By now, most of us have seen “ghost” bikes.
Because they are painted stark white and, as often as not, mangled, they are difficult to ignore, even if you’ve already seen many.
While they attract attention, it’s fair to wonder whether they have any effect on drivers, whether of motorized scooters or bikes as well as cars, trucks and buses. After all, as I have learned the hard way, even when cyclists wear helmets and follow all laws and safety procedures, they are blamed (especially if they are killed) even if the driver is intoxicated and blows through a red light at twice the speed limit.
But, if a potential victim is a child—especially the driver’s own child—could that change motorists’ behavior?
David Smith seems to think so. The Murray, Utah resident has constructed a “fake” memorial consisting of a banged-up kids’ bike wrapped in flowers and a photo of a young child* in an intersection in his hometown.
While there is no record of any car-bike crashes at the site, prior to or since the installation, Smith says he’s seen “people slamming on the brakes where they used to pump on the gas.”
While some may question the ethics of the “fake,” Smith says that posting it as he did nearly two weeks ago is better than “putting out a picture of a kid I know.”
Local police would not comment on the memorial.
*—The child in the photo is someone Smith knew and is now a woman in her 40s.