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The traffic flow on Kennedy is typically 70-80Km/h the average cyclist rides at around 20Km/h meaning that there is a 60Km/h speed differential.
I think if you look at the number of injuries that are sustained due to car on cyclist collisions vs. cyclist on pedestrian collisions it would suggest that perhaps cyclists do belong on the sidewalk -- at least in the suburbs.
Freak incidents happen all the time... look at the long term statistics before making your judgment.
The woman just died http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/678179.
Actually I've been told that a big reason bikes are not allowed on side walks is due to statistically too many collisions with cars, believe it or not. The reason being cars driving/backing out of driveways, alleys etc + high speed of bike and the cars not expecting anything fast moving on the sidewalk (i.e. this is not an issue with pedestrians since they have time to react whereas a bicycle often will not)
Licensing bicycles would be a logistical nightmare. What level of government would facilitate this? Municipal? Provincial? Why would a cyclist living in Newmarket need a license when most of the accidents happen in Toronto? Unfortunately, avoidable accidents such as this do happen on the rare occasion.
"I got a new spleen from a guy who liked to ride motorcycles". Fry, Futurama
My bike is a video star! youtube.com/watch?v=Ju9caIDWQ40
Odds are that there will be a blitz then.
People who say that the statistics show pedestrians don't frequently get hit on sidewalks, by cyclists, are correct. Jave is correct that the biggest issue is of cyclists being hit by cars as drivers both don't expect something moving at road speeds to be on the sidewalk, and the field of view is more frequently obscured to the sidewalk, for road users. Not having pedestrians be hit by cyclists is just a fortunate by-product.
Morally Ambiguous (submissions welcome)
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth." - Oscar Wilde
I was there.
Kinda, I was heading south on Kennedy from McNicoll and as I came to Sheppard I had to change lanes as there were 3 cars in the right lane. As I pass them I see an older woman on the floor with blood coming out of her head, still conscious, with about 7 people around her. There was a bike close by so I figured she was on her bicycle and got hit by one of the cars. This was at the NW side.....a bit North of Sheppard.
As I got to the lights, traffic stopped as a fire truck with lights and sirens was passing to get to the victim. The fire truck stopped right in the middle of the intersection and the driver started looking around....I reached out and pointed it out to him where the victim was.
Then I see this on the news.....wierd. It didn't look too serious, guess you never know with head injuries
http://www.thestar.com/article/678175 . . . another serious injury
You guys are probably right, I'm usually against government doing anything, but I think the general point is "something" different has to be done with cyclists in Toronto. An education campaign at least and a blitz on sidewalk riders?
Bikes need to get off the sidewalk and cars need to pay attention to bikes.
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I think I've had more close calls on my motorcycle with bicycles than cars. Maybe its cause I ride downtown a lot buy the number of cyclists who blow through stop signs and red lights without looking is astounding. I almost smoked a cyclist on Dupont the other day as we went from curb lane to left lane (where I was) to make a left turn without so much as a shouldercheck or signal.
Apparently the tires on the bike that hit the woman in Scarborough were small enough that it was legally permitted to be on the sidewalk. Or so the reports today go.
Morally Ambiguous (submissions welcome)
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth." - Oscar Wilde
I thought I heard the reason for the rule being based on wheel size was because they can't really do it by rider age since there is no requirement to have ID while riding a bike. They assume kids will be riding smaller bikes with smaller wheels. Perhaps this rule should be revisited. If a bike is moving at 30-50kmh does it really matter how old the person is, or how big the tires are.
Morally Ambiguous (submissions welcome)
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth." - Oscar Wilde
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