South LA mourns 12-year old bike rider, help end Los Angeles parking minimums, and NY official bribed to halt bike lanes

Day 237 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

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KABC-7 reports the South LA community came together Friday to mourn 12-year old Michael Smith, who was killed by a speeding hit-and-run driver last month.

Twenty-one-year old Kaleah Beasley was arrested shortly afterwards, charged with vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence for allegedly killing the soon-to-be 13-year old boy while driving 75 mph on a residential street.

Not that the cops bothered to tell us, or anything.

“We’re here to say that this community deserves a safer road. That these kids deserve safer roads… that this road right here is a race track, said Damian Kevitt, executive director for the nonprofit Streets Are For Everyone…

“You have a whole family riddled with grief and sadness over what could’ve been so easily avoided,” said Aydian Atwater, Smith’s cousin.

The East Side Riders Bike Club, Faith for SAFE Streets, and Streets Are For Everyone teamed with family members to host a breakfast, followed by a ghost bike installation and memorial ride.

Let’s hope this is the last time we need one.

Photo by Streets Are For Everyone

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Streets For All is asking for your support to end parking minimums in Los Angeles.

Tuesday: Tell the PLUM committee you support eliminating parking minimums.

The Planning and Land Use Management Committee has an item on its agenda to consider a motion this Tuesday that would begin the steps to eliminate parking minimums.

Parking minimums drive up the cost of housing and result in cities that are oriented toward cars rather than people. This results in unsafe streets and increased traffic deaths as well as buildings surrounded by parking lots instead of walkable communities.

HOW YOU CAN HELP:
Make public comment in support live on item 21
This Tuesday, August 26th at 2:00pm
John Ferraro Council Chamber
Room 340, City Hall
200 North Spring Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012

If you can’t make the meeting in person, comment in support on the council file.

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What’s a little bribe or two between friends?

The former chief adviser to New York Mayor Eric Adams is accused of taking bribes worth $75,000 and a “brief appearance in the TV series ‘Godfather of Harlem‘” to interfere with plans to improve safety on a Greenpoint street.

Siblings and prominent political donors Tony and Gina Argento allegedly bribed Ingrid Lewis-Martin to override a decision to narrow the street used by their film production company.

Which explains why the city suddenly halted previously approved plans for a road diet and parking-protected bike lanes on “notorious” McGuinness Boulevard in 2023.

Safety be damned.

A text from Lewis-Martin to Gina Argento responded to efforts by neighborhood advocates to get the city to go through with the plan, saying “We do not care what they say. We are ignoring them and continuing with our plan. They can kiss my ass.”

Nice mouth you got there, lady.

Needless to say, they all denied the allegations and pled not guilty.

The city finally installed the bike lanes last year, presumably reversing itself after Lewis-Martin left the administration.

This comes after a longtime ally, adviser and fundraiser for New York Mayor Eric Adams was outed for allegedly stuffing a $100 bribe into a bag of Herr’s Sour Cream & Onion ripple potato chips, and handing them to a local reporter covering City Hall.

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

No bias here. A Montreal newspaper pours cold water on a recent study calling for more bike lanes in the city, arguing it will never be like bike-friendly European cities with milder winters like Berlin and Amsterdam. In other words, like just about every other anti-bike lane column ever written anywhere. 

No surprise here, as Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s government is appealing a court ruling that halted his plans to rip out Toronto bike lanes, after the judge concluded bike riders have a constitutional right to not get killed.

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

There isn’t a pit in hell deep enough for the 50-something Korean man accused of chaining a border collie to his ebike and dragging it to it’s death; he is being investigated for animal abuse — which carries a maximum penalty of three years and a fine of less than $28,000. Although that hardly seems like enough for such a heinous and hideous crime.

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Local 

LADOT finally closed a dangerous 300-foot slip lane extending from Argyle Avenue to Yucca Street in Hollywood, which allowed people exiting the 101 freeway to drive like they were still on it.

MSN bypasses the Westside Current’s paywall to report on efforts to tear down the newly installed “Ralph’s wall” blocking longstanding bicycle and pedestrian access from the Ralph’s parking lot to Yvonne Burke Park and the beachside Marvin Braude Bike Trail.

 

State

State Sen. Catherine Blakespear called on Encinitas to preserve safety components of the $4.1 million Santa Fe Drive Corridor Improvements Project, two years after Blakespear secured $3 million in state funding after a 15-year old boy was killed there riding an ebike.

A man riding an electric motorcycle was killed when he collided with a police cruiser after leading the cops on a high-speed chase along an Escondido bike path Thursday afternoon; no word on whether anyone was using it at the time.

Sad news from El Centro, where a 14-year old boy was killed in a collision while riding an electric motorcycle; although for a change, the local paper distinguished the e-motorbike from a slower ped-assist ebike. Which doesn’t make his death any less tragic. But it does raise once again the question of whether kids too young to drive belong on such powerful bikes.

San Bernardino reopened the newly rebuilt Mt. Vernon Avenue Bridge after five years of work to repair the structurally deficient 1934 causeway, which now has two lanes in each direction, along with sidewalks and bike lanes.

A Kern County man will be sentenced in October after pleading no contest to the drunken hit-and-run that killed a 30-year old woman riding a bicycle over three years ago; prosecutors dropped a murder charge against Caleb Nathaniel Rodriguez for killing Raven Mora, which suggests Rodriguez has a previous DUI conviction on his record, making him eligible for the murder count.

No surprise here, as tariffs on steel and aluminum are causing delays and price increases at a Bakersfield bike shop. And probably every other bike shop in the US.

An op-ed in the UC Santa Barbara student newspaper argues in defense of bike helmets to navigate those “messy” bike lanes, something most college students usually forgo.

Great news from Richmond, where community advocate Najari Smith has re-opened the Rich City Rides bike co-op, after over a year after the shop was forced to close when burglars cleaned them out.

Sad news from North Oakland, where a Berkeley woman was killed by a driver when she allegedly rode her bicycle through a red light.

 

National

Over 1,000 people turned out on Saturday for the nearly 200-mile Seattle to Vancouver bike ride, marking the 45th anniversary of the event.

A Seattle man known around town for pulling his cello in a bright pink case on a bicycle trailer was lucky to escape serious injuries when he was run down from behind on a section of roadway where the mayor had cancelled planned safety improvements, including speed humps.

The local newspaper offers photos of the best bike parade costumes from New Belgium Brewery’s annual Tour de Fat fest as it returns to my Colorado hometown for the 26th year.

The 70-year old namesake and former owner of an upscale Minneapolis Italian restaurant is facing charges for running down a bike rider, then looking down at the unconscious victim and just saying “I didn’t see him,” before calmly driving back to work; the victim was struck when a driver in the right lane stopped and waved him across, and the semi-elderly driver in the left lane didn’t.

Indiana teenagers are lobbying the city to build a 1.5-mile, officially sanctioned trail to replace the DIY bike park officials had ordered destroyed.

A Texas software engineer finished a bike ride from New York’s Times Square to Miami Beach, while relying on the kindness of strangers along the way.

The parents of American diplomat Sarah Debbink Langenkamp are working to push a bike safety bill through Congress named in her honor, three years after she was killed while riding her bike in Maryland; the bill would close gaps in existing bike paths across the US.

The 14-year old boy on an electric dirt bike who killed a man riding a bicycle on Miami’s deadly Rickenbacker Causeway last week has been charged with driving without a license for killing the 54-year old victim after turning himself in to homicide investigators.

 

International

Edinburgh, Scotland claims to have learned its lessons from a previous attempt at operating a bikeshare system, hiring Swedish tech firm Voi to install a “more durable” ebike-based program after vandals destroyed bikes from the initial effort.

The leader of a Hertfordshire, England council hit back at protests saying an “insane” bike lane is coming to the aptly named Gallows Hill, urging residents “not to be misled.”

According to Cycling Weekly, ebike sales in the UK are being limited by a “perfect storm” of factors, as the country ranks 29th out of 30 European countries in adopting ebikes.

A British newspaper offers 20 family friendly bike routes across the UK and Ireland.

Nigerian cyclist Emmanuel Myam, aka Emmiwuks, arrived at the Liberian border, 55 days after setting out from his home to ride through Benin, Togo, Ghana and Cote D’Ivoire on his way to the US to call attention to the plight of children and vulnerable people displaced by conflicts on the African continent.

 

Competitive Cycling

Tragic news from Spain, where 17-year old Ivan Meléndez Luque was killed in a mass pileup when a tire blew out on his bike midway through the second stage of Spain’s Ribera del Duero road race championship, after he was a last-minute substitute for an injured teammate.

The WorldTour peloton paused for a moment of silence to honor Meléndez before the second stage of the Vuelta; the third stage of the Ribera del Duero was canceled as well, along with the remainder second stage.

Two-time Tour de France champ Jonas Vingegaard took both the second stage of the Vuelta and the red leader’s jersey on Sunday, getting back on his bike after crashing on the wet course.

Talk about a bad day. After French cyclist Axel Zingle dislocated his shoulder in crashing the second stage of the Vuelta, he dislocated it again reaching for a gel pack after they popped it back in. But he still managed to finish the stage — albeit dead last — even though someone stole his bike when he asked them to hold it so he could go back into the ambulance after the second dislocation.

British cyclist Finlay Pickering took a 124-mile cab ride from his home in Andorra to the airport in Toulouse, France, then caught a flight to Turin, Italy for the start of the Vuelta, after getting a last-minute call to fill in for an injured teammate.

Dutch pro Mathieu van der Poel is hanging up his road bike and switching to fat tires to focus on mountain biking for the remainder of the year; he finished his road season with a second place in Belgium’s Renewi Tour, behind overall winner Arnaud De Lie.

A 17-year old English track cyclist is now a European and World junior champ, just four years after Ioan Hepburn “pulverized” a kidney crashing his mountain bike before a race.

For some unknown reason, USA Today felt a need to catch us up on what’s going on with America’s seven-time ex-Tour de France champ 13 years after the scandal that ended his cycling career, as if anyone still cares. Or am I the only one who wishes he’d just go away?

 

Finally…

If you teach your kid not to leave his bike on the neighbor’s lawn, you won’t have to ask ’em to fix it after the sprinklers come on. How to stay comfy while riding sans pants.

And that feeling when your 80 mph DIY ebike tops the legal limit by a mere 65 mph.

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

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

One comment

  1. Ben Fulton says:

    “Indiana teenagers are lobbying…” that IndyWeek publication is actually based in North Carolina. No, I can’t explain it either.

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