Yesterday fit almost anybody’s definition of a perfect Spring day: warm (but not too), sunny, with enough wind to toss the hair hanging below my helmet. I decided to take a ride I hadn’t taken in a while: across the George Washington Bridge and down the Palisades.
To get to the Bridge, I followed another route I hadn’t pedaled in a while: up the Park Avenue bike lane that runs alongside the Metro North tracks in the Bronx.
At least, I tried to. At 170th Street, construction work closed off the path for part of a block. That meant veering into the single lane of traffic, which consisted mainly of delivery and car service vehicles, all driven by folks tense and angry.
After that detour, the lane was clear for about half a block—until I encountered a few vehicles parked in the lane. Another detour, about 50 meters of clear lane, more parked cars. Rinse and repeat for a couple more blocks until East Tremont Avenue, where an ambulance and fire department truck screamed through the intersection. Two of the drivers by whom I’d been zigging and zagging shot through just before the emergency vehicles. The ones who couldn’t make it through—who were beside and behind me—honked their horns and cursed in a couple of languages I understand, and a couple I don’t.
Finally, I gave up on that lane and turned left on Tremont, which took me to University Heights and the old aqueduct, commonly known as the “High Bridge” into Upper Manhattan, not far from the GWB.
I thought about writing to or calling the city Department of Transportation but realized that my email probably wouldn’t be opened, or my call answered, unless I sent photos—and I hadn’t taken any. But, coincidentally, I came across this story from Philadelphia: The city’s Parking Authority is adding bike patrols specifically to monitor drivers who park illegally in bike lanes.
“Just look around. Parked all the time, makes the bike lanes pretty useless,” said cyclist Nic Reynard. He explained—as I saw on yesterday’s ride—that having to move out of a blocked lane can be even more dangerous than riding without a bike lane because “I don’t know what the car next to me is going to do.”
The new patrols, therefore, are just one step in making cities safer for cyclists—and pedestrians and drivers. Streets themselves need to be more amenable to everyone, and greater awareness of cyclists and cycling must be fostered in drivers. And law enforcement officials need to take incidents of motorists maiming or killing cyclists—which, with increasing frequency, are deliberate acts—seriously.
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