As electric bicycles skyrocket in popularity and adoption rates soar, nearly everywhere in the US is seeing a higher number…

  • @AceBonobo
    link
    English
    11
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    A 12 year old on an ebike killed a 66 year old that was riding a bicycle at night without lights. Maybe set age limits? Is the solution too obvious? Traffic education and enforcement?

    • @krelvar
      link
      English
      18
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      Lights at night. Wear a fucking helmet. Idiot.

      “Police said there was no white light attached to the victim’s bicycle, and Andrews was not wearing a helmet. The report says there was a light attached to the e-bike, although the boy said he wasn’t sure if it was operating.”

      Lots of stupid to go around here. From the pic, the kid was on a Super 73.

      • @AceBonobo
        link
        English
        83 months ago

        I see so many riders without lights wearing dark clothes at night. Lights are ridiculously cheap too.

        • @br3d
          link
          English
          43 months ago

          You keep seeing them but they aren’t visible?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        23 months ago

        Lights at night.

        I completely agree, but this still doesn’t fix the problem of motorists “not seeing you” when they are looking down at their phone.

        I’ve nearly been hit a few times by turning cars… while wearing high-viz and reflective clothing… riding a bike that’s high-viz… riding on tires that have reflective sidewalls… while using a flashing front light, a solid front light… equipped with a flashing rear light… and riding in a slow, predictable way.

        Being visible only works on those who are paying attention around you, and these days that means fewer and fewer people.

        • @krelvar
          link
          English
          33 months ago

          I assume nobody sees me. If I catch their eye and I know they’re actually seeing me, that’s about the only time. I wave at cars frequently, and usually get an acknowledgment, those people saw me too.

          The one that’s gonna kill me someday will be the teenager twiddling their phone that drifts into the bike lane. Aside from not riding there at all, I don’t know what else I can do.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            33 months ago

            If I catch their eye and I know they’re actually seeing me, that’s about the only time.

            I try to make eye contact, especially where multi-use paths venture into intersections on a cross ride, because people ALWAYS drive right into the cross ride as they “stop” for their turn. But I’m finding more and more that the tint on many vehicles makes it impossible to even see if the driver is looking at you. So, I’m often forced to stop waiting for them to stop, just so I can continue with my right of way. Incredibly frustrating, but you’ve gotta stay alive.

            • @krelvar
              link
              English
              23 months ago

              Heh, I was thinking about tint while running errands a few hours ago, exactly what you describe. You’re spot on.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            23 months ago

            For sure. I’m only saying that the advantage we all seek really only applies when others are paying attention.

            When I’m driving or cycling, I can see cyclists that are hundreds of meters away. Yet, a cyclist less than 10m from a motorist at an intersection is suddenly unseeable? No, someone was distracted or impaired while at the wheel.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      43 months ago

      All the laws to prevent this tragedy already exist, except maybe limiting powered bicycles on public travel ways to licensed drivers/riders. Bicycles (powered or not) are vehicles and require appropriate lighting at night or when conditions otherwise would require it for a car. That 66 year old would have been exposed to much more safety education about bicycle helmets over the course of their life than that 12 year old. I have trouble feeling bad for the 66 year old when that kid is going to carry the weight of that death for the rest of their life. Everything about this situation is awful though so it’s understandable that the town may have overcorrected based on emotion.

      • @krelvar
        link
        English
        33 months ago

        That 12 year old’s parents are in the shit too.