As for O’Carroll’s case, he says Boston Police dismissed his complaint when he first approached them. But after his video of the confrontation made rounds on YouTube, police contacted him. A spokesperson tells us police are investigating and, “actively pursuing the driver.”
*********************************************************************
B’ Spokes: Rather shameful that police have to be guilted into action but at least for one cyclist there is a victory.
Read the full story (with the video:) https://boston.cbslocal.com/2011/09/15/helmet-camera-captures-carbike-confrontation-in-boston/
Cyclist Killed in Bowie ‘Was Stolen From Us’
from Bowie Patch
A funeral for Danielle Cooper, 24, of Bowie, will be held Saturday. The Crofton pet food store where she worked is taking up a collection to help Cooper’s family care for her orphaned animals.
…
According to a Gazette report, the 24-year-old was riding her bike along MD Route 3 when she was struck by a 2011 Chevy Malibu. Cahill said Cooper was taken to Prince George’s Hospital Center, where she later died.
…
Crunchies Collection for Cooper
Cahill is working with Cooper’s family to make sure they are able to take care of Danielle’s now orphaned pets. A collection jar and display dedicated to Danielle sits on a counter in Cruchies. The staff is taking up a collection to help Cooper’s brother buy food for her pets. The collection will continue for the next month at the store.
“She used to spend nearly $200 a month to feed her pets. Many of them had special needs,” said Cahill. She said some of the animals have food allergies and are on special diets.
Cahill said Cooper recently applied to the Maryland State Police Academy and Prince George’s County Police Department.
SPCA Memorial Donations
Funeral services for Danielle Cooper will be held Saturday afternoon at Beall Funeral Home in Bowie. The funeral home website says memorial donations can be made to the SPCA of Prince George’s County.
Continue reading “Cyclist Killed in Bowie ‘Was Stolen From Us’”
Bike thefts are on the rise in Southeast
By Mary Helen Sprecher – The Baltimore Guide
Bicycles are an economical way form of transit — until the cyclist has to buy a new bicycle to replace one that was stolen. A rash of bicycle thefts has taken place over the last two weeks in the Southeastern District.
In most cases, cycles were left unsecured and unattended. Many were last seen leaning against front steps or parked in back yards of houses. Some were left on car-mounted racks or in the back of pickups.
Police are reminding cyclists to invest in good locks, and to lock the bicycle through the frame rather than through a front wheel, which can be detached. Bicycles should be locked to a permanent structure, or (more likely to keep them safe) brought inside when not in use.
A sampling of the crimes are as follows….
https://baltimoreguide.com/http:/baltimoreguide.com/bike-thefts-are-on-the-rise-in-southeast/
Larry’s Ride and the Tour du Port!
Larry’s Ride – it’s Next Weekend – September 24th!

For the second year, Bike Maryland is teaming up with Tami Bensky and dedicated friends to promote bike safety and driver awareness in loving memory of Larry Bensky, Tami’s husband and a dedicated rider who was tragically killed two years ago on Butler Road in Baltimore County.
Please Click Here to Register!
Bike Maryland hosts the
18th Annual Tour du Port on October 9, 2011
Learn more about the Tour du Port and REGISTER HERE
Cyclists choose from 13, 23, 40, 50 and 65 mile routes.
All proceeds support bike advocacy and awareness in Maryland.
Save the date, get the discounted rate
register by September 22nd.

Learn more about the Tour du Port and REGISTER HERE
2010 Tour du Port images – credit Photos in Motion
In the Public Interest: Americans Are Driving Less. Washington Should Pay Attention.
by Tony Dutzik – Huffington Post
A few years ago, a strange thing happened: Americans started driving less.
How strange was it? For 60 years, up until 2005, the number of miles driven on America’s roads increased by an average of 3.7 percent per year – that’s more than twice as fast as population growth. Today, however, Americans are driving just about as much as we did six years ago overall. And on a per-capita basis, as researchers from the Brookings Institution have pointed out, the number of miles driven actually peaked a decade ago.
As President Obama and Congress debate infrastructure investments – both as part of the president’s jobs strategy and the ongoing debate over reauthorization of the transportation bill – it is important to know whether the trend away from ever-increasing amounts of driving is real or a temporary blip. If the trend is real, it would suggest that our transportation policies – the broad outlines of which were established when "Leave It to Beaver" was on TV and America still produced most of its own oil – need a serious rewrite for the 21st century.
…
Some cultural observers suggest that these trends are part of a larger generational shift – one in which digital connectivity trumps horsepower, and iPads and Androids take the place of an earlier generation’s ’57 Chevys as symbols of consumer aspiration and freedom.
Other factors are at work as well. The easy mortgage credit that once financed the construction of McMansions in auto-oriented exurbs is gone.
…
Gasoline prices aren’t going down any time soon. And more Americans continue to look for opportunities to walk or bike where they need to go – both to save money and to enjoy better health.
…
Why then is Washington arguing about how much to spend building our grandfather’s transportation network?
…
Continue reading “In the Public Interest: Americans Are Driving Less. Washington Should Pay Attention.”
Two Bike Maryland Events
[B’ Spokes: Seriously folks, advocacy does not happen by itself, register for these events. Thanks!]
Larry’s Ride and Run – September 24th – A Premier Baltimore County Bicycle Tour
Pump up those tires and lace up those sneakers, Larry’s Ride and Run is back for its second year and will be held at Spring Meadow Farms (Baltimore County) on Saturday, September 24, 2011. Larry’s Ride and Run continues to honor avid biker Larry Bensky who tragically lost his life while biking in 2010. This year’s event includes new bike routes and a 3.6 mile run that meanders through scenic Baltimore County. Following the bike rides and run, celebration activities will including a lunch and music for all registered participants attending the event, including non-bikers and non-runners. All friends and family are welcome to attend, participate and enjoy the day! Register Here – https://bikemd.org/page.php?id=409
Tour du Port – October 9th – Registration is Open – Save the Date and Get the Discounted Rate!
TOUR DU PORT – Canton Waterfront Park (Baltimore City) – A Super Cool Bicycling Event Promoting a Terrific Cause – Bicycling!
Register Here – https://bikemd.org/page.php?id=398
During the Tour du Port you will experience Baltimore’s historic neighborhoods, waterfront areas and beautiful parks in a way that can’t be experienced from the seat of your car. Tour du Port is a superb way to intimately tour Baltimore. Routes: 13 to a new 65 ride! This fully supported tour includes lunch,
refreshments at rest stops and a post-ride celebration with live music at Tour’s end.
House Prepares to Vote on Extension, Coburn Will Try to Kill Bike/Ped
My money is on that he will fail but if you want to read more:
https://dc.streetsblog.org/2011/09/13/house-prepares-to-vote-on-extension-coburn-will-try-to-kill-bikeped/
Drivers smash the illusion that we’re a rational society
By MARKUS MANNHEIM
Not long after Henry Ford drove the car into mainstream American life, a new area of psychology began to flourish. Its aim, in layman’s terms, was to understand why apparently normal people become complete arseholes behind a steering wheel. Leon Brody’s 1955 book, The psychology of problem drivers, concluded that ”problem drivers are problem people; or rather, people with problems, including problems of which they often are not aware”. Until then, researchers had believed most crashes were caused by physical shortcomings such as slow reflexes, poor eyesight and glare-recovery time. But, as Herbert Stack wrote in the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine in 1956, ”[In] all of our studies, these characteristics have been found to have little significance. The real causes of accidents are far more deep-seated. They have to do with our attitudes, our emotions, and our judgments.”
We don’t need to read this in journals; it’s evident to any observant driver, even on Canberra’s comparatively calm roads. Once inside a car, a harsh self-interest replaces many civilians’ usual willingness to co-operate. Driving becomes less a means of travelling efficiently than a competition to get ahead of nearby ”rivals”. We throw caution out the window in favour of cutting our journeys by seconds. Drivers who are mild mannered in all other aspects of life become enraged by the perceived slights of other motorists (and especially cyclists). And almost no one respects basic road rules such as speed limits and the requirement to indicate; somehow, when we’re in a car, these laws become optional.
Why the transformation? Tom Vanderbilt, the author of the best seller Traffic, suggests many reasons. But among the most important is that we often drive alone, and we opt to cut out external reminders (such as sounds) of the people around us. ”[We] think of traffic as an abstraction, a grouping of things rather than a collection of individuals. We talk about ‘beating the traffic’ or ‘getting stuck in traffic’, but we never talk in polite company, at least about ‘beating people’ or ‘getting stuck in people’.” For some people, driving is as surreal as a video game.
This week, talkback radio was alive with indignation as Canberrans discussed the prospect of paying a toll on the Majura Parkway. It became apparent that drivers’ lack of reason extends well beyond the confines of their cars to any road-related discussion. Caller after caller pleaded emotionally that they had already paid for the roads they use through registration fees and fuel excises. It’s a fallacy often repeated and just as often debunked. Still, let’s try again.
In 2006-07, the Federal Government collected about $14billion in fuel excises, but returned about $4billion in tax credits. Also that year, the states and territories garnered $6billion in rego fees, car stamp duties, insurance levies, parking charges and so on. So, all up, motorists directly forked out $16billion in 2006-07. In the same year, governments spent about $12billion building roads and bridges.
So drivers do pay their way? Not quite, because roads and cars create vast economic externalities; costs that the taxpayer usually wears because no one else will. The Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics estimates the social costs of road crashes alone in 2006 was about $18billion; expenses such as health care and rehabilitation, damaged infrastructure, legal bills and emergency services. The bureau also estimates that congestion cost about $10billion in 2006, mostly as a result of lost productivity. And then there’s the lost value of the public land on which roads are built: vast stretches of tarmac put to relatively unproductive use, criss-crossing Australia’s prime real estate.
In other words, driving is a highly-subsidised privilege; not a right that we have purchased. It’s worth remembering next time we feel a whine, or a rage, coming on.
Continue reading “Drivers smash the illusion that we’re a rational society”
Attacking the Obesity Epidemic by First Figuring Out Its Cause
By JANE E. BRODY – New York Times
If you have gained a lot of unwanted pounds at any time during the last 30-odd years, you may be relieved to know that you are probably not to blame. At least not entirely.
Many environmental forces, from economic interests of the food and beverage industries to the way our cities and towns are built, have conspired to subvert the body’s natural ability to match calories in with calories out.
And the solution to the nation’s most pressing health problem — the ever-rising epidemic of overweight and obesity at all ages — lies in the answer to this question: Why did this happen in the first place?
…
What Changed?
When I was growing up in the 1940s and ’50s, I had to walk or bike many blocks to buy an ice cream cone.
…
Continue reading “Attacking the Obesity Epidemic by First Figuring Out Its Cause”
The StayLocked Bicycle is unridable when the locking mechanism is broken.
From Wired
…
The locking mechanism comprises a section of the seatstays — the two tubes that extend up to the seat from the rear wheel. Leinonen installed a universal joint at the junction of the tube and latches in the stays to secure it to the frame.
The locking section of the frame swings to secure your bike to a meter, post. Should an ignorant criminal break the lock, the chain stays — those tubes extending from the rear wheel to the crank — won’t support a rider’s weight. The bike will collapse as the thief tries to ride off with the plunder. Unfortunately, whether the culprit realizes the destruction before or after breaking the lock, all parties are left without a bike.
…
Continue reading “The StayLocked Bicycle is unridable when the locking mechanism is broken.”
