Caught in the headlights A voice for those who don't have gas

25Oct/091

Cyclist’s death highlights auto hazards

We stole this photo to, we are Internet Pirates, yaaaar!!

We stole this photo to, we are Internet Pirates, yaaaar!!

There are certain things we love in the world, bike riding, surfing the web and reading smrt people's words. Another thing we love to do is steal them words and drag them here. So here is some smrt words from super hero Albert Koehl that were originally thieved from the Straight Goods website.

Cars are death traps in many ways.

Dateline: Monday, October 19, 2009

by Albert Koehl

Darcy Allan Sheppard accomplished this year what almost 3,000 other Canadians will fail to do: get more than fleeting public attention for his death on our roads. If Sheppard's death had not occurred in downtown Toronto, in gruesome circumstances, and under the wheels of a car driven by Ontario's former top law-maker, the public would already have forgotten his name.

While the tragedy on Toronto's Bloor St. may have highlighted the frailty of the human body in conflicts with the car, the fact is occupants of cars are hardly safe from the danger on our roads.

Polluting emissions from car and truck traffic claim 440 lives in Toronto alone each year.

Although cyclists are over-represented in road fatalities, the most common victims of road accidents are drivers and their passengers, comprising three quarters of all deaths. Motor vehicle occupants also count heavily among the 20,000 Canadians wounded so seriously by motor vehicles each year that they require hospital care, often for long terms.

So routine are serious traffic accidents that we more often hear about them as obstacles in the morning traffic report than in news headlines.

Cars aren't deadly just because of collisions.

Polluting emissions from car and truck traffic claim 440 lives in Toronto alone each year, according to the city's public health authority. Climate change, which is caused in significant part by transportation emissions, will claim more lives still. Over 35 percent of Toronto's greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are from motor vehicles.

The tragedy of these numbers is not that we accept them so willingly, but that we accept them despite the obvious alternatives.

First, buses and streetcars are many times safer than cars, while emitting a fraction of the air and climate poisons. A 30 percent reduction in traffic emissions would save 190 lives in Toronto each year and result in $900 million in health benefits, according to Toronto Public Health. Mass transit can be improved quickly with better and more frequent bus service.

Second, bicycles produce zero climate and air pollutants — while posing minimal risks to other road users. Cycling fatalities can be reduced. In certain European countries where bikes have been given dedicated space, cyclists (despite shunning helmets) are much safer.

"Good fences make good neighbours" wrote the poet Robert Frost. Painted lines for bikes make good relations on our streets.

Yes, cyclists must obey the rules of the road, although this doesn't help cyclists injured by motorists in so-called "doorings" that are all too common. When I cycle, I fairly diligently obey every rule of the road but sometimes marvel at the irony of it all: complying with the rules of a society that has already carelessly passed through urgent warning signs of climate change and unnecessarily wasted so many innocent lives.

Third, cars are transportation products, not necessities. Other personal transportation products would make our cities safer and healthier. Power and speed, along with polluting emissions, are car design features, and consequences, that kill.

We may be able to justify the use of a car to carry groceries, take kids to soccer practice, or pick up grandparents — but do milk and eggs really need to leave the mall in a machine capable of achieving 0-60kmph in 6 seconds? Low cost, low emission, low speed vehicles, similar to the electric ZENN car, provide another logical alternative, especially since city traffic doesn't average even 40kmph anyway.

Finally, when our roads are safer and more hospitable places, people will walk more.

The car may be part of our culture but this is no reason to stand in the way of safer and more efficient options. The facts support a war on traffic deaths and injuries, traffic pollution, and vehicle GHG emissions that have made us all —- motorists, passengers, cyclists, and pedestrians —- victims.

Albert Koehl is a lawyer with Ecojustice (formerly Sierra Legal), a Canadian environmental law organization.

In November 2007, Ecojustice and KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives, a church-based social justice organization, demanded that Canada's Auditor General investigate the government's oil and gas subsidies and the cuts to programs for poor households.

9Oct/091

Scramble to be added at Yonge and Bloor?

We stole the picture from http://www.flickr.com/photos/55976115@N00/2838819908

We stole the picture from http://www.flickr.com/photos/55976115@N00/2838819908

City of Toronto Media Relations has issued the following:
==========================================

News Release

October 7, 2009

Yonge and Bloor will be Toronto’s second pedestrian priority intersection

One of Canada’s most famous intersections is about to get a new look.

The City of Toronto is adding a pedestrian priority phase to the intersection of Yonge Street and Bloor Street on October 9, providing pedestrians with the opportunity to cross in any direction including diagonally. The first pedestrian priority intersection (or “pedestrian scramble”) in Toronto was installed at Yonge Street and Dundas Street in 2008.

“Installing a pedestrian priority intersection at this new location reinforces Toronto’s commitment to creating a pedestrian friendly environment,” said Mayor David Miller. “Giving priority to pedestrians promotes pedestrian safety and convenience, and helps renew our urban environment.”

The pedestrian priority phase has been implemented in a number of other cities and has reduced conflict between pedestrians and vehicles by separating the flow of traffic and the movement of pedestrians.

Toronto’s Transportation Division will take the following steps to help ensure a smooth transition to the pedestrian priority phase at Yonge Street and Bloor Street:
* Adjust the timing of lights to allow pedestrians to safely clear the intersection.
* Enhance the Accessible Pedestrian Signals to assist the blind and visually impaired.
* Monitor the intersection to determine whether any adjustments need to be made.

More information about pedestrian initiatives is available at http://www.toronto.ca/transportation/walking.

As far as cycling infrastructure along that stretch, you know the one where the Ontario Government told the Toronto government that they were bad and basically pulled the rug out from democratic choice, well we can hold our breath on that one. Seems its ok to walk safely at Yonge and Bloor, but not all right to cycle safely.

10Sep/090

Harold Donald Bilodeau’s Memorial


It was a horrible week for cyclists. Darcy Allan Sheppard had been killed by and enraged Michael Bryant. Dragged along Bloor Street, he was finally dislodged from the car by being bashed off the side of a mailbox. There was lots and lots of press. Unfortunately, a day later another cyclist was hit. His name was Harold Donald Bilodeau, he was in his sixties and he was struck by a street car.

Surprisingly he lived for three more days before he succumbed to his injuries and died on the third. As is the ARC way we held a memorial a week after the death of the cyclist.

We met Thursday night at the corner of Bloor and Spadina. We were about thirteen people. We rode down to the site of the crash at Spadina and Nassau. We were not sure how to proceed really, this was our first memorial in which a street car was involved. Usually we would take the lane for a minute of silence, but were we to take the street car lane?

No.

It was decided that we would take the turn lane beside the street car track. We unfurled our banner and held our vigil. We hung around for about a half hour. People seemed interested. A TTC supervisor pulled up in a giant SUV and talked to us for a bit about what happened.

Harold Donald Bilodeau had been waiting for the light to change so he could turn left onto Nassau. No one is sure why he decided to run the red. Some say it is the confusing lights that are present at that intersection. But one thing is for sure, he didn't hear the street car that ran into him.

ARC is not about putting blame on cyclists for their deaths, we just lay flowers and hope that it doesn't happen again. We can only hope the city will look at the intersection and maybe do something about the christmas tree lights that pass as traffic signals.

May you rest in peace Harold Donald Bilodeau

14Jul/091

Maybe i do hate cops

p_2048_1536_C16BB821-E988-406B-9066-4D232D2C2A5E.jpegI was down at my local watering hole, the coffee shop, when I was talking to my man Tim. He mentioned that he had been reading my blog. Of course I was flattered. He said he liked. Flattered. He said he noticed that I really hated cops.

WHAAT?

Tim pointed out that almost every post had some mention of the cops or a jab at the cops or some referance to the cops. What was he talking about?

I quickly pulled out my trusty phone and checked out the blog. Hmmmm, well the story of the brothel discount for cyclists didn't have any mention of cops, but as I scrolled down I began to notice a striking similarity in the articles.

I guess tim was right. There were a lot of articles that had to do with my displeasure with cops. It is true I don't like the Toronto police. I find the way they treat cyclists unnecessary. I think they are overpayed and because they are in an association they can get away with murder. Actually they do. I think they are, in short overpayed, underworked bullies who can do whatever they want.

Hmmmm...... I guess I do have a hate on for the cops. Maybe I should just turn this whole blog into a cop hating rant. But maybe, just maybe, riding your bike in Toronto has a lot more to do with cops then first thought.

I guess something to think about as I go about my busy day, fixing bikes and hating cops.

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12Jul/090

Well known North Carolina Cyclist dies

FITCOL1.AL.041208.RTW        APEX -- A well-known biking enthusiast died Saturday after a collision with a car at the intersection of South Salem Street and Apex Peakway, Apex police said. Bruce Rosar, 56, of Cary, has been bicycling in the Triangle area for years, serving as director of the N.C. Active Transportation Alliance and founding member of numerous other organizations, according to his Web site.

Rosar and a Honda passenger car were traveling along South Salem Street when the accident happened just before noon Saturday, said Capt. Ann Stephens of the Apex Police Department.  Rosar was transported to WakeMed in Raleigh, where he was pronounced dead.  The accident remains under investigation. Police aren't releasing the name of the driver of the car.  Stephens said several witnesses stayed behind, but about four or five other vehicles were also in the area when it happened.  "If anybody else, whether another cyclist or motorist that witnessed the accident, we would like to hear from them," Stephens said.  Anybody with information should call Apex police at 362-6661.  Stephens said that Rosar had been traveling with other bicyclists earlier in the day, but was riding on his own at the time of the accident.

Ironically if you were to look on Bruce's web site there is an ad for a Honda that he had sold in 1998, the same brand of car that he "collided" with.  Of all the 32 stories that I could find on the interweb of his death, none mentioned that he was wearing a helmet, but many described the collision as the cyclist colliding with the car.  One wonders how an experienced cyclist like Bruce would have "collided" with a car.  We send our condolences to his family and friends.  He will be missed.