Sunday, December 20, 2009

Poll Results: Toronto Cycling Peeves

Tis the season for lots of things and top-ten lists are not the least of them.
I thought that this Toronto police news release about Toronto cyclists' top peeves was interesting and that other "bikers" might enjoy it.
It really nailed my pet peeves and got the top three in my personal peeve order, as it were.
"A couple of weeks ago, Sergeant Tim Burrows, of Traffic Services, asked Toronto via Twitter
and Facebook, "Hey Toronto Cyclists. What's your biggest pet peeve about cycling in
Toronto? Let me know. I'll be writing about it."
This one came about after the drivers top 10 pet peeves and a lot of cyclists wanted their
voices heard. Well, here is the writing about it and the results. Some great responses and
really diverse!
Here are honourable mentions that didn't make the top ten:
Drivers who don't let you change lanes, drivers who stop too close to you and my favourite...'drivers who wait for pedestrians when turning right and don't leave room to go straight ahead'.
More on that one...it gets a special section for itself.
# 10 − SUVs
I'm not really sure why cyclists don't like SUVs. Could be the carbon footprint, the size or
make. Either way, I think the dislike should be for poor driver behaviours, not the vehicles.
# 9 − No helmets
One of my favourite answers. Other cyclists who don't wear helmets. Sure, as the argument
goes, "a helmet won't save your life in all crashes." But what about the falls, the bumps and
the crashes that it will save your life? Pretty small piece of safety equipment that can be the
difference between life and death.
# 8 − Other cyclists running reds, makes us all look bad
Not only does it make the good cyclists look bad, but it also confuses drivers. Predictability
leads to better understanding, communication and respect.
# 7 − Not being seen
This is a shared complaint for cyclists, pedestrians and motorcyclists. Not being seen is a big
deal. Drivers need to be more aware, alert and cognizant of vulnerable road users. Having
said that, make sure you are doing everything you can to be seen. Bright, reflective clothing, a light, reflectors, a bell, a whistle, not cutting in between cars... these can all help.
# 6 − Dooring
Drivers, do you open your doors in front of cars? Then why do it in front of cyclists? You can't
just rely on mirrors to see what's coming from behind you... you need to check over your
shoulder to get the big picture.
# 5 − Drivers who don't get Road Sharing
Fully agree with this one. Cyclists are vehicles and have the same rights to the roadway as
such. Because they are slower moving they are to stay to the right, but where situations
dictate, cyclists can block a lane for their safety. This also has to do with passing. Drivers
should pass cyclists giving them as much space as possible.
# 4 − Pedestrian Actions
Pedestrians have to consider their safety and the safety of cyclists. Stepping out from
between parked cars or onto roadways without looking is a recipe for disaster for both road
users.
#3 − Drivers who right turn without signalling
Drivers failing to signal was number one on their list and here it is in the top 3 here. Evidence
again that this is a problem.
# 2 − Vehicles parked in bike lanes
No surprise here at all. The bike lanes are not a place for delivery vehicles or cars to park for
convenience. They are to allow a safety zone for cyclists to travel.
# 1 − Infrastructure
By a landslide! Lots of responses for this in many forms from bike lanes that lead nowhere, to
lanes that aren't cleared of leaves and snow along with not enough bike lanes and poor road
maintenance and street car tracks."
Cheers,
Vanessa

No comments: