Showing posts with label #safety #sharetheroad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #safety #sharetheroad. Show all posts

Sunday, April 22, 2018

What Is It this Time, California? An Earth Day Post


What is it this time, California? 

It's the plastic straws, isn't it? Or is it the woodburning fireplaces? Let me guess: it is something - anything - but your own personal motor vehicle. 

Yes, I am disgusted that SB827 - a measure designed to build more housing near transit in CA - died in committee last week. But I shouldn't be surprised. California puts on a good show but it is really a red state disguised as a blue one in that it preserves the suburbs as though they were an endangered owl or a giant redwood. The fact that this state, which does so many things well (up to and including allowing bikes on trains) is so far behind the curve when it comes to building a car-lite world is really disheartening. 

So in the lead up to Earth Day 2018 I tried to think to myself - what would it take Californians to see just how absurd the car culture is? 

I went to work with my miniatures - first showing a place where unused motor vehicles are stored (it's important because around 25% or more of a city's land is used for storage of an unused motor vehicle and it should be easier to house a human being than it is to store a machine).


Eagle-eyes followers will note I have upped my game: yesterday I rode a cargo bike to Staples to buy black poster board and a white paint pen (as a habit I take a photo of my bike, no matter what I'm riding or where I'm riding it to, so that if it is stolen I have a most recent shot).



That is the rack I used.  I should point out that when this photo was taken I was returning a Rug Doctor I had rented from the nearby grocery store. I picked it up and returned it by bike because you don't have to make the air dirty if you want your carpets clean. Both ways I was transporting it I wanted to catch up with a Stanley Steemer van at a red light and pull the Robert DeNiro "I-am-watching-you-move" from Meet the Parents but no such luck. 

But back to the minatures. With the garage door open I made my streetscapes completely to scale in the hopes that California motorists (and street designers, government officials - Hi, Jerry Brown! - pretend environmentalists, etc.) would actually see their world - which causes about 1/3 of pollution in this state - for the first time. 


"A car rack? I think if you go around the corner of the building you'll find one on the sidewalk next to a sign that says 'Cars Not Allowed on Sidewalk'. You're brave to be driving a car here! Be careful!"


"Dammit! There's always a bike parked in the car lane!"


"Officers he just came out of nowhere. I don't know what he was doing driving at night. He and his car should have been painted a brighter color!"

"Don't worry, sir. He's dead but it's totally not your fault. No charges will be filed. You're free to go."


"Dang. I keep forgetting what side of the bike the gas cap is on."


"I have bad news. The little plastic wire tie that holds the brake cables together has come loose. It'll cost $1,200 to fix it but you can pick it up Friday. Next Thursday at the latest."


"Officer it was so horrible! He just accelerated his bicycle and plowed right through the crowd! All I could hear was screaming! Why would anyone do anything like this?"

"Terrorists use bicycles as weapons all the time, ma'am. But the cyclist was elderly and I think he just got the brake lever mixed up with the pedals. It happens all the time.*"


"Yes, I'll have a Double Double with fries and a Diet Coke. And extra onions."

The last one was a bonus to anyone following me on Twitter - I posted several of these yesterday under the hashtag #IfCarsWereBikes since that was when the mood struck.

So anyway, California: please let me know if I am getting through to you at all because this whole thing of keeping people living in one place and making them drive to another place for work is quite tiresome. Acknowledge that the young people living in crummy rented rooms and trapped in a car-centric system are going to want this state when you draw your last breath (and thanks to the fact the Bay Area now has the sixth worst air in the country every breath you take between now and then may feel a bit more labored than usual). 

Hope everyone had a good Earth Day. Thanks for reading and thanks for riding.


*This is actually a point that has to be talked about more. When people age in a car-centric system they age out of being able to care for and transport themselves. We owe it to ourselves and to every generation (even the Boomers) to endure some short-term disruption of the world - like what SB827 would have done - to get some long-term benefits.




Friday, September 30, 2016

Die in a Car Crash in New Jersey? No NBC News Animation for You


Once again my week was thwarted. I didn't get to make the YouTube video I wanted because the New Jersey Transit Accident happened.

The thing is, I was going to make a video featuring a train for another purpose, but my inspiration left me. Besides, news organizations like NBC Nightly News put together a very professional digital animation of the accident that looks better than anything I can make with my HO scale miniatures. 

They sure work quickly. 

However, the NJ Transit accident did make me think once again about how lousy biking can be in New Jersey (particularly Cherry Hill, which I rode in last year) and the disproportionality of fear and of media attention - something I covered a few months back for Blaze in the UK and something Cyclicious summed up in a perfect Tweet

But here's what I found when I did a Internet search for "New Jersey Car Accidents" and found almost a dozen stories (just from this month) in minutes. In case the graphics person at any news organization is overworked, here are a some other horrible commuting stories that may just have gotten a wee bit less attention than the New Jersey Transit Crash:












That one is awful, but it's worse still knowing that a five-year-old also died in the same crash but I guess that isn't tragic enough to make the national news and lead to a huge series of discussions about auto safety, 



Now before anyone accuses me of being insensitive in terms of the NJ train crash, let's look at the insensitivity of not just news headlines (when you can find them) on car crashes, but on the lens in which we look at them. Car crashes - even fatalities - are often discussed in terms of 'what does this mean for my commute?' instead of anything that remote closes in on compassion. In the minds of most editors a train crash can be described as a 'horror' but a car crash that makes you 15 minutes late? That's just an obstacle between you and enjoying your driving experience. 


I am going to go to yoga today at St. James Park in San Jose (very thankful to the city and Be the Change Yoga & Wellness for doing that). I am going to ride my bike to the VTA and take the train in. It's safer. Easier. Better for my health and better for the environment. As for you, please travel safe no matter how you get around and please, for the love of whatever you pray to, question the headlines and don't sweep car crashes under the rug. Ever. Thanks for reading and thanks for riding. 

Thursday, September 8, 2016

"Amateur Drivers on a Crowded Course"


I know I've used the term "Amateur Drivers on a Crowded Course" before (naturally inspired by the "Professional Driver on a Closed Course" disclaimer that accompanies nearly every car commercial since "Homicidal Maniac Out to Kill Cyclists and Pedestrians" would require a smaller font.

Please like, please share, and as always thanks for watching and thanks for riding. 

Thursday, September 1, 2016

#VisionZero Step 1: Why Driving Slower is Important


This is more important than my childhood action figures in the shot suggest (and bonus points for whoever names the figure all the way on the left).

A lot of cities want to make speed limits 25 miles an hour instead of 30 or even more. It's a good idea and while a lot of sources say you should do it few have really said why one has to do it. The answer is rooted in physics (I did something similar in my riding at night feature). 

Thanks for watching, thanks for sharing, and thanks for riding. 

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Cycling, Driving, and Safety: State Bills I'd Like Passed


Two states were in the news lately for the wrong reasons: the first was Missouri, which apparently proposed a bill that bicycles operated in the state must fly a flag 15’ high. 

The second was South Dakota, which just proposed a bill that bicyclists, when followed by a motor vehicle, must pull over and dismount to allow the motor vehicle to pass. Momentum Magazine did a great piece about this daft proposal. (They didn't say all cyclists must, after dismounting, get on his or her knees and bow to the motor vehicle as it passes like the Ewoks did when they first saw C-3PO, so I guess it could be worse). 

As cyclists, we have to be vigilant to this kind of crazy. At the very least, people who propose these kinds of laws with a straight face shouldn’t be elected to public office again. Honestly, given how the 2016 presidential race has a lot of people redefining crazy, proposed rules like these may have a shot at passing. 

So as long as we are taking about laws that are written with safety in mind, I’m putting forward some proposals that have a little more proportionality:

California - S.R. 2942: Beginning in 2018, All motor vehicles sold in the State of California must have gull-wing doors to prevent city cyclists from being injured by the opening door of a pre-2018 motor vehicle (also known as ‘doored’).

Rhode Island - H.R. 234: All motor vehicles driven in this state - with no exceptions -  are required to have a florescent yellow hood and grille covering (known as a “bra”) to make the motor vehicle easier to see at night. 

Mississippi - S.R. 128: As a new addition to the motor vehicle driving test, residents must be able to pronounce the names of all chemicals in motor vehicle exhaust and know their effects on personal health and climate change. 

Florida - H.R. 5887: Motorists caught using a cellular phone or tablet while driving shall be fined not less than $2,000 and must donate the device in question to the nearest battered women’s shelter. 

Connecticut - S.R. 1188: Motor vehicles that park in a designated bicycle lane are subject to seizure, the driver’s operator license confiscated, and the motorist shall undergo no less than 40 hours of sensitivity training to regain their license. 

Oregon - H.R. 455: Car taxes are to be reduced 30% for households with one motor vehicle with two more more adults and raised 130% for households with a 1:1 motor vehicle/adult ratio.

Kansas - H.R. 456: A 10% tax on Toyota Prius’ sold in the state (Also known as “The Smugmobile Act of 2016”).

Alabama - S.R. 321: All drive through windows at fast food restaurants must display signs, printed in letters no less than four inches high and in full view of the drivers, that read: “Drive through windows are making you fat and polluting the environment” (Known as the “Arby’s Act”).

Michigan - S.R. 2534: By December 31, 2016, all motor vehicles in this state are to have an aftermarket speed governor installed by a trained professional so said motor vehicle, when driven within a fifteen-mile radius of an urban center, will be governed to a speed of no more than twenty-five miles per hour. 

Texas - S.R. 832: Designating the High Occupancy Vehicle lane (known as “HOV Lane”) for vehicles with three or more people, with highway tolls reduced accordingly. Electric and hybrid vehicles with one occupant are banned from using the HOV lane. 

California - H.R. 3566: Congestion pricing in urban areas are to take effect beginning July 1, 2016, with proceeds to fund light rail projects. Additionally, motorists caught racing up to a red traffic light are to be fined $800 per offense with proceeds benefiting Good Karma Bike’s Transitional Age Youth (T.A.Y.) program. 

New York - H.R. 1673: Personal motor vehicles are banned permanently in New York City. 

South Carolina - S.R. 1299: When selling a new or previously owned motor vehicle, the Seller must tell the Buyer that motor vehicle exhaust is murder and go over alternatives to buying a car, including bicycling, walking and public transit.

These probably have little to no chance of passing. Neither do the ones from Missouri and South Dakota. But let's be vigilant about proposed laws - and elect legislators that will write bills that make sense and help enable people to #choosethebike. Thanks for reading and thanks for riding. 

P.S. - Good Karma Bikes' Park Tool School, which starts Feb. 9th, is still taking students. Visit Good Karma Bikes' Park Tool School page for details.