Tag Archive for Riverside County Sheriff’s Department

American expat with TX & CO ties missing after mountain biking in Spain, and focus on drivers to improve elderly bike safety

Day 42 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

We mentioned last week that a man from the UK had gone missing while mountain biking in Spain, prompting an all-out search.

Now it turns out that the victim is 50-year old US expat Matt Opperman, who has lived in Spain off-and-and on for several years, after serving as head mechanic for the Australian mountain bike team at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Police concluded that Opperman, who worked for Yeti Cycles, set out on his electric mountain bike two weeks ago yesterday, after finding his black van parked in Segura de la Sierra, west of Alicante, Spain.

Family members say the father of two had planned to stay at a cabin and explore local trails, but hasn’t been seen since.

Opperman is a former resident of both Houston, Texas and Longmont, Colorado.

Photo by Markus Spiske from Pexels.

………

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Office held a bike safety seminar for older riders at a Palm Desert senior center, after two men in their 70s were killed while riding their bikes to start the year.

World-renowned golf photographer John Henebry, Jr., 76, was killed by a driver in Rancho Mirage on New Years Day, while 72-year old Patrick Petre died after he was fatally struck by a motorist in Palm Desert just one day later.

Which suggests that if the sheriff’s department really wants to improve safety for older bike riders, maybe they should start with a seminar on how to drive safely around people on bicycles, older or otherwise.

Because it’s not the people riding bikes who are killing people.

………

Streets For All’s latest virtual happy hour will take place tomorrow, featuring newly-elected Culver City Councilmember Bubba Fish.

………

NACTO says there’s a lot of new and revised rules in the latest edition of the organization’s Urban Bikeway Design Guide (click to make graphic mo’ bigger).

You know, in case you need a little light reading.

………

Local  

Transportation For America says the opening of the LAX/Metro Transit Center Station will be a key step in preparing Los Angeles to host a carfree 2028 Olympic Games, along with a planned 28-mile-long — or maybe 22-mile — zero-emissions, non-vehicular “Festive Trail” linking the major venues currently proposed for the 2028 Games.

 

State

Escondido cops wrote 68 traffic tickets in that city’s latest crackdown on violations that can endanger bicyclists and pedestrians, but didn’t break down how many of those tickets went to bike riders, walkers or motorists.

 

National

A writer for conservative The Federalist says New Urbanism is just a left-wing assault on property rights and personal mobility, and the future of America isn’t a “high-density…nightmare,” but “spacious, family-friendly suburbs where liberty thrives.” Sure, let’s go with that.

In a scenario many Los Angeles bike riders can relate to, a Honolulu bike path has “bumps (that) make bike rides feel more like bull rides” due to ridges and cracks in the pavement caused by tree roots.

Seattle is adding a protected bike lane and pedestrian improvements to a short, two-block street segment connecting a pair of waterfront parks, although stopping short of fully pedestrianizing the street.

Even 5th graders get it. An elementary student in the tiny mountain town of Eagle, Colorado — not far from the famed Vail ski resort — calls for a bike path to replace a popular, but dangerous riding route on a local roadway to improve safety and reduce injuries.

Anti-urbanist President Trump is reportedly in talks with New York’s governor to not only get rid of New York City’s successful congestion pricing program, but also rip out the city’s bike lanes, which have improved safety for everyone. Although it’s questionable what authority he has to force their removal on state and local roadways, but that doesn’t seem to stop anyone these days. 

New York takes another dramatic step to slow traffic by installing a “green wave” on a 36-block stretch of Third Ave, where traffic signals that had been timed for vehicles traveling 25 mph have been reset for a 15 mph, allowing bicyclists — not drivers — to travel without stopping.

Even motor-centric Daytona Beach, Florida is getting buffered bike lanes on the state’s coastal highway, as part of a $10 million resurfacing project.

A writer for the University of South Florida takes a look at the bike scene in St. Petersburg.

 

International

Momentum offers a Valentines Day list of “10 enticing ideas to ignite your passion for both cycling and romance.”

Life is cheap in Ireland, where a 62-year old man, who had faced up to ten years behind bars for running a red light and killing an eight-year old boy riding a bicycle, was sentenced to just three years in jail, with one suspended, after the judge considered mitigating factors; the boy’s father says he will never get over the “violence of the impact.”

A new Dutch study shows that promoting bicycling can help create more compact cities, while eliminating bicycle infrastructure increases commuting times and distances and exacerbates traffic congestion, while resulting in a significant reduction in worker welfare.

India’s Supreme Court ruled that cities can’t be required to build protected bike lanes, when the government has trouble providing even basic amenities like housing and hospitals.

 

Competitive Cycling

World road champ Tadej Pogačar may be ready to take on the famed cobbles of the Hell of the North, after he was filmed on a Paris-Roubaix-themed training ride.

 

Finally…

Even bank branches are victims of hit-and-run drivers. Lead a tank into battle on a bicycle, and somehow you’re a laughing stock instead of a hero.

And your next bike could have self-charging shifting and solar-powered brakes.

Okay, maybe not the next one. Or the one after that, even.

………

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

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

Ebikes blamed in insurance CEO’s murder, and Riverside County deputy charged with killing Palm Desert bike rider last year

Just 26 short days until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 
But not one LA city leader seems to give a damn about it.
Or if they do, they’re not saying anything. 

………

It’s Day 7 of the 10th Annual BikinginLA Holiday Fund Drive!

Thanks to Ross P and Tom M for their generous donations to bring all the best bike news and advocacy to your favorite screen every morning. 

So don’t wait. Give now!

And if you have anything left over, give a little to Streetsblog LA to support their vital work coving transportation in the Los Angeles area. 

………

Yesterday morning, a masked gunman stepped out from behind a car on a New York street, and fatally shot the CEO of United HealthCare.

The shooter then walked away, before hopping on an ebike and riding off into the sunset to make his getaway. Or Central Park, anyway.

So what does the Daily Beast focus on?

The killer’s last known means of escape, obviously, terming the gunman the “E-Bike Assassin.”

Actually, almost all of the initial reports focused on a Citi Bike-riding killer, but most of the stories were revised after it turned out the ebike wasn’t a Citi Bike, after all.

Which seemed to take the fun out of it for them, since the stories downplayed the gunman’s means of escape after that bit of news broke.

Although it would have been better if he had been on a Citi Bike, since they have digital trackers that would allow the police to trace the route the shooter took on the bike, enabling them to look for cameras that might show his face, or where he went after docking the bike.

They would also have been able to identify the exact bike he used, allowing them to examine it for evidence.

Instead, they’ll just have to rely on the city’s massive number of public and private security cams, and hope for the best.

………

Better late than never.

A Riverside County Sheriff’s deputy has been charged with vehicular manslaughter for killing a man riding a bicycle in Palm Desert last year.

Deputy Christian J. Lopez pled not guilty to the single count when he was arraigned October 16, a full year and six days after the collision that killed 33-year old Palm Desert resident Christopher Thomas.

Lopez was on duty and driving a marked patrol car when he drove into Thomas around 3:40 am near the intersection of Country Club and Eldorado drives.

Unfortunately, there’s no word at this time on why Lopez was charged, or whether he was charged with a felony or a misdemeanor.

Hopefully, we’ll learn more soon. If not, we may have to wait until his next court date on January 10th, although that is almost guaranteed to be delayed.

………

After Russian generals banned soldiers from driving into battle in commandeered civilian vehicles, following a spate of drunk driving crashes, the soldiers have turned to bicycles to lead their armored vehicles.

Clearly, some Russian drone operators were unimpressed.

Actually, there’s a long history of bicycles used in warfare, leading all the way up to modern ebikes, as well as foldies designed for paratroopers and capable of carrying 500 pounds of gear.

………

It’s now 350 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 42 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

………

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

No bias here. Streetsblog says hundreds of people have signed a letter of support for an Evanston, Illinois bike lane, despite a local newspaper’s suggestion that most residents are against it.

Washington Post readers respond to the recent badly misguided and misleading opinion piece blaming the city’s traffic problems on bike lanes, with similarly misguided letters claiming we’re stealing their traffic lanes and parking spaces; the paper says they’ll post letters supporting the lanes tomorrow.  Or they could just link to my piece dismantling the writer’s arguments

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

Seriously? Police in Bournemouth, England are looking for a man in his 60s who was reportedly acting suspiciously, apparently because he was riding a bicycle while wearing hi-viz, and had a bike cam attached to his helmet.

Singaporean Redditors go berserk over video of a man on a bicycle riding slowly in front of a bus, forcing the driver to follow him for ten minutes. Or maybe the rider was just nervously waiting for the driver to go around him so he could change lanes. 

………

………

Local  

More on Metro’s demand that Culver City repay the $435 million they gave the city for the now-removed MOVE Culver City protected bike lanes; the decision to collect the funds will be finalized at Monday’s Metro board meeting.

The Pasadena Complete Streets Coalition has reached the 100-person cap for their third annual Holiday Lights Ride this Saturday. So if you haven’t signed up yet, you’re SOL. 

 

State

The CHP is giving away bike lights in Isla Vista in hopes of reducing the high number of bicycling collisions.

A San Francisco website wonders if the city has learned the lessons of its Covid-era Slow Streets, arguing they could form the backbone of its new bike plan.

Bad news from Santa Rosa, where a man riding a bicycle suffered life-threatening injuries when he was struck by the driver of a minivan, who actually stuck around and cooperated with investigators.

 

National

Bike Portland reports Oregon could finally reconsider the state’s regressive $15 Bicycle Excise Tax, charged on all new bicycle sales as a performative gesture to the people who falsely claim bike riders don’t pay their fair share for the roads we ride.

Police in Boulder, Colorado ruled no one was at fault in a fatal crash between a 34-year old man riding a gravel bike and a 74-year old man who died when he hit his head after they collided; the rider wasn’t speeding, neither person was under the influence, and both tried to avoid the crash.

Philadelphia just banned parking or stopping in bike lanes, increasing fines to a relatively paltry $125 in the city center, and just 75 bucks elsewhere. There’s something seriously wrong when cities have to belatedly ban something that should have been illegal all along. 

 

International

Momentum examines the world’s best bicycle parking garages. None of which are in Los Angeles. Obviously. 

A writer for The Guardian says there’s a Black bicycling revolution sweeping the globe, with the rise of grassroots groups breaking cultural barriers to entry (scroll down).

Toronto’s transit board banned lithium-ion batteries in buses, trains and stations during the winter months, apparently concerned about the risk of ebike and e-scooter fires, although that doesn’t seem to increase in cold weather; the motion was approved despite a report showing it would adversely affect low-income workers. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up.

Here’s another reason why people keep dying on the streets. The daughter of a British man killed by an 82-year old driver with failing eyesight renewed her call for giving motorists mandatory eye tests, rather than just allowing them to tick a box. Seriously, mandatory eye tests for drivers should be, well, mandatory. For everyone.

Greece is now officially bike friendly, encouraging responsible bike tourism. As opposed to irresponsible car tourism, evidently. 

Israel opened a new bike path, built for the equivalent of $2 million, in honor of the 11 people riding bicycles who were killed in last year’s October 7th attack, and call for the safe return of two bike-riding hostages, as well as the other hostages taken in the attack.

The AP looks at Indonesia’s Starlings, the country’s bicycle-born coffee peddlers.

A 47-year old man in Perth, Australia will spend the next four years and three months behind bars for the hit-and-run death of an 86-year old man who was illegally riding his ebike on the freeway; the judge said the question of why the victim was on the freeway in the first place was “beside the point” and termed the driver’s failure to stop as “callous.”

 

Competitive Cycling

The Athletic offers more details about the dooring that put double Olympic champ and 2022 Vuelta winner Remco Evenepoel in the ER; he’ll spend the next two weeks immobilized after undergoing successful surgery.

The world’s longest single-staged mountain bike race kicks off in Namibia tomorrow, covering 250 miles in 24 hours.

 

Finally…

Maybe cycling teams should cover their new kits in tape, like carmakers do to road test new models. Now you, too, can just pedal your 10,000 daily steps.

And no. Just no, already.

………

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

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

33-year old man riding bicycle killed by Riverside sheriff’s deputy in Palm Desert; 6th SoCal bike rider killed in past week

It just keeps coming.

For the sixth time in just seven days, someone has been killed riding a bicycle on the mean streets of Southern California.

And this time, the killer was an on-duty Riverside County Sheriff’s deputy in a marked patrol car.

Multiple sources are reporting that the victim, identified as 33-year old Palm Desert resident Christopher Thomas, was struck by the deputy around 3:40 am near the intersection of Country Club and Eldorado drives in Palm Desert.

Thomas died at the scene just seven minutes later, despite the efforts of deputies to revive him.

The deputy was not responding to a call, or using red lights and siren. The investigation has been taking over by the CHP.

Unfortunately, that’s all we know at this time.

Let’s just hope it’s not another case of a deputy distracted by his onboard computer.

This is at least the 41st bicycling fatality in Southern California this year, and the eighth that I’m aware of in Riverside County.

It’s also the second person killed riding a bike in the county in the past week.

My deepest prayers and sympathy for Christopher Thomas and his loved ones.

Thanks to Jeffrey Rusk for the heads-up.