused of assaulting a 13-year-old cyclist after he told them to watch out for cyclists on the road.

Hartley, a competitive cyclist who trains every day with a daily 10-mile round trip, said a white pickup truck came within a foot of him and passed by. Hartley said he met up with the truck at the next stop light and noticed the driver looking at his phone and texting.
"I just tapped him and said, ‘You almost hit me back there. Could you put the phone away?’ And he told me, ‘Pull over.’ He was going to talk to me," Brody Hartley said.
Brody said he pulled over at a gas station just up the road and pickup truck driver, 45-year old William Tinnell, got out of the vehicle, enraged.
“He was just saying I shouldn’t be on the road, it’s not a vehicle. I shouldn’t be on the road because I’m a kid," Hartley said.

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