We’re stalled out once again at 24 new or renewing members of the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition who’ve signed up in the first-ever May BikinginLA LACBC Membership Drive.
Which means we need just seven more people to sign up or renew your membership today to make get to 31 new members by May 31st.
So please take just a moment and invest a little time and a few dollars in making this the city and county it should be for bicyclists, by joining the one organization dedicated to fighting for your right to ride in comfort and safety, wherever you ride in the LA area.
Not to mention there’s still time to get some great LACBC swag with your membership. But only if you join before the end of this month!
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If you haven’t done it yet, take a few minutes to read Michael MacDonald’s guest post about being stopped by an ill-informed LA County sheriff’s deputy for riding in the Bus Only lane on Wilshire Blvd — right next to a sign saying bikes are allowed. Along with a couple other incidents in which police officers seem unaware of the laws regarding bike riders.
Just more proof that we have to know the law. Because the ones charged with enforcing it too often don’t.
Meanwhile, CiclaValley offers his take on the incident.
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Bike Month officially concludes tonight at with the free Bike Night at Union Station from 5:30 to 8:30 pm.
This is from the event’s Facebook page —
Bike Night is more than just bikes. You are invited to Bike Night at Union Station, hosted by Metro and our partners. Join us for music from Jungle Fire, raffles and games, awesome prizes like a Public Bike, and the highlight of the evening, a bicycle fashion show. The fashion show features works by OTIS Fashion Design students under the direction of Todd Oldham, presented with a sneak preview of the Downtown LA bike share Metro Bikes.
Bike Night is free and will feature special guests, live music and entertainment, complementary bike valet, and non-hosted food trucks and vending.
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The CHP in Orange County is looking for witnesses to the tragic death of an eight-year old boy who was crushed by a garbage truck while riding his bike on Thursday. The Newport Beach neighborhood is reportedly devastated by the death of the boy, who still has not been publicly named even though his identity appears to be common knowledge in the area.
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Cycling Weekly offers five talking points from the 18th stage of the Giro, where Dutch rider Steven Kruijswijk maintains a nearly insurmountable three-minute lead.
Italian pro Fabio Taborre gets a four year ban for doping.
Several members of pro cycling’s Team SmartShop are suing the team owner in Orange County Court for failing to support the team, which folded last year.
Steel frames may be making a comeback on the pro tour.
And Cycling News calls this weekend’s USA Cycling Professional Road Championships course in Winston-Salem NC a technical, hilly death by a thousand cuts.
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Local
Metro approves an Active Transportation Strategic Plan for first mile/last mile connections to transit, though the commitment to pay for it along the Purple Line leaves something to be desired. You can use their interactive budget tool to tell Metro what to do with their money.
Great idea. Give up your UCLA parking permit, and get a $400 credit towards a new bike from Helen’s Cycles in Westwood.
Cycling in the South Bay offers a primer in how and why to file a police report when you’ve been harassed, threatened or assaulted on your bike. Even if the cops really don’t want you to.
A sheriff’s SWAT team captured the man who shot a cop in West Covina last weekend when the deputy approach him as he walked his bike.
State
A local website looks at last week’s Temecula Ride of Silence. Meanwhile, Richmond CA bicyclists ride to remember victims of gun violence.
Newport Beach considers safety improvements on PCH and the Mariner’s Mile. Although converting the latter to a six-lane “super highway” to speed traffic flow should not be considered an improvement, safety or otherwise.
The new bike path along Highway 101 between Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties wins a state award for Bicycle Pedestrian Project of the Year.
Google funds the repaving of a four-mile stretch of a Bay Area bike and pedestrian trail.
Caught on video: A road raging San Francisco driver got out of his car to threaten and spit on a frightened female bike rider, after she became angry when he parked in a protected bike lane. Which evidently isn’t protected enough.
San Francisco plans improvements to the dangerous Masonic Drive, including raised bike lanes; the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition calls for protected lanes instead.
National
A Forbes writer asks for a bike brand just for women to increase the number of women on bikes, while a London bespoke framebuilder has the same idea, but one custom frame at a time.
An Illinois man used a fake check to buy a real 1957 Schwinn Black Phantom worth nearly two grand.
Hundreds of car racing fans will skip the traffic and parking hassles by biking to the Indy 500.
A Vermont website is apparently dedicating itself to ferreting out the grand AARP – World Health Organization conspiracy behind Complete Streets. Or maybe walkable neighborhoods are just part of the Agenda 21 plan to wipe out the auto industry.
Evidently, New York Bike Month plays second fiddle to Fleet Week.
Gothamist lists the six best bike rides in New York for your next trip to the Big Apple. Or maybe you’d prefer seven great places to bike in Bethesda.
A peeved Philadelphia cyclist blocks a city bus for a full hour because he felt the driver was following him too closely. Meanwhile, a Philly writer says if bicyclists had better infrastructure, there’d be fewer public displays of self-righteous moral outrage.
International
A Canadian writer predicts disaster when an Ontario regional government legalizes riding two abreast next year, even though the law prohibiting it was repealed because it was never enforced to begin with.
The Guardian says new London mayor Sadik Khan faces a challenge standing up to the fading dinosaurs who oppose improving bikeways and livability.
Olympic medalist Victoria Pendleton says she was forced out of bike racing by the corrosive culture in British cycling.
I want to be like him when I grow up. A 99-year old British man looks back on 70 years of riding around the world.
The Netherlands is considering banning cell phone use while riding, after a 13-year old boy was killed while using his last year. But how would that affect mobile cycling apps and GPS systems?
Dutch bike maker VanMoof promises their new bike is so theft proof, that they will replace it if it can’t be recovered in two weeks after being stolen.
A 75-year old Catholic priest has put 50,000 miles on his bike serving his parish in Africa.
An Aussie study shows the further the distance cycled, the fewer women who make the trip.
Finally…
Your next bike could be a pedal-powered hamster. Maybe bicycling really is the new golf, at least for traffic planners.
And who needs a map when you’ve got GPS built into your shoes — or your handlebar grips?
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I’m planning to take the holiday weekend off. So get out and ride your bike. And unless there’s breaking news over the weekend, we’ll see you bright and early Tuesday morning.
And please join the LACBC or renew your membership today if you haven’t already!
Developing Now in Santa Clarita re Hit and Run Placerita Canyon
http://www.hometownstation.com/santa-clarita-latest-news/suspect-in-custody-in-fatal-hit-and-run-crash-171604
That Indy 500 story combined my two favorite things, bikes as transportation and car racing as entertainment.
Being an avid cyclist. In the past 3 years I have noticed an increase of disregard by many cyclists of common courtesy for motorists.It is evident in the increase of cyclist. Deaths perhaps related to the “Freds” and their entitled behavior that angers motorists toward ALL CYCLUSTS