http://newsandsentinel.com/page/content.detail/id/511433.html
I'd like to provide a response to the paper from the
Mid-Ohio Bicycle Council if anyone is interested in participating. If
so, please send your thoughts. This is a perfect opportunity to
educate Steve and the rest of the public. It would be nice to show a
group of people responding.
Looks like our awareness ride worked :).
Thanks!
Kim
Drivers not only problem
POSTED: November 16, 2008
Being
of the country persuasion, I've long been disgusted by city bike riders
coming onto our narrow country roads and making nuisances of
themselves. Yes, they have a legal right to be there. However, in the
days before cute little spandex outfits for aging athletes, most people
on bicycles realized that they were a safety hazard in their own right
and made at least some effort to cooperate with automobile drivers.
Many would move near the edge to allow drivers to pass more easily, or
slow down slightly and motion those behind them around.
Today,
too many seem to prefer to ride on the center-line and dare anyone to
hit them. Rarely do you see one deliberately yield part of their lane
to let a car around, and the only place that most slow down is where
they know auto drivers can't pass anyway. As soon as you get to a safe
place to pass, they take off like the proverbial bat out of Hades. Few
women bicyclists seem to behave that way, so I guess it must to be a
testosterone thing.
In town, some of them dart between lanes of
stopped traffic to crowd ahead in line, run stop signs and switch on
and off the sidewalk at will. During the publicized ride for awareness
the other day, my wife and I stepped out the door of the bookstore by
the mall and were nearly run down by what appeared to be a bicycle club
member who was riding on the sidewalk to avoid the speed-bumps in the
street. While I realize that there are plenty of rude and careless
drivers out there, it seems to me that rude auto drivers aren't the
only problem on the highways (and sidewalks).
Steve Dye
Parkersburg