Tour of Missouri

MoBikeFed press release on bicycle safety, Spring 2003

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contacts:
  • Bob Foster, Chair, St. Louis, bob.foster@stlbikefed.org
  • Brent Hugh, Online news editor, bhugh@mwsc.edu, (816) 356-1740
  • Missouri Bicycle Federation, Inc., Post Office Box 104871, Jefferson City, MO 65110-4871

Every spring and fall our region experiences a rash of bicycle-related accidents, as good weather brings young cyclists out.

The Missouri Bicycle Federation reminds both Missourians that bicycling is very safe and healthful sport if both motorists and cyclists follow the rules of the road and drive with a little bit of care.


Motorists--please share the road
An overwhelming majority of Americans support the creation of communities that are safe for bicycling and walking. How you drive around town makes a big difference in bike/ped safety.

When you pass a bicyclist on the street, remember:

* By state and local law, bicyclists are allowed to use the road. By law, bicyclists have the same rights and duties as other vehicle drivers.

* When passing cyclists, common sense and standard traffic law says that "Drivers shall pass at a safe distance." Squeezing past is simply unsafe--whether passing a bicycle, a pedestrian, or a motor vehicle.

Good road design allows autos and bicyclists to cooperate with little friction. But many of our Missouri roads are sub-standard, and that requires a little bit of patience from everyone.


Please use special care around young cyclists and pedestrians
We want our streets to be safe for young people to travel. Yet young cyclists and pedestrians present a special challenge for drivers. Remember that young people are far safer--both for themselves and for others--on a bicycle or on foot rather than behind the wheel of a car.

* Young bicyclists are often unpredictable. Approach such cyclists at a safe speed and leave an extra distance between yourself and the cyclist for safety. Remember how you rode when you were that age--you probably weren't very predictable, either!

* Young cyclists (and pedestrians) often emerge unexpectedly from behind parked cars or from driveways and side streets. They might be over the top of a hill or around a curve. Slow down and expect to see people walking or cycling at any time on any city street.

* Be especially cautious and reduce speed at dusk, when many pedestrians and cyclists are out and it is very difficult to see them.

* If you see a young pedestrian or cyclist, slow down. If you see one young person, there are likely several more nearby that you haven't seen--yet.

Cyclists--following common-sense traffic rules increases your safety many times
For cyclists, safety depends on how you ride, not where. Millions enjoy bicycling in traffic throughout their lives without collision or trouble. The safest cyclists have taught themselves to politely cooperate with other drivers by using all the rules of the road:

* Stop. Stop and yield to cross traffic before entering a road from a driveway or sidewalk. Stop at stop signs. Stop when you have the red at traffic signals. Motorists follow these rules because they make the streets safe and predictable for everyone--you should, too.

* Be predictable and visible. Good drivers don't weave all over the road--neither should you.

* Ride with traffic, never against it. Cycling against traffic is 5-20 times more dangerous than cycling with traffic.

* Use arm signals. If you communicate with motorists they will cooperate with you.

* Check traffic before merging or turning--just as car drivers do.

* Wear a helmet. Your helmet is a lot like your seat belt in your car--wear it all the time as "insurance," but then drive so safely that you never need that insurance.

* Lights on at dusk. Motorists try to avoid hitting a cyclist they can see, but an unlighted bicycle at night is nearly invisible to motorists.

More about bike lights:

* Reflectors are not enough. Reflectors don't help drivers approaching from the front or sides, because their headlights do not shine on your reflector.

* "We have good streetlights in my area. I can see just fine when I'm riding. Why do I need bike lights?" Bike lights help you see better. But their *main* purpose is to help other drivers see you. Motorists are dazzled by their own headlights and can see surprisingly little by the light of streetlights.

* The bike's front light is even more important than the rear light--more than 75% of bike-car accidents involve cars approaching from the front or sides.

* Both front and rear lights are required by state law.

* Inexpensive lights can be purchased at any store that sells bicycles.

* Parents should know that about half of the young people seriously injured or killed in bicycle accidents in Missouri recently were riding after dark with no lights. Parents--don't let your kids ride at night without lights!

Done right, cycling is a quick, easy, healthful, and fun way to get from here to there.

Ride on!

---
The Missouri Bicycle Federation (www.MoBikeFed.org) is a statewide, not-for-profit, membership organization that advocates the advancement of access, safety, and education for all forms of bicycling in Missouri.

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National bike commuting act gains momentum

According to an article in today's KCStar, a tax break for people who commute by bicycle is gaining momentum in Congress:
Commuters who burn a precious resource - oil - to drive to work get a tax break. Those who use their own muscle power to pedal bikes to the office do not.

With the war in Iraq and gas prices soaring, cycling advocates think they have found an answer that both parties can embrace: give bikers a tax break. . . .

According to the League of American Bicyclists, nearly 1 million U.S. workers commute regularly by bicycle. The federal Bureau of Transportation Statistics lists bicycles second only to cars as a preferred mode of transportation. . . .

The bipartisan [House bicycle caucus], established in 1996, now includes more than 100 House members. The Senate has started its own group with more than a dozen members so far.
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Further comment about KC pedestrian death

UMKC student Pei Chen was struck by an automobile as she crossed the street in a crosswalk in a school zone, by a driver who was speeding and improperly changing lanes to pass other drivers who had stopped to allow her to cross. Chen died about two weeks later. The driver was charged with a misdemeanor.

Chen's death has lead to quite a bit of discussion in local media outlets. Here are some of the latest letters and comments about the situation:
  • The recent death of University of Missouri-Kansas City student Pei Chen in a crosswalk, near a school zone, suggests that Kansas City drivers need to slow down. --Brent Hugh, in a KCStar letter

  • What a tragic and senseless loss for her family and the community.

    Yet it is even more amazing that we do not have more injuries and deaths because of drivers ignorant of or disobeying crosswalk laws. [She goes on to list many examples of drivers flagrantly violating laws relating to crosswalks.]

    If we are going to prevent injuries and deaths in the crosswalks of Kansas City, and be a pedestrian friendly city, let us educate the driving public about the laws and the dangers of speeding through crosswalks. Maybe people don't know they are supposed to stop for pedestrians at a crosswalk. This seems like a good time to educate them. Maybe we can save a few lives. --Suellen Dice, KCStar article

  • Mike Hendricks' column about the University of Missouri-Kansas City student who was recently fatally hit by a car was sad but true. . . . If you don't want to worry about "slamming on your brakes" at an intersection, just slow down. --Terry Clevenger, KCStar letter to the editor

  • At one time, a red traffic light meant stop. As I drive around this great metropolitan area it is clear that red traffic lights now mean hurry up and get through the intersection. . . .

    During the last quarter of 2002, I had no less than six close calls -- one as a pedestrian. Each driver was either hurrying to clear a red light, talking on a cell phone or both. It was only through defensive driving (and walking) that I was not hit. . . . --Jim Caccamo, KCStar article
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Will Missouri Senator Bond support alternative transportation in TEA3?

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reports that
the Senate's new key players, like Republicans James Inhofe of Oklahoma and Kit Bond of Missouri, seem bent on returning to the 1950s era of road-building, with less emphasis on repairing the aging interstate system or expanding commuting choices in metropolitan areas.

The article suggests that senators like Inhofe and Bond will be less likely to support bicycle, pedestrian, and transit funding as part of the TEA-21 renewal package.

Missourians can find contact info for Sen. Bond on his web page.
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St. Louis-area village receives payment for rail-to-trail conversion

Grantwood Village received a $30,000 payment from the federal government this week, for land that was part of a rail-to-trail conversion.

Property owners along Grant's Trail, the Katy Trail, and other rail-to-trail projects have sued the federal government for compensation. Grantwood Village was part of a class-action lawsuit that included many property owners along the Katy Trail in Missouri. Property owners won their suit; Grantwood Village is one of the first to actually receive payments from the federal government as a result of this lawsuit.

Grant's Trail is operated by TrailNet (which, incidentally, is looking to expand Grant's Trail). The Katy Trail is a Missouri State Park. Some have assumed that the large monetary awards related to the creation of these trails would have a devastating effect on the organizations that operate the trails. But the authority to create rail-to-trail conversions came from the federal Rails-to-Trails Act, and so the U.S. Supreme Court has held that the federal government--and not the local organizations or government bodies who may operate the trail--must pay any compensation due to adjoining landowners.

So far, Congress has felt that the value of maintaining the continuous right-of-way of the (former) railroads is well worth the payments involved. If the rights-of-way were allowed to disintegrate, the cost of re-assembling them would be many times greater than the court ordered payments will be.

Some groups representing property owners near rail right-of-ways, including the Farm Bureau, have fought long and hard, first to prevent rail-to-trail projects from moving forward and then, when court rulings made that impossible, to get property owners the compensation to which they felt entitled. The federal government, for its part, has fought the lawsuits brought by property owners tooth and nail.

The payments to Grantwood Village represent one of the first definite conclusions to any part of this hard-fought battle.

See STLToday's story on Grantwood Village here.
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Senator Kit Bond to tour Missouri discussing transportation issues

Missouri's Senator Kit Bond will become chairman of the Subcommittee on Transportation, Infrastructure and Nuclear Safety when congress re-convenes. He will be in a key position to influence the funding priorities for transportation bills coming down the line, including the TEA-3 re-authorization slated for next year.

Bond's press release says:

Senator Kit Bond will begin the reauthorization of the federal highway bill with a series of meetings around Missouri towards the end of this week. The meetings will provide Bond the opportunity to hear directly from state and local leaders. And they will allow state and local leaders and Bond to begin working closely together on a unified strategy to improve Missouri's transportation infrastructure.
. . .
Bond will meet with state and local leaders in St. Joseph this Thursday and St. Louis and Cape Girardeau this Friday. Additional meetings will be held next week in Joplin, Springfield and Kansas City. Bond will be accompanied by representatives from the Missouri Department of Transportation. While Bond's goal is to increase Missouri's share of federal transportation funds, it is the state's jobs to identify and budget for specific projects.

Note: Here are the specific meeting times, as far as we know. Meeting should be open to the public, although you might call ahead to find out details.
  • Thursday, December 5, 11:30 am, St. Joseph City Council Office 1100
    Frederick
  • Friday, December 6, 12 noon, St. Louis, Comfort Inn Hotel, Page and 270
  • Friday, December 6, Cape Girardeau, evening, details to be announced
  • Kansas City, Springfield and mid-MO to be announced
Along with Oklahoma Senator Jim Inhofe, chairman of the full Environment and Public Works Committee, Bond will help write the law that, in large part, governs how and where tens of billions of federal dollars are spent to improve the nation's highways. The rewriting of this bill occurs only once every six years.

The new law builds upon previous reauthorizations, including the 1992 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA) and the 1998 Transportation Equity Act, which expires September 30, 2003.


Visit Senator Bond's website for his complete statement.

The News Tribune's report on Bond's meeting in St. Louis.

The KC Star covered Bond's new committee assignment. The good news for Missouri highways, according to the Star, is that Bond has a knack for increasing Missouri's share of funding, for whatever projects he has worked on in the past . . .


If you support funding of cycling and pedestrian accomodations in the new law, it will be well worth your time to write, call, or email Senator Bond periodically over the next several months to let him know of your support.
Read more

Bike St. Louis up for vote within next few weeks

St. Louis City will be considering implementation of signing and striping the Bike St. Louis project (20 miles, onstreet, downtown) within the next few weeks (late November/early December 2002). You can check out the draft signage at http://www.stlbikefed.org/signs.pdf. Watch the St. Louis Bike Fed site for more details.
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IMBA Pleased With New BLM Mountain Biking Plan

Press release from the International Mountain Biking Association" (IMBA):

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has released a final National Mountain Bicycling Strategic Action Plan for the management of mountain biking on the BLM's 262 million acres of public land. The 31-page document represents the most comprehensive mountain bike management plan created by any land management agency.

The plan was announced yesterday, November 12, at the National Trails Symposium in Orlando, Florida."This is a great plan," said IMBA's executive director Tim Blumenthal. "It addresses the current desires of mountain bikers, leaves most decision making to local managers, and is adaptable as the sport evolves."

The BLM decided to produce a mountain bike-specific plan last year following a flood of comments from IMBA leaders and members on the BLM's Off-Highway Vehicle Strategy. That plan originally proposed to group mountain bike management with that of motorized vehicles. Mountain bikers played a key role in shaping the new plan. The BLM considered thousands of cyclists' comments, sent a team of leaders to the 2002 IMBA Mountain Bike Advocacy Summit, and included long-time IMBA advocate Mark Flint of Tucson, Arizona, as an advisor.The BLM did not adopt suggestions from the American Hiking Society and others that recommended a "closed-unless-open" trail policy and a prohibition of bicycling from national conservation areas.IMBA believes the 10-year plan sets a positive, proactive direction for the BLM. It offers constructive advice to local managers, clearly recognizes changing demographics, identifies emerging bicycle and trailbuilding technologies, and discusses other issues unique to mountain biking.The BLM now faces the challenge of implementing the plan. IMBA will cooperate with the agency by providing volunteer resources and technical assistance. IMBA will also continue to seek adequate recreation management funding from Congress.The plan is available at: https://www.blm.gov/mountain_biking/

Missouri's Marvin Johnson adds: "[BLM has] adopted a mountain bike plan for its immense land holdings that could turn out to be the most positive turn for the sport in the past three years. Access to the back country for mountain biking has been under a high-pressure offensive from passive-use advocates such as the Sierra Club and various Wilderness-related organizations, who campaigned heavily to restrict us from BLM property as the legislation was making its way down the pipe.

"There is no way to stress the importance for all mountain bikers to keep the land access fires blazing by writing and e-mailing politicians, and local, state, and government officials any time an issue surfaces. The best way to celebrate our victory is to send IMBA ten bucks with your thank you note attached. Read the release."
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St. Louis County petitioned to become more bicycle-friendly

The St. Louis Bicycle Federation recently presented a petition with 282 signatures to the St. Louis County Council, asking them to adopt bicycle-friendly policies and provide many more bicycle accommodations. Many area cities have adopted very bicycle-friendly policies, and MoDOT has recently been adding "Share the Road" signs to all MoDOT roads in the area. But St. Louis County has rebuffed all efforts of cyclists to ask for improved conditions.

If you live in the area, please contact St. Louis County and let them know that you support bicycle-friendly facilities!

Find out all the details on

The St. Louis Bike Fed has launched a postcard campaign aimed at the county. You can find out about that and more on the Bike Fed's County Campaign site.
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