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#1 |
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Is Brian Reid's letter in
http://www.smh.com.au/news/letters/...l?page=fullpage true, or just a load of bollocks? I suspect it's a load of bollocks, or if indeed there is a sign, it's probably about as legal as the signs outside of my town that say "no cycling" on the public RTA controlled highway. My thought is that SMH should only publish letters talking about legal opinion if they can verify the truthness of the statements made by the letter writer. Tony Schramko's next comments *is* a load of bollocks, because bicycle riders, last time I checked, do not have the law about riding with sufficient room in front. Pity they didn't publish my letter: Subject: Eric Roozendaal is not helpful to peak hour traffic It seems to me that, contrary to the roads minister, Eric Roozendaal's suggestion that bikes are not helpful to peak hour traffic (despite bike riders having as much purpose in getting somewhere as our car driving compatriots), it is other traffic which is not helpful to peak hour traffic. For example, from the NSW transport department's own statistics, we find that commuters have a car occupancy rates of 1.1 people per car (or at least 9 out of 10 cars having only the 1 driver occupant). The taxi travellers where there is just a shade over 2 people per car, one of them being the driver doing the ferrying. The people attending schools, where the occupancy rate is 1.3 (where the average is boosted by mums in 4WDs driving their charges to school in peak hour traffic, instead of letting them walk or ride the 1km to the school). People on work duty, ferrying themselves and 0.16 other people on average. The shoppers attending the local corner store 800 metres down the road, with 1.3 people in the car. If you got rid of these populations, and put them on bikes that take 1/6th of the room of a car, that would be a great way to save people from road rage by easing congestion. Or if we only had a forward thinking transport minister who actually cared about getting a reliable and complete rail network. But I dream. -- TimC The triangle wheel was an improvement upon the square wheel: It eliminates one bump. -- unknown |
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#2 |
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In aus.bicycle on Tue, 13 May 2008 01:55:51 GMT
TimC <tconnors@no.spam.accepted.here-astro.swin.edu.au> wrote: > Is Brian Reid's letter in > http://www.smh.com.au/news/letters/...l?page=fullpage > true, or just a load of bollocks? > > I suspect it's a load of bollocks, or if indeed there is a sign, it's > probably about as legal as the signs outside of my town that say "no > cycling" on the public RTA controlled highway. This came through on the Massbug list from Gilbert <gilbert.grace@bigpond.com>. I make no representations as to its truth or otherwise. Zebee Myth 7/ With all the publicity over 50-odd cyclists running into each other and the rear of a car on Southern Cross Drive, nobody is pointing out that it is illegal for the cyclists to be there. This fact is clearly signposted with directions to the adjacent cycleway and at times also spelt out on the overhead message boards. *Busted/ The break down lane adjacent to the roadway is a designated cycle lane. The result of rather poor planning on behalf of the RTA and various governments who see shoulders and bus lanes as appropriate for cycle paths thereby fulfilling their promise to increase cycle paths and contributing yet another bureaucratic green wash. The RTA Guidebook on Bicycle infrastructure states that where there is a cycle path on the should of a main road where the traffic is moving at 70kmh there should be a one metre buffer lane. This is evident on the Sydney to Wollongong Expressway. No such buffer exists on Southern Cross Drive. The cycle lane that is there - and it is 100% legal to use it despite the wishy washy statement above, is often if not always littered with construction rubbish nails, screws, oddments that fall from uncovered loads from construction workers vehicles. And the remains of an often thrown bottle. |
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#3 |
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"Zebee Johnstone" <zebeej@gmail.com> wrote in message news:slrng2hvis.a08.zebeej@gmail.com... > In aus.bicycle on Tue, 13 May 2008 01:55:51 GMT > TimC <tconnors@no.spam.accepted.here-astro.swin.edu.au> wrote: >> Is Brian Reid's letter in >> http://www.smh.com.au/news/letters/...l?page=fullpage >> true, or just a load of bollocks? >> >> I suspect it's a load of bollocks, or if indeed there is a sign, it's >> probably about as legal as the signs outside of my town that say "no >> cycling" on the public RTA controlled highway. > > This came through on the Massbug list from Gilbert > <gilbert.grace@bigpond.com>. I make no representations as to its truth > or otherwise. > > Zebee > > Myth 7/ With all the publicity over 50-odd cyclists running into each > other and the rear of a car on Southern Cross Drive, nobody is > pointing out that it is illegal for the cyclists to be there. > This fact is clearly signposted with directions to the adjacent > cycleway and at times also spelt out on the overhead message boards. > > *Busted/ The break down lane adjacent to the roadway is a designated > cycle lane. The result of rather poor planning on behalf of the RTA > and various governments who see shoulders and bus lanes as appropriate > for cycle paths thereby fulfilling their promise to increase cycle > paths and contributing yet another bureaucratic green wash. The RTA > Guidebook on Bicycle infrastructure states that where there is a cycle > path on the should of a main road where the traffic is moving at 70kmh > there should be a one metre buffer lane. This is evident on the > Sydney to Wollongong Expressway. No such buffer exists on Southern > Cross Drive. The cycle lane that is there - and it is 100% legal to > use it despite the wishy washy statement above, is often if not always > littered with construction rubbish nails, screws, oddments that fall > from uncovered loads from construction workers vehicles. And the > remains of an often thrown bottle. > > Sorry for doing the Road Rule bit but: ARR 247 says : Cyclists are obliged to use a sign posted (of the correct regulatory kind) bike lane UNLESS there is a reasonable excuse not to, like debris or rough surfaces etc, or not wide enough. So I imagine they could hardly ping the cyclists for not using the bike lane, if the shoulder is actually a proper bike lane. Maybe what the Herald letter writer was on about is a sign alerting cyclists to an access path to the residential access road next to SC Drive at Todman Av. This goes along behind the sound barrier for a few hundred metres then there is a path for cyclists to rejoin SC Drive. It isnt obligatory to use this side road AFAIK, its just a quieter alternative for a while, although maybe the shoulder does disappear near Todman St due to the tunnel portals. Anyway its all by the by, a bunch of fast cyclists is not going to disappear down a side street only to reappear a short distance on. The shoulder definitely disappears further along, after Wentworth St exit, on a flyover of the lakes, where I think cyclists are banned- although ISTBC on that. Cars exiting left to Wentworth can cut off continuing cyclists badly there. Odd that there is no shoulder under the runway (not anymore anyway) but cyclists can use the lane there. Attempting to understand some letter writers who say the bunch cyclists should be charged for riding too close together to avoid a collision, I see ARR 126 says " A Driver must drive a sufficient distance behind a vehicle....to avoid a collision..", but rule 16 implies a rider is not a driver, so 126 doesnt apply to cyclists. However rule 19 says "a reference to a Driver includes a ref to a Rider" so Im confused. FB in Sydknee |
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#4 |
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"TimC" <tconnors@no.spam.accepted.here-astro.swin.edu.au> wrote in message news:12106429031658-twc@hexane.ssi.swin.edu.au... > Is Brian Reid's letter in > http://www.smh.com.au/news/letters/...l?page=fullpage > true, or just a load of bollocks? > > I suspect it's a load of bollocks, or if indeed there is a sign, it's > probably about as legal as the signs outside of my town that say "no > cycling" on the public RTA controlled highway. > > My thought is that SMH should only publish letters talking about legal > opinion if they can verify the truthness of the statements made by the > letter writer. Tony Schramko's next comments *is* a load of bollocks, > because bicycle riders, last time I checked, do not have the law about > riding with sufficient room in front. > > Pity they didn't publish my letter: > > Subject: Eric Roozendaal is not helpful to peak hour traffic > > It seems to me that, contrary to the roads minister, Eric Roozendaal's > suggestion that bikes are not helpful to peak hour traffic (despite bike > riders having as much purpose in getting somewhere as our car driving > compatriots), it is other traffic which is not helpful to peak hour > traffic. For example, from the NSW transport department's own statistics, > we find that commuters have a car occupancy rates of 1.1 people per car > (or at least 9 out of 10 cars having only the 1 driver occupant). The > taxi travellers where there is just a shade over 2 people per car, one of > them being the driver doing the ferrying. The people attending schools, > where the occupancy rate is 1.3 (where the average is boosted by mums in > 4WDs driving their charges to school in peak hour traffic, instead of > letting them walk or ride the 1km to the school). People on work duty, > ferrying themselves and 0.16 other people on average. The shoppers > attending the local corner store 800 metres down the road, with 1.3 people > in the car. If you got rid of these populations, and put them on bikes > that take 1/6th of the room of a car, that would be a great way to save > people from road rage by easing congestion. Or if we only had a forward > thinking transport minister who actually cared about getting a reliable > and complete rail network. But I dream. Letters need to be punchy and explicit. Conclusive rather than detailed... Here's my edit. -- Eric Roozendaal really doesn't get it. Peak hour is a cars problem. Bikes are a major part of the solution. Official statistics dismally reveal more people per vehicle in a car than on a bike, but only just. Although 1.1 commuters sit in the average car against 1.001 commuters for each bike, cars take up a lot more space. Cars also make you fat, sick and angry. In some cases, very angry. -- The things that will make it publishable are: "1.001" and "very angry"... [Feel free to submit that one]. -- I had a letter published last Friday, which I thought was a hoot: Will somebody please honour Peter Costello with Deputy Life Membership of the Liberal Party of Australia? And then turn out the lights and shut the gate on the way out. It's over. Cheese, Tomasso. |
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#5 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 04:48:35 +0000, fractal wrote:
> Attempting to understand some letter writers who say the bunch cyclists > should be charged for riding too close together to avoid a collision, I see > ARR 126 says " A Driver must drive a sufficient distance behind a > vehicle....to avoid a collision..", but rule 16 implies a rider is not a > driver, so 126 doesnt apply to cyclists. However rule 19 says "a reference > to a Driver includes a ref to a Rider" so Im confused. Didn't the nitwit admit to cutting in front of them, aka there is no onus of travelling a safe stopping distance. It is going to be interesting to see if "the air bag popped" story holds up or is JAL? |
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#6 |
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terryc wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2008 04:48:35 +0000, fractal wrote: > >> Attempting to understand some letter writers who say the bunch cyclists >> should be charged for riding too close together to avoid a collision, I see >> ARR 126 says " A Driver must drive a sufficient distance behind a >> vehicle....to avoid a collision..", but rule 16 implies a rider is not a >> driver, so 126 doesnt apply to cyclists. However rule 19 says "a reference >> to a Driver includes a ref to a Rider" so Im confused. > > Didn't the nitwit admit to cutting in front of them, aka there is no onus > of travelling a safe stopping distance. > > It is going to be interesting to see if "the air bag popped" story holds > up or is JAL? > Air Bag? I thought I'd read where he said that he pulled over because his gas supply wasn't working and he had to switch to petrol?? |
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#7 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 20:11:42 +1000, Peter Cremasco wrote:
>> Didn't the nitwit admit to cutting in front of them, aka there is no onus >> of travelling a safe stopping distance. >> >> It is going to be interesting to see if "the air bag popped" story holds >> up or is JAL? >> > Air Bag? I thought I'd read where he said that he pulled over because > his gas supply wasn't working and he had to switch to petrol?? You are getting the picture. The more this idiot keeps talking, the more he is going to be hopping. One wonders if plod is following all this or needs someone to co-allate all these "excuses" and bring them to his attention. |
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#8 |
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In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 08:52:29 +1000
terryc <newssixspam-spam@woa.com.au> wrote: > On Tue, 13 May 2008 20:11:42 +1000, Peter Cremasco wrote: > > >>> Didn't the nitwit admit to cutting in front of them, aka there is no onus >>> of travelling a safe stopping distance. >>> >>> It is going to be interesting to see if "the air bag popped" story holds >>> up or is JAL? >>> >> Air Bag? I thought I'd read where he said that he pulled over because >> his gas supply wasn't working and he had to switch to petrol?? > > You are getting the picture. The more this idiot keeps talking, the more > he is going to be hopping. One wonders if plod is following all this or > needs someone to co-allate all these "excuses" and bring them to his > attention. The quote in today's Herald was "The airbox popped". Which could be read as a mechanically clueless person describing the coughing of a car running out of fuel. Somehow I think the coppers read the papers during the tea break just like everyone else. Zebee |
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#9 |
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On Tue, 13 May 2008 01:55:51 GMT, TimC
<tconnors@no.spam.accepted.here-astro.swin.edu.au> wrote: http://www.news.com.au/story/0,2359...from=public_rss Driver charged over cyclist crash May 13, 2008 07:29am A DRIVER involved in a crash with a pack of 50 elite cyclists last week has been charged. The cyclists were on a training ride near Sydney airport early last Thursday when a car stopped suddenly in front of them. More than 20 riders, including professional cyclists Kate Nichols and Olympic hopeful Ben Kersten, crashed into the back of the car, with some suffering minor cuts and abrasions. The driver allegedly drove away from the scene. A 34-year-old Claymore man was yesterday ordered to appear in court charged with not supplying particulars. He is due in Waverley Local Court on June 26. |
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#10 |
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Zebee Johnstone wrote:
> In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 08:52:29 +1000 > terryc <newssixspam-spam@woa.com.au> wrote: >> On Tue, 13 May 2008 20:11:42 +1000, Peter Cremasco wrote: >> >> >>>> Didn't the nitwit admit to cutting in front of them, aka there is no onus >>>> of travelling a safe stopping distance. >>>> >>>> It is going to be interesting to see if "the air bag popped" story holds >>>> up or is JAL? >>>> >>> Air Bag? I thought I'd read where he said that he pulled over because >>> his gas supply wasn't working and he had to switch to petrol?? >> You are getting the picture. The more this idiot keeps talking, the more >> he is going to be hopping. One wonders if plod is following all this or >> needs someone to co-allate all these "excuses" and bring them to his >> attention. > > The quote in today's Herald was "The airbox popped". Which could be > read as a mechanically clueless person describing the coughing of a > car running out of fuel. > > Somehow I think the coppers read the papers during the tea break just > like everyone else. > > Zebee Ummm. Well actually The way lots of gas setups work is with a gas mixer into an airbox. A backfire and the airbox comes apart. Its built with clips so that it does cos otherwise it would burst. Follow me? And when it happens the car does roll to a stop. So yah.. that bit hangs together. But ummmmm. it does not start again until you put the airbox back together :P |
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#11 |
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On Wed, 14 May 2008 09:37:47 +1000, David Springthrope
<david.springthrope@idxx.com.au> wrote in aus.bicycle: >More than 20 riders, including professional cyclists Kate Nichols and Olympic >hopeful Ben Kersten, crashed into the back of the car, with some suffering minor >cuts and abrasions. > >The driver allegedly drove away from the scene. > >A 34-year-old Claymore man was yesterday ordered to appear in court charged with >not supplying particulars. > >He is due in Waverley Local Court on June 26. That seems a very minor charge compared with an attempt to harm somebody.. The defence that he was scared by a mob of angry cyclists might stand up - though he was a bouncer and did he report the accident to the police before they found him? Anyway pretty pathetic charge. Regards Dinsy Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum - Lucretius |
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#12 |
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In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 11:34:46 +1000
Dinsdale Pirana <Dinsdale@memento.mori.com> wrote: > That seems a very minor charge compared with an attempt to harm > somebody.. The defence that he was scared by a mob of angry cyclists > might stand up - though he was a bouncer and did he report the > accident to the police before they found him? > They charge with what they think they can get to stick. Failing to stop is obviously an easy one. No contest. Anything that requires intent, that's much much harder. It might be that the prosecutor's office is useless (it has been said before) or it might be that the witness statements are bitty enough or contradictory enough that they don't think they can make anything more stick. Or maybe they want to hit him with this now to shut everyone up while they work on other charges for later. My money's on "he says one thing, they say another, given what we have a good defence counsel will raise enough doubt that it's just not worth it." Zebee |
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#13 |
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Zebee Johnstone" <zebeej@gmail.com> wrote in message news:slrng2kir0.gmm.zebeej@gmail.com... > In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 11:34:46 +1000 > They charge with what they think they can get to stick. > > Failing to stop is obviously an easy one. No contest. > The main problem is it happened on the road so they can only charge him with offences under the traffic act. Dangerous driving, failing to stop etc. Sadly we don't have a vehicular homicide charge or similar in Australia yet so it's up to the individual victims to lay their own assault charges and/or damages claims. I doubt he'll get jail but, short of allowing the cyclists baseballs bats and 30 mins alone with him, having to pay for the damage to all those high-end bikes would be a most excellent outcome in this case I think. -- www.ozcableguy.com www.oztechnologies.com |
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#14 |
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Has anyone else noticed a slight change in the behaviour of Sydney
motorists since this. In the past I have noticed that when Adolf Evans of the NRMA has one of his anti cycling rants motorists act more aggressively towards me. However this time they seem to be giving me more room etc (not all but most) OzCableguy wrote: > > > Zebee Johnstone" <zebeej@gmail.com> wrote in message > news:slrng2kir0.gmm.zebeej@gmail.com... > >> In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 11:34:46 +1000 > > >> They charge with what they think they can get to stick. >> >> Failing to stop is obviously an easy one. No contest. >> > > The main problem is it happened on the road so they can only charge him > with offences under the traffic act. Dangerous driving, failing to stop > etc. Sadly we don't have a vehicular homicide charge or similar in > Australia yet so it's up to the individual victims to lay their own > assault charges and/or damages claims. > > I doubt he'll get jail but, short of allowing the cyclists baseballs > bats and 30 mins alone with him, having to pay for the damage to all > those high-end bikes would be a most excellent outcome in this case I > think. > -- Remove norubbish to reply |
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#15 |
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"OzCableguy" <ozcableguy@NOSPAMhotmail.com> wrote in message news:bJsWj.853$IK1.676@news-server.bigpond.net.au... > > > Zebee Johnstone" <zebeej@gmail.com> wrote in message > news:slrng2kir0.gmm.zebeej@gmail.com... >> In aus.bicycle on Wed, 14 May 2008 11:34:46 +1000 > >> They charge with what they think they can get to stick. >> >> Failing to stop is obviously an easy one. No contest. >> > > The main problem is it happened on the road so they can only charge him > with offences under the traffic act. Dangerous driving, failing to stop > etc. Sadly we don't have a vehicular homicide charge or similar in > Australia yet so it's up to the individual victims to lay their own > assault charges and/or damages claims. > > I doubt he'll get jail but, short of allowing the cyclists baseballs bats > and 30 mins alone with him, having to pay for the damage to all those > high-end bikes would be a most excellent outcome in this case I think. > > -- > www.ozcableguy.com > www.oztechnologies.com There is Predatory Driving, brought in to target tailgaters or other threastening behaviour. But the definition of vehicle in this case doesnt include bicycle for some reason - seems an oversight to me. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/...90082/s51a.html 51 A of the Crimes aCT << The driver of a vehicle who, while in pursuit of or travelling near another vehicle: (a) engages in a course of conduct that causes or threatens an impact involving the other vehicle, and (b) intends by that course of conduct to cause a person in the other vehicle actual bodily harm, is guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for 5 years. >> fb |
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