PCH Workshop next Wednesday, trial in Magnus White death continues, and pediatric e-micro mobility injuries climb

Day 93 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Caltrans forwards word that the upcoming PCH Master Plan Feasibility Study Workshop will take place a little earlier than planned.

Please be advised that the upcoming April 9th meeting at the Malibu City Hall will now start at 5:30 PM instead of 6:00 PM. This extra time is an open house period to provide more opportunities for attendees to review project information displays and ask Caltrans staff questions.

Thank you for your time, and we’re excited to have you at the event!

PCH photo from Caltrans press release.

………

More heartbreaking testimony in the death of US National Team junior cyclist Magnus White.

Day three in the reckless driving trial of Yeva Smilianska featured more descriptions of the crash that killed the 17-year old White, as a forensic investigator estimated that White went from 25 mph to 55 in “milliseconds” when Smilianska rear-ended him.

Another bicyclist who was following White on that “perfect” Boulder, Colorado day two years ago reported seeing the recent Ukrainian immigrant’s car strike White’s bicycle so quickly he would have had no chance to react.

He also said he gave up bicycling after what he saw that day.

The other notable piece of news came from a police investigator who said the woman Smilianska was with the night before the crash told him neither of the women drank because she wouldn’t allow alcohol in her house, and both got six hours of sleep the morning of the crash.

Yet examination of Smilianska’s phone showed video of her taking a drink out of a tumbler, as her friend asks if that’s whiskey. Smilianska said yes, nodding, and the friend took a drink herself, contradicting her earlier comments to the police.

And yes, once again prosecutors showed photos depicting the crash, this time White’s bloodied bike helmet. So make sure that’s something you really want to see before you click on the link.

………

A new report in the medical journal JAMA shows ebike injuries among children and teens jumped from 751 in 2017 to 23,493 in 2022, while e-scooter injuries climbed from 8,566 in 2017 to 56,847 in 2022 — likely more reflective of the climb in ridership rather than an increase in risk.

That was demonstrated by a crash in Orange Tuesday night, when two teens riding an e-scooter were critically injured when they slammed into the side of a Tesla while riding upstream on the wrong side of the road.

A tragic reminder that it’s not what you ride, but how that matters.

Thanks to Arthur W Bauer for the Orange heads-up.

………

Doris Day was one of us.

Actress, singer, and bike lover Doris Day riding her bicycle around Beverly Hills. The license plate reads, "This vehicle is smog free."Happy #BicycleBirthday, Doris!April 3 (1922-2019)

Cool Bike Art (@coolbikeart1.bsky.social) 2025-04-03T04:00:08.526Z

……….

Norm Bradwell forwards the clearest view yet of the remarkable changes underway in Paris, with the transformation of the iconic and formerly car-clogged Rue de Rivoli.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps going on.   

No bias here. ESPN sportscaster Randy Scott posted video of a group of “sad” bicyclists riding single file while politely hugging the shoulder, saying “These monsters must be stopped” because they made him slow down a little bit. Never mind that he’s the one who could be breaking the law by using a handheld cellphone to record the video, or that he crashed his own car into a concrete barrier last year, without the help of anyone on two wheels.

Click here for the video if Elon is still screwing with embedded X/Twitter posts.

………

Local 

Culver City will host the final walking tour this Saturday to help develop the city’s new Complete Streets Design Standards. Actually, all they have to do is go back to the MOVE Culver City Complete Streets project. You know, before they ripped it out. 

So, am I the only one who thinks the Long Beach Grand Prix should include a bike race on the closed circuit course for us two-wheeled racing fans?

 

State

San Diego authorities are offering a $1,000 reward for the driver of a gray Mercedes E-Class sedan who fled the scene after killing an ebike rider in the city’s Clairemont neighborhood last week.

Chula Vista opened a new 39-acre bay front park, compete with two-and-a-half miles of walking and biking trails.

This is who we share the road with. A road-raging Riverside driver knocked a motorcyclist off his bike and dragged him with his car following an argument, in a crash captured on helmet cam.

They get it. The Planning Commission in the Sonoma County town of Windsor says walking and biking should be as easy, pleasant and natural as driving. Although driving may be the norm in the US, but there’s nothing natural about it.

 

National

No surprise here, as a new study of 14 small to mid-sized U.S. cities shows that bicycle-friendly cities are safer for everyone. Yes, even the people in the big, dangerous machines.

The Motorcycle Safety Foundation and People For Bikes are launching the eBike eCourse to help improve safety and riding skills for people on ebikes, presumably with or without pedals.

Escape drops their paywall to consider what Rad Power and VanMoof got wrong, and what can be learned from the fall of the two iconic ebike brands.

Momentum suggests taking advantage of Trump’s “Liberation Day” to liberate yourself from driving by riding a bicycle.

Bicycling posts their favorite bikes of the year. But you’ll need a subscription to click on the links.

This is who we share the bike path with. A Portland man was forced off a bike path, and narrowly avoided getting hit head-on, by a driver in a massive SUV blithely cruising down the biking and walking path, taking the concept of a multi-use path just a little too far.

Tragic news from St. Louis, where a man riding a bicycle was killed when he was struck by not one, not two, not even three, but four drivers, only two of whom bothered to stick around afterwards.

A South Carolina woman charged with killing a bike-riding father of three while allegedly driving drunk with an open bottle of vodka in her car has been arrested once again, on charges of “unlawful conduct toward a child, with the risk of abuse or willful abandonment,” as well as possession of meth and coke.

 

International

Road.cc says Trump’s tariffs could be the final blow for the bike industry, which is already in the toilet.

An iconic South London bike shop is throwing in the towel after 43 years due to “rising costs, a brutal economic climate, and a million other small battles.”

Here’s another one for your bike bucket list, with the village of Saint-Rémy-la-Varenne along France’s 500-mile Loire à Vélo bicycling route, home to ancient megalithic sites and a 1,000-year old priory.

A new Dutch study contradicts the usual perception in this country by showing that delivery bike riders are safer and more law-abiding than casual bicyclists in the Netherlands.

A 38-year old Indian man is riding over 3,700 miles in 35 days, from Bengaluru to Tamil Nadu and back, despite losing one hand in a machining accident when he was 18.

 

Competitive Cycling

A major upset in Belgium, where American Neilson Powless stunned Wout van Aert and his Visma-Lease a Bike teammates by outsprinting them at the finish to win the men’s Dwars door Vlaanderen on Sunday; Italian champ Elisa Longo Borghini won the women’s race in a solo breakaway.

Sorry, folks. Life Time Grand Prix has banned cyclists from drafting riders outside their own category in any of their races, such as Unbound Gravel.

A writer for Outside says skip the Tour de France, and go to Europe to watch the Tour of Flanders, instead.

 

Finally….

Recharge your next ebike with your phone charger. We may have to worry about feral LA drivers, but at least we don’t have to contend with a loose bull moose.

And nothing like that feeling when you order a new bicycle on Temu, and this is what you get.

@cloud9ceo

Temu gave me the biggest April Fool

♬ original sound – cloud9CEO

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

Metro pulls plug on Sepulveda Corridor meetings, and killer of 17-year old US Cycling Team’s Magnus White on trial

Day 92 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Cancel that.

Metro has pulled the plug on this week’s meetings to consider rail proposals for the Sepulveda Transit Corridor.

So if you were planning to attend on Thursday, Friday or Saturday, make other plans.

However, the agency insists this project remains a high priority, and the meetings will be rescheduled soon.

Image from Metro’s Sepulveda Transit Corridor website

………

A Denver TV station reports on the testimony from day two of trial over the death of 17-year old National Team member Magnus White.

The defense admits she killed him, but argues she isn’t guilty of the reckless driving charge because she was asleep at the wheel at the time of the crash.

Although it seems kinda reckless to drive when she was too tired to stay awake in the first place.

Several of the witnesses report that 25-year old Ukrainian immigrant Yeva Smilianska didn’t seem disturbed following the crash, acting unnaturally calm until she finally saw White laying behind her gasping for breath.

One officer said she didn’t seem to understand what had happened, while another investigator said she told him the “steering wheel stopped listening to me.”

Prosecutors also showed photos of White’s badly mangled bike, which the station included in their story.

But make sure you really want to see it, or read what the witnesses testified to before you click on the link.

Because I felt kind of sick after reading it. And not because of Covid.

………

In news that shouldn’t surprise anyone, new Caltrans data made available by a 2023 law showed the state transportation agency focused on highways, and paint over protection for bicycles, in recent years.

That’s despite the agency’s ostensible commitment to Complete Streets.

According to Calbike,

Caltrans built 554 new highway miles over the period covered by this data, at a time when California needs to reduce, not increase, vehicle miles traveled. At the same time, the agency built just 160 miles of bikeways, more than half of which were Class 3 lanes where bike riders share the lane with motor vehicle traffic.

While the SB 695 data doesn’t provide enough detail to fully understand Complete Streets projects on state routes, this first release of data shows that Caltrans isn’t doing enough to meet California’s goals to increase biking and walking.

Well, duh.

Anyone who’s tried to ride a bike on state roadways could tell you that.

………

It’s happened again.

According to a Sparks, Nevada TV station, a road-raging Reno resident faces an attempted murder charge for using his car as a weapon to deliberately ram a man on a bicycle, leaving the 35-year old victim with life threatening injuries.

Security video shows the driver intentionally target the victim at a high rate of speed, apparently angered by a “minor altercation” that came after he nearly hit the victim a few minutes earlier.

Another reminder that every angry driver is already armed with a deadly weapon, if they decide to use it.

……….

Seriously?

A sheriff’s deputy in Florida’s Broward County isn’t facing an investigation, despite bike cam video showing him using his patrol car as a weapon to knock a teenaged boy off his bicycle before tacking the kid,

The deputy was responding to a report of juveniles “riding bicycles recklessly and engaging in unlawful activity,” neither of which would justify the use of deadly force when the boy wasn’t threatening anyone’s safety.

……….

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps going on.   

The home of the Idaho Stop could take a big step backward, with two bills on the governor’s desk that would restrict bicycle and pedestrian improvements to a secondary role in highway projects, as well as banning any projects that would result in a narrower roadway.

Welsh bike advocates warn that the country could risk missing the opportunity to get more people on bicycles, as the government shifts its focus to prioritizing walking over biking.

………

Local  

The Los Angeles Street Standards Committee will vote Thursday to approve the minimum standards to implement Measure HLA. Which is probably exactly what the city will implement, the bare minimum. And raise your hand if you didn’t know the city even had a Street Standards Committee.

 

State

Calbike reports they’ve joined the Clean RIDES Network, a seven state coalition working to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from transportation.

San Diego’s ABC10 reports that 21 people were killed in traffic collisions in the San Diego area last month, adding to the 39 killed in January and February. In other words, they did exactly what every local news outlet should do by reporting the dangers we all face on the streets, regardless of how we get around. 

 

National

The husband of the Oregon woman killed by a DEA agent while she was riding her bike has filed suit against the Oregon State Police and state Department of Justice, alleging lapses in training, supervision and policy led to her death.

Washington State is working on connecting existing trails into a network of bicycle highways; meanwhile, Calbike is supporting a bill to bring the first bicycle highways to California.

Thirteen states have now adopted some form of the Idaho Stop Law, aka Stop As Yield, after New Mexico passed a law allowing bike riders to treat stop signs as yields, and red lights as stop signs when it’s safe to do so.

The University of Iowa student newspaper profiles the organizations working to make the local community safer for people on bicycles.

Streetsblog talks with Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin about the bi-partisan Sarah Debbink Langenkamp Act to allow full federal funding of active transportation safety projects, arguing that “the carnage is intolerable.” Which seems a little strange considering how long our government has already tolerated it.

 

International

Your next Mercedes AMG F1-inspired ebike could have a speedometer that tops out at 60 mph, even though the bike itself is legally required to top out at 20.

The 24-year old Moroccan man who rode his bike to Qatar for the 2022 World Cup is now riding from the tip of Argentina to Alaska, with plans to stop in Mexico, the US and Canada for next year’s World Cup along the way.

UK disability advocates Wheels For Wellbeing calls for the country to reconsider the recent ban on non-folding ebikes on trains, since they can be used as mobility devices. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up.

The Dutch ambassador rode his bike more than 100 miles to the heart of Bangladesh tiger country to highlight the need to save the endangered animals.

Velo offers highlights from the Taipei Cycle Show, including a nifty little electric tire pump, arguing that some of the tech there could rival the bike industry’s best.

A pair of Aussie researchers consider the problem of drivers who look, but fail to see people on bicycles, and what can be done to keep us safe.

 

Competitive Cycling

Read all about it, in excruciating detail, as a new medical paper details Egan Bernal’s “remarkable recovery” from the training crash that nearly killed him, or could have left him paralyzed. But didn’t.

 

Finally….

It’s almost plausible that Paris is confining cars to protected lanes and turning traffic lanes over to bikes. Or that Ontario’s anti-bike premier is jogging in the bike lanes he wants to rip out.

And apparently, bikes can use the full LAN.

You know, in case you need to print something when you’re riding.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

April Fools-free edition — sadness and schadenfreude on Highland Ave, and let’s impound the cars of repeat scofflaw drivers

Day 91 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Well, this is not fun anymore. 

I found myself struggling to breathe Sunday afternoon, accompanied by a spike in blood pressure and a drop in blood oxygen.

Fortunately, the situation resolved before it got serious, but left me feeling like I’d been hit by a truck for the rest of the night. 

So my apologies for yesterday’s absence. 

I’m starting to realize why my doctors all warned that combining Covid and diabetes probably wasn’t the best idea.

Anyway, let’s get on with today’s April Fools-free update.  

Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay.

………

This is who we share the road with.

And why.

Over a decade ago, there was a movement to build LA’s first bicycle boulevard on 4th Street through Hancock Park.

But it didn’t take long for local residents to get out their torches and pitchforks in opposition to it, despite our best efforts to explain how it would benefit them, from eliminating cut-through traffic to increasing property values.

The greatest conflict, however, was over finding a safe way to get bike riders across busy Highland Ave.

Each proposal was soundly booed, whether a traffic circle, stop light or on-demand crosswalk. Even though it would have made Highland much safer for everyone, on foot, a bike or in a car — or just living in the general area.

It didn’t take long for then Councilmember Tom LaBonge to fold, promising not to make any changes to the dangerous intersection, and dooming the entire proposal to the scrapheap of history.

Although someone later saw the light, and belatedly installed a push-button on-demand traffic light. Which helps people cross the street, but does little or nothing to slow speeding drivers.

So it was with a combination of sadness and schadenfreude that I heard local residents complain about speeding drivers using the wide, straight divided roadway as a race track, after the driver of a Lamborghini ran away from a fatal hit-and-run on the street.

No, literally.

On foot, leaving the smashed supercar behind.

All just blocks from where that proposed traffic circle would have forced drivers to slow down, improving safety along the entire corridor.

It’s common for people everywhere to oppose change. But in an effectively run city, the final decision would be made with an eye to safety, after listening to objections and incorporating any reasonable suggestions, knowing that most people will come around to support it once they get used to it.

But in Los Angeles, the only voices usually heard are the loudest — and too often, wealthiest.

So Highland will continue to be a racetrack, just like Sunset and Hollywood boulevards.

And innocent people will continue to die.

………

This is who we share the road with, too.

And why people keep dying on our streets.

A 35-year old mother was killed, along with her two young daughters, when a speeding driver slammed into another car, and careened into them as they walked in a New York crosswalk; at last report, her four-year old son was still clinging to life in critical condition.

Yet the 32-year old woman behind the wheel was still driving despite a suspended license, suspended registration and expired insurance, as well as 15 school zone speeding and red-light tickets in just the last 12 months.

Yes, 15.

New York Mayor Eric Adams described as a “tragic accident of a Shakespearean proportion.”

But in reality, it was the entirely predictable result of allowing a woman who has shown a clear disregard for traffic laws and the courts to keep a car she could no longer legally drive.

Virginia just passed a law allowing judges to require repeat excessive speed drivers to install speed limiting technology, making it impossible to exceed the posted speed limit; New York State is considering a similar law.

Now we need to take the next step of impounding the cars of people with suspended driver’s licenses until they regain the right to drive legally.

………

Bollywood star Shahid Kapoor is one of us — or at least his son is now — using a towel as a sling to help the kid learn how to ride a bike.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps going on.   

Houston is ripping out a vital protected bike lane in the city’s Mid-City neighborhood, replacing it with sharrows and putting bike riders at needless risk, because drivers found it a little inconvenient.

A Tennessee man faces charges of reckless endangerment, aggravated assault and criminal littering for threatening a group of bicyclists on a rural road, driving his car at them and throwing beer bottles out the window, leaving two of the victims with visible bruises; he then made a U-turn and came back to run over one man’s bicycle, after the rider managed to jump out of the way.

Boston is joining Houston in ripping out protective curbs and bollards on a trio of newly installed bike lanes, after the mayor initiated a review of all the city’s safety and bus infrastructure projects, bowing to impatient drivers as she prepares to run for re-election, as it they are the only voters.

An English city was forced to install bollards on a new bike lane outside a hospital, after drivers immediately turned it into a parking lane.

No surprise here. British women continue to be frightened off their bikes by threatening and intimidating drivers, compounded by a lack of safe infrastructure.

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.   

A former English cop complains that he’s being taunted by ebike-riding “yobs” after he was fired for ramming his patrol car into a couple of teens with long criminal records, when they “taunted” him by riding past his car on their bikes.

………

Local  

Metro is hosting a series of meetings this week to discuss the Sepulveda Transit corridor, with in-person meeting on Thursday and Saturday, and a virtual meeting on Friday; Streets For All urges you to voice support for heavy rail under the Sepulveda Pass, rather than the inefficient monorail preferred by wealthy Bel-Air homeowners who don’t want to be disturbed by underground construction.

The Pasadena Complete Streets Coalition with host their monthly virtual meeting on Monday, highlighted by presentations on the San Gabriel Valley Greenway Network and a local carbon-free electricity campaign; they’ll also host a family-friendly ride on April 12th showcasing homes with native California landscaping.

The South Pasadena Public Library will host a Repair Café on April 19th offering free repairs on a number of items, including bicycles.

 

State

French startup Upway opened their first SoCal location in Redondo Beach over the weekend, buying and selling refurbished e-bikes, similar to Carvana or CarMax for motor vehicles.

About two dozen Fontana kindergarteners got new bicycles, courtesy of All Kids Bike.

A Simi Valley letter writer complains about a recent ebike editorial, asking if there are “excellent bike lanes” traversing the city, where are they?

Your next ebike could charge in just 15 minutes, thanks to a new bike mountain biking legend Gary Fisher plans to introduce this month at Monterey’s Sea Otter Classic.

The threatened protected bike lane on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge is safe for now, after Caltrans withdrew a proposal to turn it back into a motor vehicle lane on weekdays.

 

National

A tech website asks why buy your bike accessories when you can just 3D print them?

Momentum teams with People For Bikes to dispel the most common myths about bike riders, ranging from not many people ride bicycles to we’re all rich, lawbreaking and fearless.

Juiced Bikes is rising from the dead after the ebike maker shut down operations last year, amid efforts from the founders of Lectric EBikes to revive the brand.

America’s seven-time ex-Tour de France champ says if you want to feel safe on a bike, ride a gravel bike so you can go onto any surface, and avoid long straight stretches of roadways to reduce the risk of distracted drivers.

Here’s another one for your bike bucket list, with the Great Plains Gravel Route that stretches 3,800 miles through Texas, Kansas and five other Midwestern states.

Life is cheap in Idaho, where the driver of a gravel truck got a whole 90 days behind bars for the hit-and-run death of a 14-year old kid standing on the side of the road next to his bicycle, but at least he’ll have to spend every holiday behind bars for the next two years, along with both his and his victim’s birthday.

The 24-year old woman accused of killing 17-year old Magnus White went on trial yesterday, nearly two years after running down the rising US National Team cyclist in Boulder, Colorado; prosecutors say she fell asleep at the wheel after staying up all night partying.

San Antonio, Texas becomes the latest city to offer ebike vouchers, providing 244 $1,000 vouchers for low-income residents. Meanwhile, California’s deliberately throttled voucher program remains just this side of moribund.

A 64-year old Galveston, Texas man was sentenced to 35 years behind bars for using his truck to murder one man and injure another as they tried to get away on their bicycles, all over over a paltry five buck debt, as well as another 25 years for assaulting a third man. Which means he’d be 124 if he survives to serve his full terms, which seems just a little unlikely. 

The Illinois legislature is considering over a dozen bike-related bills, from including tricycles in the legal definition of a bicycle to plainly stating that bicyclists are intended users on every roadway.

A kindhearted Ohio man gave away dozens of refurbished bicycles to anyone who needed one, just because he could.

People For Bikes flew a group of bicycle industry leaders to DC to advocate for tariff relief and trade fairness.

 

International

Severance star Britt Lower is one of us too, riding a bicycle through the streets of Toronto to get a better understanding of the character she plays in the upcoming film Darkest Miriam.

Welsh advocates warn that budget cuts are threatening to put the government’s efforts to promote bicycling at risk.

Momentum offers 20 reasons why the Netherlands is a bike rider’s paradise.

Stars and Stripes celebrates the joys of biking in Deutschland.

Nice work if you can get it. A 28-year old British woman says her 9-to-5 job is riding her bicycle from her English hometown to Singapore to raise funds for a mental health charity; meanwhile, a 31-year old British man is one year into his ride around the world to raise money for a children’s hospital.

A pair of 15-year old Japanese junior high students spent 13 days riding over 600 miles around Taiwan. At that age, my parents barely let me ride around my own hometown. 

 

Competitive Cycling

Tour de Big Bear is adding a 50K cross-country mountain bike race to their August lineup, promising a “a thrilling 36 miles, starting with a 4-mile neutral rollout before immersing riders into demanding single-track and double-track trails.”

Dutch sprinter Olav Kooij crashed just as he attempted to respond to an attack by eventual winner Mads Pedersen at Gent Wevelgem, suffering a broken collarbone.

Slovenian Primož Roglič won an “explosive” final stage of the Volta a Catalunya ahead of Laurens De Plus and Lennert Van Eetvelt, vaulting into first place in the overall standings, points and mountains classifications.

 

Finally….

Fight off bike thieves with a U-lock that smells like something died. Your next NFL draft baseball cap could have a bike on it, but only if you’re a Packers fan.

And always remember to bungie your corgi before you ride.

@tedrogerla.bsky.social Grabbed this from a Kiwi Corgi FB group. The owner takes "Spud" everywhere on the bike. She says Spud is harnessed in and loves it.

(@nzdebs.bsky.social) 2025-03-31T23:26:17.058Z

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

Move along, nothing to see here — continued Covid edition

My apologies.

I thought I was finally getting over Covid, but things took a concerning turn for the worse on Sunday. Hopefully a good night’s sleep will help, and we’ll be back tomorrow to play catch up.

Ebike rider killed by heartless hit-and-run driver in San Diego’s Claremont Mesa East neighborhood early Saturday

Once again, someone on a bicycle has been killed by a heartless hit-and-run driver.

This time in San Diego.

According to multiple, nearly identical stories, a 36-year old man was riding an ebike on the 6900 block of Balboa Ave, in the city’s Claremont Mesa East neighborhood, when he was struck by a driver around 1:30 am.

Police report the victim, who has not been publicly identified, was riding in the westbound bike lane when he veered left for some unknown reason and was hit by the westbound motorist, who continued without stopping.

He died shortly after being taken to a local hospital.

Video from the scene shows damaged car parts and a Lectric ped-assist bicycle lying in the center of the three through traffic lanes.

The suspect vehicle is described as light-colored 2016-2022 Mercedes Benz E-Class sedan, possibly gray, with likely front-end damage including missing grill and other front-end body parts.

It’s not clear if there was a witness to the crash, or if investigators pieced events together from evidence found following the crash.

Anyone with information is urged to call the Traffic Division of the San Diego Police Department at 858/495-7800, or Crime Stoppers at 888/580-8477

This was at least the 11th bicycling fatality in Southern California this year, and the third that I’m aware of in San Diego County.

This is also the fourth SoCal bike rider killed by a hit-and-run driver since the first of the year.

My deepest sympathy and prayers for the victim and his loved ones.

LA officials vote against the will of LA voters on Vermont BRT project; LA 50 wants your input; and Bike Oven art crawl

Day 87 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

So let’s get this straight.

The Metro Board unanimously approved plans for the Vermont Transit Corridor bus rapid transit project — but without the bike lanes required by law under voter-approved Measure HLA.

According to LAist,

Founder and CEO of Streets for All, Michael Schneider, told LAist in a statement that Metro ignored “the law and will of the voters” by voting to move forward with the design of the project without bike lanes…

The disagreement here isn’t about the bus lanes themselves — Schneider and other transportation advocates in L.A. agree that improvements to transit on the corridor are needed.

But the question is whether Metro, a countywide transportation agency, is required to comply with Measure HLA, a city-level initiative.

Metro doesn’t think so, and it has threatened legal action if it is forced to comply.

To repeat, it’s not a question of whether the bike lanes called that are called for in the city mobility plan are required under HLA, which applies to all but the most minor street resurfacing projects on Los Angeles city streets.

But rather, whether the city ordinance applies to a county agency.

Proponents of HLA — myself included — say it does.

Metro takes the contrarian stand, however, arguing that it only applies to work actually done by the city, rather than projects done by outside agencies on the city’s behalf.

Although a better question might be why Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and CD6 Councilmember Imelda Padilla voted against a city ordinance that they are legally required to implement.

And whether by doing so, they violated their obligations as officials elected to represent the City of Los Angeles, which is why they are on the board in the first place.

Because the people who put them there are the same ones who voted overwhelmingly to approve the measure.

And the same ones they will face when they run for re-election.

Correction: I’m told Karen Bass did not vote against HLA, if only because she missed the meeting. Blame Padilla, CD5 Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, and LA representative Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker. 

Rendering of Vermont BRT project, sans HLA mandated bike lanes. 

………

LA 50 wants your input on who should get the latest round of LA 50 Challenge Grants.

Although they don’t apparently trust us to vote directly on the recipients anymore, but rather just express opinions that will apparently influence their choices.

………

The Bike Oven co-op is hosting an art ride on North Figueroa tomorrow night.

………

Local  

Pasadena police with conduct a bicycle and pedestrian safety operation today, focusing on driver behaviors that endanger bicyclists and pedestrians — although they are legally required to enforce the law equally, whether it’s someone on four wheels, two wheels or two feet who commits the violation. As usual, ride to the letter of the law until you cross the city limit lines, so you’re not the one who gets written up.

 

State

Streetsblog’s Damien Newton says the San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres may be behind the Dodgers in the standings, but are miles ahead of LA in providing bike and transit access to their home stadiums. Okay, so maybe I was the one who threw in a little shade about the standings. 

Laguna Beach becomes the latest Orange County city to succumb to the spreading ebike panic, adopting an ordinance restricting the speed and use of ebikes in the city. Although once again apparently failing to distinguish between ped-assist bicycles and throttle-controlled electric motorbikes.

Sausalito debates whether to accept a grant for a “controversial” safety project that would require bike lanes in each direction on a dangerous stretch with no crosswalks, where bicycles and cars are forced to share a single lane in each direction, and drivers use the center turn lane for free parking.

Sad news from Woodland, where a man in his 50s was killed when he was run down by a man driving a tractor, while riding in a bike lane on a rural road outside the Sacramento suburb. Although thee’s no word on why the driver was in the bike lane, and why he somehow failed to see the victim despite operating a slow-moving vehicle. And no, tractors aren’t allowed in bike lanes, any more than any other motor vehicle. 

 

National

Blogger Craig Medred takes a deep dive into how the law protects dangerous drivers, when most fatal crashes are just written off as “oopsies.”

Grist considers who will be hurt most by Trump’s freeze on funding for bike lanes and other pedestrian safety projects. That’s easy — everyone. Because as the story says, “infrastructure that prioritizes safety over speed…are proven solutions that protect everyone.”

Nice change in Portland, where the Downtown Neighborhood Association wants fewer traffic lanes, instead of demanding more.

Residents of Chicago’s predominantly Latino Southwest Side debate whether protected bike lanes will improve safety, or lead to gentrification. Even though the bike lanes would protect low-income workers and immigrants who may not own a car, and rely on a bike to get to work, school or other destinations.

In New York City bike-related violence, a food delivery worker was stabbed in the back with a screwdriver when he attempted to defend his bike from thieves trying to take it, and pair of “crazed” men used their own bicycles to beat another man senseless on New York’s Upper East Side.

 

International

British parliamentarians called for urgent reform of the country’s Cycle to Work program by opening the bike voucher system to low-income workers, freelancers and retirees. Because salaried white collar workers aren’t the only ones who could benefit from biking rather than driving.

Momentum says stop bending over, and ride upright on one of these Dutch-style bikes, instead. Personally, I’ll take the Pashley, Guv’nor

An Indigenous man riding an ebike in a Sydney, Australia suburb was killed when a police sergeant somehow ran him down with his patrol car while attempting to make a traffic stop; he was found to have $10,000 in cash and three ounces of meth on him after he was killed. Which does not justify the cop using lethal force to make the stop unless the victim somehow threatened him — even if the cop knew or suspected he was dealing drugs.

 

Competitive Cycling

Former Dutch pro Laurens ten Dam says he slept under the stars surrounded by cows and grizzly bears with pepper spray tucked under his pillow last year during the 3,000-mile Tour Divide race from Canada to Mexico.

 

Finally….

Take a stand on apartment bike storage, or turn your bike into an objet d’art. Seriously, you haven’t lived until you’ve ridden a fat bike across the Gobi Desert in the middle of winter.

And forget those flammable lithium-ion batteries, and fuel your bike with the stuff that blew up the Hindenburg instead.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

Help research LA & SF bike commutes, why Vermont Ave is an HLA flashpoint, and zombie street widening in DTLA

Day 86 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Well, this is fun. 

Evidently, Covid’s so nice I’m doing it twice.

Which puts me in the less than 3% of people who get a rebound infection, according to my pharmacist. 

Yay, me. 

At least I’ve been able to work through it this time. So let’s get on with it. 

………

A French Fulbright scholar working in the US to research bicycle commutes in Los Angeles and San Francisco wants your help with a brief survey on your bike commuting habits.

So take a few minutes to give him your honest answers. Because this is the kind of actual scientific research that’s so out of favor in government circles these days.

Survey: Long-distance (over 3 miles) bike commutes in LA

Hello everyone,

Are you a bike commuter? Do you commute by bike or electric bike and cover long distances (over 3 miles) as part of your daily mobility? Please complete this brief survey.

Conducted as part of an academic research project on sustainability and initiated by a French researcher in environmental social sciences (and in California for 6 months), this questionnaire will help better understand the practices, obstacles, levers and motivations of active mobility in LA.

Click here to complete the survey

………

Pasadena public radio station and website LAist examines Metro’s “transformational” bus rapid transit on Vermont Ave, and why it’s become a flashpoint over Measure HLA.

According to the site,

The Vermont Transit Corridor project will add dedicated side-running bus lanes and 13 stations along a more than 12-mile-long stretch of the busy corridor. It’s slated to be up and running by the 2028 summer Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The project will also include infrastructure upgrades that help with pedestrian accessibility and decrease the distance people have to walk to get to bus stops.

But what it doesn’t include, and what’s required under HLA, is bus lanes.

The question is whether the city ordinance that was overwhelmingly passed by voters applies to Metro, which is a county transportation agency.

Metro has already threatened to sue if they’re required to comply with the ordinance.

(Streets For All founder Michael) Schneider said the argument isn’t as simple as saying Metro doesn’t have to comply with Measure HLA because it isn’t a city entity.

“The city permits Metro’s work,” Schneider said. “They contribute financially to Metro’s work. City planners sign off on Metro’s work, so it’s sort of a technicality who’s leading the project.”

Schneider also said public funds would be wasted if the bike and bus lanes don’t go in at the same time.

It’s worth reading the full article, which offers a detailed primer on the project, as well as the ongoing debate.

Then consider tuning in for the livestream of today’s 10 am Metro board meeting where a vote is scheduled to approve the Vermont project. Or show up in person at Metro HQ in DTLA to support it.

………

Call it Revenge of the Living Dead.

According to LA Streetsblog, “zombie” road widening is still occurring in Los Angeles, even though that requirement would be illegal today.

But a 54-story apartment building at Olympic and Hill that was already under construction when the rules changed. And so they were required to add a 12-foot traffic lane to previously 60-foot wide Olympic Blvd, which exceeds the road width called for under the city mobility plan.

But that’s okay, because they made up for it by building substandard width sidewalks, too.

………

Streets For All’s next virtual happy hour will take place on Wednesday, April 9th, featuring Los Angeles Deputy Mayor Randall Winston.

Maybe I’ll actually be over this damn Covid by then.

………

Congratulations to Virginia on passing the nation’s first law allowing judges to order drivers to install intelligent speed limitation tech, restricting them to going no faster than the posted speed limit.

A similar bill is being considered in the California legislature, if it can get past Gov. Newsom’s veto pen.

https://bsky.app/profile/fam4safestreets.bsky.social/post/3ll7vsuzaok2q

This transformative bi-partisan legislation allows judges to require drivers convicted of extreme speeding offenses to install Intelligent Speed Assistance (ISA) technology in their vehicles, automatically limiting their speed to the posted limit.

Families for Safe Streets (@fam4safestreets.bsky.social) 2025-03-25T18:32:33.339Z

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

Advocates are complaining about a “serious downgrade” at a popular roundabout in Norwich, England, leaving no safe route to the local hospital for bicyclists and pedestrians. Which could unironically lead to more of both going there.

No bias here. A Scottish satirist is accused of spreading bike hate with a parody take on the poster for the Tour de France Edinburgh depart, replacing “France” with…well, read it yourself.

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.

Neighbors are mourning the death of a 49-year old Brooklyn man, who was killed in a collision with an ebike rider last week. And yes, the bike rider stuck around after the crash.

………

Local  

Children from across Los Angeles received new adaptive bicycles to mark World Down Syndrome Day last Friday.

Glendale is moving forward with the city’s pilot speed cam program, asking for your input on where the cameras should go. Which is a hell of a lot more than Los Angeles has done so far. 

 

State

Orange County will begin to enforce new ebike regulations next month, which are targeted mostly at more powerful electric motorbikes, rather than slower ped-assist bicycles.

The San Diego Union-Tribune examines strategies to get people to actually act more sustainably, such as peer pressure, role models and rewards, financial and otherwise. You know, like riding a bike instead of driving.

San Francisco advocates are calling for a “no-brainer” protected bike lane on Oak Street along the Panhandle. Problem is, too often the “no-brainers” seem to be ones in charge. 

 

National

Seattle Bike Blog says a proposed ebike tax would “be awful” for Washington’s struggling bike shops, particularly in the face of Trump’s on-again, off-again, on-again-again tariffs.

New Mexico has passed the full Idaho Stop Law, allowing bicyclists to treat stop signs as yields, and proceed through red lights after stopping when safe to do so. Meanwhile, California Governor Gavin Newsom has vetoed Stop As Yield laws twice, apparently believing there’s something special about California that means what’s been proven to improve safety other places somehow won’t work here. 

New York advocates are making an urgent call for better street safety after a 57-year old man was killed riding a bike in the Bronx over the weekend, along with a pedestrian in Brooklyn.

The best places to ride a bike in Athens, Georgia, for your next visit to the land of REM, The B-52’s and other assorted musical dinosaurs.

 

International

Bike Radar questions why there’s been so little innovation under your feet, as the first new pedal design in four decades hits the market.

Life is cheap in Ontario, Canada, where a 35-year old man will spend a whole 15 months behind bars for the drunken hit-and-run death of a 79-year old bike-riding woman, plus another two months for a second crash three weeks later; evidently, his show of remorse and promises to change overcame a long history of alcohol addiction and a six-year criminal history in the judge’s mind.

Forget “Mind the gap.” Mind the new rules banning ebikes from the Tube and other London train lines, unless you’re riding a foldie.

 

Competitive Cycling

Triple Tour de France champ Tadej Pogačar is preparing to tackle the infamous cobbles Paris-Roubaix, aka the Hell of the North, for the first time; he may be riding a sparking new model of Colnago.

 

Finally….

Your next ebike could be a Rivian — yes, the e-truck maker. Your next bicycle pump could be electric, even if you don’t have an electric bike. Or truck.

And your toddler’s next balance bike could be made from eco-friendly, sustainable carbon fiber.

No, really.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to wrap myself in a blanket, watch the Dodgers home opener, and try not to cough myself to death. 

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

15-year old ebike rider busted for DUI, HLA foot-dragging means worsening LA streets, and trial date for killer Vegas teens

Day 85 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Teenaged ebike riders are in the news once again.

And once again, for not-so-good reasons.

Like the 15-year old boy who was busted for DUI after crashing his ebike into a parked car in Newhall Monday night, suffering minor injuries and major problems.

Or the 16-year old ebike rider who was hospitalized after getting hit head-on by a driver while riding salmon in Rancho Cucamonga Tuesday morning.

Although, as always these days, the question is whether these scofflaw victims, who haven’t been publicly identified, were riding electric motorbikes or ped-assist bicycles.

Because police reports and the press don’t seem to be able to distinguish between them.

………

According to Streetsblog’s Joe Linton, the city’s foot dragging on implementing Measure HLA is resulting on worsening conditions on some of the streets that had been scheduled for repaving.

That’s even though pavement cracks and pot holes can pose a significant risk to bike riders, especially after dark when they can be almost impossible to see.

And even though Los Angeles has already paid out large settlements for bike riders seriously injured by crumbling pavement.

………

Jesus Ayala and Jzamir Keys, the two formerly teenage suspects accused of recording themselves laughing as they intentionally ran down and killed former Bell police chief Andreas Probst as he rode a bike in Las Vegas, are now scheduled to go on trial November 3rd.

………

This is what the Vermont Corridor could look like, if Metro continues to refuse to comply with Measure HLA, which requires bike lanes, as well.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

He gets it. Former Top Gear host James May calls out the “anti-cycling rage” of London’s Telegraph newspaper, saying the “anti-cycling opposition out there ‘smacks of sheer bloody-mindedness.'”

………

Local  

Streetsblog takes a look at the newly opened Big Dalton Bike Path, nee Vincent Community Bikeway, which traverses three-miles through Irwindale, Covina, Azusa and unincorporated points in between, and is part of a planned 130-mile bike network through the San Gabriel Valley.

The manager of the Velo Pasadena bike shop says the shop has been burglarized “constantly” since the start of the pandemic, losing a total of over a hundred grand worth of bicycles — including three break-ins in just the past three months.

 

State

The Triathlon Club of San Diego talks with BikinginLA sponsor, Oceanside bike lawyer and tri supporter Richard Duquette.

La Mesa is starting its own ebike incentive program, offering 150 vouchers to people over 18 who live and plan to ride in the city. Let’s just hope they manage to do a better job than California has so far. 

After Berkeley gave 56 free ebikes to a group of low-to-moderate income residents, they reported driving less, but also learned how crappy it is to ride there.

Marin County approved an ordinance banning children under 16 from riding Class 2 throttle-controlled ebikes; presumably, Class 1 ped-assist bikes are still okay.

The Sacramento city council was scheduled to vote on approving a quick-build bike lane program for the state capital. Something a certain megalopolis to the south could stand to emulate. 

 

National

A writer for Cycling News says skip the power meter, and use a heart monitor instead — even if it’s ugly and sits on your chain collecting grease. Or better yet, skip them both and just enjoy riding a bike if you don’t race for a living.

A legal website calls out the deadliest and safest states for bicyclists, as well as offering strategies for how to make things safer. Good news and bad news — California didn’t make either list. 

Bike riders in Houston protested the removal of concrete armadillos along a formerly protected bike lane; they had intended to form a human bike lane, but moved to the sidewalk when police threatened them with criminal sanctions. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

You’ve got to be kidding. An Illinois county board member was cited for a lousy crosswalk violation, despite leaving the scene after hitting a little kid riding a bicycle with the walk signal; she ended up driving herself to the police station, claiming she was confused and didn’t know what to do. Seriously, if you don’t know that you’re supposed to stick around after a crash — especially after hitting a little kid — you shouldn’t be driving. Or in office, for that matter. 

New York State will begin an ebike voucher pilot program in Ossining offering up to $1,000, with plans to eventually expand to the greater Hudson River region. Apparently, the rest of the state can keep paying retail. Unless you know a guy with a few that fell off a truck. 

 

International

An English man was left shaken after he tried to recover his bicycle from the young thieves who grabbed it outside a bike shop; he was chased, threatened and beaten, but somehow ended up with his bike.

Researchers in Sweden and Iran have developed a better shock-absorbing material that contracts bilaterally, resulting in bike helmet liners that provide better protection from head injuries; because it’s 3D printed, it can also be custom crafted to fit individual heads.

Forbes says add sunny Morocco to your bike bucket list.

An exploring website says the story of the bike-touring Chinese grandmother calls out the problem of “silver tourism,” as China caters to older tourists, while most Western country’s don’t.

A Kiwi website credits the extensive bike lane network Christchurch built after the city was devastated by a 2011 earthquake for its high rate of bike riding, using the damage as an opportunity to re-envision its streets. Something else a certain SoCal megapolis could learn from after the recent fires.

 

Competitive Cycling

Belgian police raided the home of a doctor previously “affiliated” with a professional cycling team, after noticing “atypical prescribing behavior” that raised the possibility of doping practices. But the doping era is over, right? 

 

Finally….

Apparently, bike lanes make it hard to visit long-closed libraries. Now you, too, can take your final bike ride after you’re gone.

And if you’re not inclined to walk your bike up an incline, maybe you should be.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

PCH public workshops back on the table, support bike lanes on Vermont Ave, and pedestrian safety expo next month

Day 84 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

SoCal’s killer highway is back on the table.

Caltrans has rescheduled the public workshops to consider the PCH Master Plan Feasibility Study to improve safety on the deadly roadway, which remains one of the state’s most popular riding routes, despite a glaring lack of safe infrastructure.

The previously scheduled meetings were postponed due to the Palisades Fire.

Here’s what their press release says.

UPCOMING WORKSHOPS FOR THE PCH MASTER PLAN FEASIBILITY STUDY

The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and the City of Malibu invite the public to the Round Three workshops for the PCH Master Plan Feasibility Study on April 9 (in-person), April 16 (virtual) and May 12 (virtual). The first three public workshops in July 2024 (Round One) gathered input from residents, businesses and other stakeholders to identify safety priorities for the highway. Based on that input, Caltrans held three more workshops on Aug. 28, Sept. 12 and Oct. 23, 2024 (Round Two), focused on presenting and soliciting feedback on design alternatives and other recommendations to improve safety on PCH. Following Round Two, Caltrans developed a draft of the Study that it will present during the upcoming workshops (Round Three). At the Wednesday, April 9, meeting, Caltrans will formally release the Study to the public and begin the 60-day public review period.

The upcoming workshops will also cover two PCH pavement rehabilitation projects in the cities of Santa Monica, Los Angeles and Malibu, which aim to extend the pavement service life and improve ride quality for motorists on PCH from Santa Monica to the Los Angeles/Ventura County line. Community members are invited to participate in these workshops to learn about the latest updates and provide input.

For more information, please visit the project website or e-mail: 07-pchmpfs@publicinput.com.

Click here to register for the April meeting, or here for the May workshop.

Photo from the Caltrans press release.

………

Streets For All is calling for support for bike lanes on Vermont Ave at Thursday’s Metro board meeting.

Something that’s required under Measure HLA as part of the city’s mobility plan when the street is re-striped to install bus lanes, even if Metro’s lawyers don’t seem to agree.

On Thursday the Metro board has an item on its agenda (Item 9) to approve the LPA (locally preferred alternative) for the Vermont Bus Rapid Transit Project.

Vermont Ave has more bus riders than any other street in LA County, and we think BRT on this street is one of the highest impact transit projects in the region. We are incredibly supportive of the project.

However, Vermont is also one of the most dangerous streets in LA with nearly 50 people killed in the last decade. Despite this, Metro has aggressively pushed back on implementing Measure HLA‘s required bike lanes as part of the Vermont BRT project.

If the bike lanes don’t go in during this project, when Metro is doing the expensive work (curb ramps, repaving, etc.), then the City of Los Angeles will be fully responsible for implementing them at a later time, entirely on its own dime.

At a time when both road deaths and the City’s budget deficit are at a record high, we cannot afford to not implement the bike lanes as part of this project.

Click the link for tips on how to help.

………

LA Public Health is hosting a pedestrian safety expo in Roosevelt Park on Friday, April 11th.

And yes, it matters, because we’re all pedestrians at some point (click here if the tweet/xeet doesn’t embed).

https://twitter.com/heybikela/status/1904350768951673220

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

No bias here. A right-wing group called for a DOGE-style crackdown on “unethical” British bicycling and walking advocacy group Sustrans, and its “taxpayer-funded, deeply unpopular, and undemocratic restrictions on motorists.” Um, sure. Because nothing is more unethical than taking an inch of road space from overly entitled drivers. 

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.

A 49-year old man was killed as he exited his double-parked car and was struck by New York food delivery rider on an ebike who reportedly blew through a stop sign.

………

Local  

No news is good news, right?

 

State

San Diego public TV and radio station KBPS examines the city’s new draft Street Design Manual, which calls for narrower lanes and more options for protected bike lanes, but still allows slip lanes and right turns on red.

Downtown Temecula will get a trio of new green bike lanes, replacing the current white-striped lanes to make them more visible.

Sad news from Sacramento, where a 59-year old man was killed when he was struck by a driver while riding his bicycle. And no, ABC10, he did not “collide with” the car, someone driving a car crashed into him — as the story itself says in the second paragraph, contradicting the headline and lede. 

 

National

Around 70 Portlanders rode in support of a Palestinian paracycling team 7,000 miles away.

Denver is releasing the year’s first round of ebike vouchers, offering $450 off a standard ebike or $1,400 for an adaptive ebike. Meanwhile, California has only managed to release a single extremely throttled round of vouchers, limiting it to just a tiny fraction of the demand. 

About “100 real-life human beings” turned out for a Chicago bike ride to call for replacing parking spaces with a protected bike lane on an Uptown street.

Untapped New York introduces the bicycling advocates who are keeping up the good fight for better bike infrastructure, despite Trump’s freeze on federal funding.

Philadelphia bike riders are happy to see plans call for a protected bike lane on a bridge over the Schuylkill River, but don’t like the two-way design that doesn’t line up with existing bike lanes on either side.

Speaking of Philly, a bike lane placed in the middle of a neighborhood sidewalk is drawing mixed reactions. So let me simplify this: Sidewalk level bike lanes good, bike lanes in the middle of the sidewalk bad.

 

International

Momentum offers a beginners guide to getting started with bike commuting.

A new British study shows the safety in numbers hypothesis even applies to e-scooters, finding the presence of e-scooters appears to result in a 20 percent reduction in the risk of bicycling collisions.

Life is cheap in the UK, where a 20-year old man will spend just 13 years behind bars for murdering a 34-year old father-to-be, in what began as an effort to retrieve a stolen ebike, and escalated to a series of threatening emails and roadside arguments before the killer stabbed the victim to death; two other men who were with the killer at the time of the stabbing were arrested, but not charged.

You still have time to make it to Liège, Belgium for Bike Week.

 

Competitive Cycling

UCI’s Track Cycling League bit the dust, killed by an apparent lack of interest after just five events in four years; it will be replaced by a new Track World Cup.

Double Tour de France champ Jonas Vingegaard is back to gentle training after suffering a concussion earlier this month when he crashed during Paris-Nice.

Thirty-nine-year old Los Angeles-based former pro and current author Phil Gaimon will be honored with the Legends Award at next month’s Redlands Bicycle Classic, a race he won in 2012 and 2015.

 

Finally….

Start bike commuting, and say goodbye to road rage. Your next ebike could be a boat, or a camper. Or both.

And that feeling when you think you could do a better job of restructuring the government than Elon Musk, and offer your services as a bike-making outsider.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

34-year old Las Vegas man riding ebike dies days after Oceanside hit-and-run; driver left him for passerby to find

A Las Vegas man has died, three days after a hit-and-run driver left him alone and bleeding on the side of the road.

According to the San Diego Medical Examiner’s Office, a passerby found 34-year old Jonathan Joseph Akahito Lupola lying near his ebike on the 3100 block of Oceanside Blvd in Oceanside, on Saturday, March 15th, suffering from multiple major injuries.

Despite the efforts of first responders and medical personnel, Lupola’s condition continued to decline, and he was disconnected from life support on Tuesday, March 18th, with his wife at his side, and his organs donated.

There’s no description of the suspect vehicle at this time; a crowdfunding page put up by Lupola’s aunt says the driver was doing an estimated 65 mph in a 35 mph zone.

Although you’d think a crash at that speed would have left debris that could identify the vehicle, unless the driver stopped to pick it up.

The crowdfunding campaign has raised a little over $1,400 of the modest $2,000 goal to transport his body and pay funeral expenses. Lupito’s aunt is also donating proceeds from her food truck in Hawaii.

Note: A comment below from a man identifying himself as Lupito’s uncle says the crowdfunding campaign was not authorized by his family. So maybe hold off donating until I learn more. 

This was at least the tenth bicycling fatality in Southern California this year, and the second that I’m aware of in San Diego County.

Lupito was also the third SoCal bike rider killed by a hit-and-run driver since the first of the year.

My deepest sympathy and prayers for Jonathan Joseph Akahito Lupola and his loved ones.