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

18Nov/093

Harbord bike lanes retouch

New blobs of paint that somewhat resemble bicycles have been showing up on Harbord St. It appears that the city was trying to repaint the lanes but soon gave up when Huey realized that the wind was to high. Congrats to the city for repainting the lanes just in time for winter.

29Oct/093

Cyclist dies in Cambridge

October 29, 2009
By Cherri Greeno, Record staff

CAMBRIDGE - A 20-year-old Cambridge cyclist is dead after he was struck by a vehicle just before midnight Wednesday on a dangerous stretch of road near Highway 401.

Shane Vandermeer died after he was hit by a vehicle getting off the Eastbound 401 ramp to Franklin Boulevard.

Vandermeer was biking south on Franklin Boulevard when he was hit by the vehicle. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Initially, the OPP were asking for the public's help in identifying the cyclist. However, they were able to track down his family early Thursday morning after receiving tips from the public.

The driver of the vehicle was at the scene when police arrived. No charges have been laid.

That stretch of road has been the subject of a feasibility study being conducted by city officials. The study will help figure out where to build a pedestrian bridge over Highway 401.

"It's a very dangerous area," Mayor Doug Craig said this morning. "The whole thing is very dangerous for pedestrians and for cyclists."

The road has worried local politicians for years because people are forced to walk over the narrow Franklin Boulevard bridge to cross Highway 401.

The bridge is the only practical way to get from Hespeler to north Galt for cyclists and pedestrians.

But the west side has only a narrow sidewalk and pedestrians must cross traffic exiting from the 401 to Franklin. On the east side, there's a ramp for traffic to enter the freeway but no sidewalk at all.

In April 2007, Lyle Prior, 83, was killed at the exit ramp, which prompted the city to post "No Pedestrians" signs.

Craig said he has talked to the Ministry of Transportation - even once bringing the minister out to the area - but as of yet, the province is showing no interest in widening it.

"We can't touch the bridge because it's a provincial bridge," Craig said. "We can't get the province to do anything. We've done everything we can as a city."

Craig wasn't sure when the study would be completed. It is being funded by the city and Waterloo Region.

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.

8Oct/090

Ontario Government says Toronto bad, make bike lanes clear

060The province of Ontario released a report detailing facts that Toronto cyclists had been doing for years, criticizing the city over its lack of bike lanes.

In his annual report, Environment Commissioner Gord Miller said in his annual report that Toronto mishandled the question of Bike Lanes on Bloor Street. The report, entitled, Building Resilience said the city should have consulted with the public before finalizing plans for the stretch between Church and Avenue Road.

"It was classified as an 'A' which means there was very little opportunity for public consultation and discussion that some proponents of cycling wanted to see," Miller said after tabling his report in the provincial legislature on Tuesday.

Miller said the classification resulted in the loss of bikes lanes in the area of Bloor, between Church Street and Avenue Road. He said the province needs to do more to ensure bicycles are taken into consideration when municipalities seek provincial approval.

"There should be a mandatory requirement," said Miller "[that] in future in these kinds of projects that cycling and pedestrians — as legitimate forms of transportation — be included in the consideration and the alternatives in discussion and design."

Eventually the Bloor Street Transformation Project plan ended up in court. The city got what it wanted and cyclists ended up with 'sharrows' — a shared lane with traffic — instead of bicycle-only lanes.
Miller's recommendations are a small victory for Albert Koehl, the lawyer who represented cycling advocacy groups on the Bloor Street project, but comes to little to late.

"We have now the environmental commissioner pointing the finger at the province and saying you've got to do quite a bit more," he said.
Koehl says the report isn't going to change the situation overnight and unfortunately will not change things on that particular stretch of Bloor Street, but will be a weapon in the bigger battle towards having safe streets for cyclists and pedestrians.

22Jul/090

Call me Fred

Wikipedia knows everything. It knows all about the moon and the sun and the stars and what the term Fred means. According to Wikipedia a "Fred" has several different meanings and they are all used and abused by roadies.
the earliest useage comes from Britian where the term Fred was used to describe commuters that looked nothing like the much cooler looking spandex wearers. Freds refered to, often bearded, sandal wearing touring cyclists who eskewed any high tech gear.

in the US, Fred is a term used to describe as someone who either has a lot of gear on his bike and usually held together by gaffer tape. The other meaning for Fred is a cyclist who has aot oc gear on his handlebars and such, but the gear might not be cycling specific and has been modified to fit the bicycle.

the reason I am bringing this up is that I have morphes I to a Fred. I just don't know with what Fred I am aligned with. I have some new stuff and I don't have anything yet, being held together by gaffer tape. The only stuff I have on my handlebars is light mounts, though I do have a computer on
order. I don't wear sandles.

I have become a Fred for one specific reason. I was tired of carrying crap on my back. Since becoming a Fred I have felt a relief and a joy of riding that I have not felt for some time.
the only drawback of that is that I no longer have that cool courier look that I have been wearing for so long. But that's ok cause I haven't been a courier for some time.

it's mostly an experimentright now. I'll let you know how it goes. But right now I have to go see if my basket is in