10 May 2025

I Was So Ready To Ride

 Just my luck. It rained all day yesterday .  Today dawned in living colors: Sunrise bloomed shades of magnolia, lilac and some late cherry blossoms, all vibrantly but as gentle as the sun-tinged breeze.

A perfect day to ride,right? And my bikes were ready.

Except that my body didn’t cooperate.

I’ll spare you the details.I’ll just say that something—perhaps that head of kale I cooked rather than threw away last night or the espresso I drank this morning—was the pot not properly cleaned?—turned my body into a volcano .

Such a condition is not very comparable with cycling, to say the least!


08 May 2025

A Criminal Deems Cyclists As Criminals--Even If We're Not Breaking The Law

 The Fake Tan Fuhrer, I mean Donald Trump, is not unique as a chief executive who, in essence, says that the law says whatever he says it is.  Nearly four centuries ago Louis XIV decreed, "L'etat, c'est moi"--I am the state.  And three centuries later, longtime Jersey City mayor Frank Hague famously reminded a reporter, "I am the law."

Now it seems that the New York City Police Department is operating under such a principle, at least when it comes to cyclists.  Mayor Eric Adams, a career constable himself, has essentially given officers license not only to mis-interpret laws, but also to harass, I mean subordinate cyclists and pedestrians through "Phantom Law Syndrome." Worse yet, some rogue cops are entrapping cyclists by crossing into their paths to avoid them and, in some cases, oncoming ebikes or crossing pedestrians and charging said cyclists with "endangerment."  One cyclist who had such an encounter on the Manhattan side of the Williamsburg Bridge was given an additional charge of "obstructing the administration of justice" for protesting what said officer did.

Police officers like him are ostensibly acting under Adams' mandate to target "quality of life offenses."  That has the stench of the now-discredited "broken windows" and "stop and frisk" methods of policing, neither of which had a significant, if any, effect on crime (which was already in decline when those policies were implemented) and both of which had the same effect:  arrests, convictions, fines and sentences for disproportionate people of color, poverty and non-conforming sexual orientation and gender identity and expression. Oh, and the cops are concentrating their efforts on the major corridors of Upper Manhattan, Central-East Brooklyn and the South Bronx--all largely poor and "minority" parts of town.

And, it seems, something similar is happening among those Adams--who is desperately trying to keep his political career alive--is targeting.  While the stated purpose of his directive is to crack down on eBikes and motorized bikes, the cops have gone after the "low hanging fruit"--cyclists and pedestrians--whether or not they have actually committed offenses.


Photo by Josh Katz for NYC Streetsblog


But perhaps the most galling aspect of this new offensive, which started last week, is that it calls for issuing court summonses instead of the standard traffic ticket written for most violations.  In other words, instead of simply paying a fine, anyone who receives the summons has to appear in court and therefore runs the risk of having a criminal record, which could be disastrous for some immigrants, students and people in certain jobs and professions.

The cynic in me says that Adams--who, like another former New York City mayor (Rudolph Giuliani) realizes that he has no political future and that any future at all is dependent on his staying out of prison and in the good graces of FTF, a criminal on an even grander scale.  So, perhaps, he is trying to show his loyalty to Donnie Boy by mirroring his hatred for bicycles and cyclists. 

Oh, and advocates, lawmakers and legal experts question whether the NYPD even has the authority to, in essence, turn tickets into summonses. Perhaps Adams is also imitating Mango Mussolini's disdain for the law.  

07 May 2025

Should Citibike Require Its Users To Wear Helmets?

 They prevent injuries.  They save lives.  But do they stop people from riding?

In some cases, the answer could be "yes," at least in the case of eBikes in public share programs like Citibike.  That is a conclusion drawn from a number of studies in the decade or so since eBikes have proliferated on the streets of New York and other cities.  

And that is the rationale behind the opposition to Assembly Bill 590, sponsored by Amy Paulin (D) of Westchester County.  If passed, it would require 16- and 17-year-olds in New York State to wear helmets when riding pedal-assisted (Class 1) or low-speed throttle-controlled (Class 2) eBikes.  


From the Streetsblog photoshop desk.


In addition to the studies, what evidence exists for the fear that a helmet mandate would deter riders?  Well, under the laws of New York City--which has, by far, the largest bike and eBike share program (Citibike) in the US, no one over the age of 13 is required to wear a helmet.  And Citibike allows anyone over 16 to rent an eBike.

But it's not only Citibike and other eBike sharing programs that provide the opposition to Bill 590 and similar proposals.  Members of racial, ethnic, sexual and gender minorities are also against them.  They cite, among other things, incidents that led Seattle to repeal its helmet requirement three years ago.  Edwin Lindo, who identifies as Central American Indigenous, cited statistics from the city's Municipal Court showing that 17.3 percent of summonses for not wearing helmets were issued to Blacks, who represent only 4.7 percent of the city's cyclists.  The numbers for Native American and Alaska Native cyclists were 1 and 0.5 percent, respectively.

In other words, there is the fear that a new helmet mandate will not only deter young people, but also members of "minority" groups--and low-income people--from using eBikes, or even regular bicycles, because it will "invite cops to target youths, particular those of color," according to Amy Sohn in Streetsblog NYC.

Proponents of the new bill, on the other hand, see the potential for preventing injury or even saving lives as outweighing other concerns.  "My only concern is for the safety of the people riding the bikes," declared Assembly Transportation Committee Chair William Magnarelli, a Democrat from Syracuse.  While not citing them directly, he said that studies indicate an alarming rise in severe injuries among eBikers.  One such study, published last year in the Journal of the American Medical Association, reported a 49-fold increase in the number of head injuries among eBike riders from 2017 to 2022.  Some of that rise is of course attributable to the dramatic growth in eBiking, especially in the early part of the COVID pandemic (2020-21).  But another, more troubling reason is this:  Ebike riders, at least in the US, are far less likely to wear helmets than their counterparts on traditional pedal bicycles.  

And, in my own observation, here in New York City, a great many of those bareheaded eBikers are delivery workers--nearly all of whom are immigrants and/or people of color.