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#31
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Cycling: almost actual science
On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 2:18:10 PM UTC-7, Tim McNamara wrote:
On Thu, 16 May 2019 09:12:22 -0700 (PDT), Tom Kunich wrote: On Monday, May 13, 2019 at 7:11:40 PM UTC-7, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 5/13/2019 11:14 AM, sms wrote: On 5/12/2019 6:48 PM, James wrote: On 11/5/19 5:32 am, Frank Krygowski wrote: And they are ignoring the studies that have clearly shown significant increases in crashes from "protected" bike lanes, like this one from Ohio: http://www.dot.state.oh.us/engineeri...oorhead_72.pdf Is there some trick to downloading this PDF? The connection times out for me, regardless of whether I try Firefox or wget. I can download it in Chrome. Interesting. Cycling rates went way up (75%). Fatal crashes went down (1 to 0). Non-fatal crashes went up. Non-fatal crashes went WAY up. Skip the sugarcoating, please. And fatal crashes anywhere are rare as hen's teeth. Dropping from one to zero is not in any way mathematically significant. It's regression to the mean. From the photos, it appears that they cheaped out and did not do actual protected bicycle lanes that prevent vehicle intrusion. They're using pop-up bollards spaced at intervals that allow vehicles to enter the bike lane. Ah yes, not safe enough! The "Danger! Danger!" crowd said wide lanes were not safe enough, and they demanded bike lane stripes. Then they said bike lane stripes were not enough, and they demanded green paint. Now they're saying stripes and green paint aren't safe enough, and they demand barrier separation. Now Scharf is saying bollard barriers aren't safe enough. Will a 30 foot tall solid concrete wall be sufficient? Trump seems to think it will do the job for him. But if that border wall thing falls through, maybe the disappointed contractors can get work doing kosher bike lanes (i.e. never violated by the touch of car tires) in some California town. Why, if only ONE life can be saved, it will be worth the entire city budget of Cupertino! -- - Frank Krygowski Frank, you don't seem to realize what a problem illegal aliens are. While the majority of them may be good neighbors and hard workers, there is a VERY large criminal contingent. We have a local vocal bicycling group and they have GoPro's mounted front and rear and the things you see would give you the willies and maybe stop you from riding in areas with large illegal populations. Earth to Tom. WTF are you talking about Martians for? They're not the problem. The people who give me the willies around here are Caucasians in Audis. Damned near every driver who's tried to kill me in the past year, whether I'm in my car or on my bike, has been a white male in an Audi. Why do aggressive lunatics seem to buy Audis? Now that is odd because I have the same problem with BMW drivers. Though Audi and Mercedes run a close second. And they usually have handicap driver plates. |
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#32
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Cycling: almost actual science
On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 5:14:18 PM UTC-7, Andre Jute wrote:
On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 10:18:10 PM UTC+1, Tim McNamara wrote: Damned near every driver who's tried to kill me in the past year, And that's just your neighbours and colleagues, Timmie. Some must have tried more than once. Andre Jute If at first you don't succeed, by an Audi and try again +8 |
#33
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Cycling: almost actual science
On Thu, 23 May 2019 13:26:46 -0700 (PDT), Tom Kunich
wrote: On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 2:18:10 PM UTC-7, Tim McNamara wrote: The people who give me the willies around here are Caucasians in Audis. Damned near every driver who's tried to kill me in the past year, whether I'm in my car or on my bike, has been a white male in an Audi. Why do aggressive lunatics seem to buy Audis? Now that is odd because I have the same problem with BMW drivers. Though Audi and Mercedes run a close second. And they usually have handicap driver plates. Perhaps it's a regional thing- more Audi than BMW dealers here. |
#34
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Cycling: almost actual science
I think segregated bike lanes should take the form of every second street being off limits to motor vehicles. In areas with grid street layout, this would provide an easy way to realize some of the benefits of car-free areas, without making any location inaccessible to motorists.
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#35
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Cycling: almost actual science
On 6/28/2019 12:46 AM, Chalo wrote:
I think segregated bike lanes should take the form of every second street being off limits to motor vehicles. In areas with grid street layout, this would provide an easy way to realize some of the benefits of car-free areas, without making any location inaccessible to motorists. "Bike Boulevards" which make using certain streets impossible for vehicle traffic to use them as thoroughfares also works well. Local traffic can still use the streets. |
#36
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Cycling: almost actual science
On Friday, June 28, 2019 at 12:46:27 AM UTC-7, Chalo wrote:
I think segregated bike lanes should take the form of every second street being off limits to motor vehicles. In areas with grid street layout, this would provide an easy way to realize some of the benefits of car-free areas, without making any location inaccessible to motorists. In San Francisco they are trying that and to say the least it isn't very popular with motorists. And they're the ones with the money. |
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