The stretch of Union Turnpike where a cyclist was struck and killed by a car door |
What are the greatest fears of an urban cyclist?
I'd bet that many cyclist would say that getting "doored" is one of them.
It's something we all think about, particularly when we ride between traffic and the parking lane on narrow city streets. I have been "grazed" or suffered a glancing side-blow from drivers opening their doors.
While my encounters with doors were painful, I escaped with injuries that healed with rest. However, last night, someone on his way home from work wasn't so lucky.
A 39-year-old lighting technician whose name has not yet been released was riding eastbound on Union Turnpike, a major thoroughfare in central and eastern Queens. Although it's not far from where I work, I generally avoid Union Turnpike because it has the worst of two worlds: highway traffic speeds and a parking lane where cars frequently pull in and out, or weave, as most of the Turnpike is lined with stores. On the other hand, I can understand why he took the Turnpike, especially if he'd had a long day at work and wanted to get home quickly.
Anyway, as he was pedaling, a driver opened his door. The NYPD doesn't suspect any criminality on his part, probably because he remained at the scene after he realized what happened. But even his action, and the help passerby gave the cyclist, were to no avail. According to one eyewitness, who said the Lord's Prayer over the victim, "The handlebar went right through his jugular" and "The blood was pouring out like a fire hydrant."
According to Section 1214 (pdf) of New York State Vehicle And Traffic Law, which regulates the opening and closing of vehicle doors:
No person shall open the door of a motor vehicle on the side
available to moving traffic unless and until it is reasonably safe to do so,
and can be done without interfering with the movement of other traffic, nor
shall any person leave a door open on the side of the vehicle available to
moving traffic for a period of time longer than necessary to load or unload
passengers.