A new research found that motorists and dangerous street design — not cyclist behavior — are the primary factors that put cyclists at risk. According to the study done by University of South Florida, cyclists were in compliance with traffic laws 88 percent of the time during the day and 87 percent of the time […]
“Cyclists should give way to pedestrians on shared use cycle tracks and to horse riders on bridleways.” - nope, you hear a bell you dodge as they’re not slowing down. Happens every time I use a shared path.
“Only pedestrians may use the pavement. Pedestrians include wheelchair and mobility scooter users.” - nope, we get plenty mounting the pavement illegally; again, you hear a bell and you dodge. Happens 1–2 times a day on my trip to work.
I reckon people in a hurry just bend the rules more readily than people taking their time.
Yes. Even accounting for those idiots, car drivers still break more traffic laws. And it’s exponentially more dangerous when they do. This is what the article is getting at.
I think that depends on country…
“Cyclists should give way to pedestrians on shared use cycle tracks and to horse riders on bridleways.” - nope, you hear a bell you dodge as they’re not slowing down. Happens every time I use a shared path.
“Only pedestrians may use the pavement. Pedestrians include wheelchair and mobility scooter users.” - nope, we get plenty mounting the pavement illegally; again, you hear a bell and you dodge. Happens 1–2 times a day on my trip to work.
I reckon people in a hurry just bend the rules more readily than people taking their time.
Yes. Even accounting for those idiots, car drivers still break more traffic laws. And it’s exponentially more dangerous when they do. This is what the article is getting at.
Huh, neat. So as a percentage of the population, drivers break the law more often, and it is always more dangerous when they do.
Any chance of a link to those stats for the UK? It’ll be great to show my students.