
Day 163 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025.
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Calbike reports on the California legislature’s halftime progress on a number of bicycling and transportation-related bills.
In addition to the bills we discussed yesterday, measures advancing from one chamber to the other include:
- AB 382 lowers the speed limit around schools from 25 mph to 20 mph.
- AB 720 reforms automated red light cameras to make the system more equitable and effective.
- AB 1014 would give city’s more flexibility to lower speed limits on non-freeway state routes.
- A number of bills further regulating ebikes also moved forward.
However, AB 981, which would have established a pilot program to require intelligent speed assist for drivers convicted of reckless driving, was held over for next year.
On the other hand, a bill that would have redefined electric motorbikes that exceed the state’s 28 mph speed limit for Class III ebikes died due to opposition from the DMV and the motorcycle industry.
And thankfully, AB 612, giving fire departments more authority over bikeway planning, died a merciful death. As we’ve seen, fire officials frequently oppose projects that would improve safety over misplaced fears it could slow their trucks; firefighters claimed protected bike lanes on Venice Blvd in Mar Vista caused dangerous delays, but LAFD’s own stats showed response times only dropped by a few seconds after the lanes were installed.
Meanwhile, Calbike says they’re working with Caltrans to “ensure the agency takes active transportation safety seriously and better implements Complete Streets on its highways,” after accusing the agency of ignoring a 2024 law mandating Complete Streets.
Photo from California State Assembly website.
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A joint session of the LA City Council Transportation and Public Works Committee approved motions for better bike path maintenance, bus cam enforcement of drivers parking in bike lanes, and how to implement Measure HLA, requiring the city to build out the mobility plan when streets are resurfaced.
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People For Bikes announced its support for a bipartisan bill in the US House that would remove tariffs on bicycle components to accelerate domestic bike manufacturing.
But they could still be subject to the 50% tariff on steel and aluminum, which are already driving up bike prices.
Exactly what the industry doesn’t need as it struggles to recover from the post-pandemic bike bust.
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Sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.
Apparently, former KNBC sportscaster Fred Roggin is spending his retirement working as a Palm Springs commentator, tackling the ever-popular subject of bike riders rolling stop signs. Never mind the drivers who do the same thing in their multi-ton SUVs.
Police in the UK are looking for a road-raging mountain bike rider who evidently didn’t take kindly to getting hit by a driver, walking over to his car and assaulting him.
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Local
Metro posted the results of their survey asking for the public’s budget priorities; unfortunately, biking and walking improvements are nowhere to be seen, although bikeshare showed increased support “when filtered by (its) respective geographic zones.”
Works for me. CD10 Councilmember Heather Hutt is proposing closing portions of four streets to convert Leimert Park’s Stocker Plaza into a public park.
Today is the last day to register for the cycling competition at the Pasadena Senior Games. And get your comments for the proposed 380-acre Haskell Canyon Bike Park in Saugus by end of day today.
State
Trump is expected to sign a measure today that will block California’s mandate banning the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035. Okay, how about a mandate banning all cars within ten years, instead?
National
She gets it. A writer for Streetsblog says empty bus and bike lanes are a feature, not a bug, because they move traffic more efficiently than all those lanes clogged up with cars.
Cycling Savvy posted video of Mighk Wilson’s recent webinar on data-driven planning for bicycling.
Bike Magazine says modern cross-country and short-travel mountain bikes may just be the ideal bikes for most riders.
Bad news from Las Vegas, where motorcycle deaths in Clark County have gone up 16% — and bicycling fatalities have more than doubled.
The Phoenix New Times examines the case of a Latino man shot in the back by police during the altercation that followed a pretextual traffic stop, after two cops pulled him over because he was riding his bike without a light near a drug house; he somehow allegedly pulled a gun and fired a shot at them, despite being dogpiled by both of the officers, whose body cams conveniently fell off during the struggle.
That’s more like it. Boulder, Colorado has taken an old storage space next to a bus stop and converted it into a free garage for bicycles — which is a great way to encourage more people to ride.
Heartbreaking news from Texas, where a 12-year old Houston boy was killed by a hit-and-run driver after he was chased by a dog before losing control of his bike and falling into traffic. Seriously, there’s a special place in hell for anyone who would take off and leave a kid to die in the street.
The Illinois legislature passed a handful of bike and pedestrian safety bills, including one giving every human-powered device and low-speed electric bicycle the same rights and responsibilities as two-wheeled bicycles, effectively legalizing recumbents, adaptive bikes and adult tricycles.
This is why people keep dying on our streets. An Illinois driver took off after striking a kid riding his bike in a crosswalk, and had to be stopped from fleeing by a witness — yet police cited him for a couple of lousy traffic violations, while giving him a walk on the hit-and-run.
New York is installing protective daylighting barriers at Brooklyn intersections to improve safety for bike riders and pedestrians.
That’s more like it, too. Louisiana’s governor signed a new bill imposing a mandatory sentence of at least two years for hit-and-run resulting in death or great bodily injury, without the possibility of probation, parole or a suspended sentence.
International
A Toronto city council committee concluded that only bicycles should be allowed in bike lanes, which are currently governed by a mixture of rules depending on what type of lane it is.
Former British cycling star Chris Boardman says the ebike panic is misplaced when 99.5% of road deaths are caused by the people in the big dangerous machines — not the ones riding on two wheels with a battery attached.
He gets it, too. A Dutch engineer says forget mandating bike helmets and focus on building bike lanes, which too often lose out to funding public transportation in local communities.
Competitive Cycling
I want to be like him when I grow up. Thirty-time mountain bike, road and ‘cross national champ Fred Schmid is still lining up for Unbound Gravel at 92-years old.
The International Olympic Committee and World Anti-Doping Agency issued a joint statement condemning the Enhanced Games, a pro-doping alternative to the Olympics where failing a drug test means not taking any. So if Lance is still looking to make a comeback, the door is wide open.
Finally…
If you’re going to place an AirTag on your kid’s bike, make sure you’ve got the right bike. The two-year old daughter of a Legend is one of us, too.
And if anybody ever says I died doing what I love, I will come back and haunt them to the end of their miserable days.
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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.
Oh, and fuck Putin.