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Perils and Joy Of Cycling - Way forward for Bangalore Cycling
Written By Sagi Krishna Prasad - 13 November, 2013
Bangalore cycling suggestion Praja initiatives blrcycleday
I wanted to put my thoughts expressed here out to Bangalore Cycle Day Organizers, before the next Cycle Day, and Mr. Adiga's post in GGI GROUP, gave me a proper opportunity to artculate my thoughts.
regards,
-KP
Dear Adiga,
A very timely post.
First, - let Cyclists not be their own enemies - by not being very aware and by not so very responsible behaviour, thus adversly affecting our Image in General Public .. and rubbing the General Public on the wrong side.
Humans are about EMOTIONS and EGO first, and everything else Next. And we do not WIN because we are RIGHT - But we may WIN because we CARE and are Very Responsible, and Show it in practice. And because we do not invalidate other public or communities.
For that we must make ourselves conciously aware - the way the Human Psyche, Instincts, Reactions and Emotions work / play out - and carefully condition our RESPONSE(S) (not REACTIONS) - to make a POSITIVE IMPACT, and Elicit a Empathetic Response from the Other side. You Tick off somebody, you prove somebody wrong - you have lost them forever - worse you have made enemies - and strengthened the Opposition. If somebody is wrong, not very responsible, rude - first acknowledge the person, smile and make a connect. Then engage, reason and explain, seek their support. This has positive, amicable results - 90% of the time - and slowly change attitudes, that's what finally matters and makes the difference. And when we have sufficient Public on our side, we can press for systemic and policy interventions .. Cycling lanes and whatever.
I was at the first Bangalore Cycle Day, 27th October - in Cubbon Park. When back at Office, I was talking about it to my colleague, she asked .. Sir, But is Cycling safe!? I have spoken out at the Cycle Day - that we Cyclists are not out there to show our Might - but our Positive and Caring Nature, and that is how we Impact - first ourselves - and then more and more of others, and win them to our side. So this Day forward let all Cycling Groups in Bangalore - first clearly become aware themselves - and take this Open Pledge -
- We are not out to show our Might .. but Posiibility and Feasibility of Sustainable and Green Commuting .. Cycling for one
- We are not out to Hinder Traffic .. rather to Help it .. by de-clogging the roads, putting less load on traffic, and causing no Pollution
- We stand for a Positive and Caring Culture - that is what we Project - and ask you to reciprocate, and make Cycling Safe
- When we cycle / assemble as Groups, we will not Block traffic - we will stick to one Lane / side, and let the other traffic pass smoothly
- We will not stop and Block Junctions (including in Cubbon park) at any time, but allow traffic to continue to flow unhindered
- We will not Jay Walk, Jay Cycle or Jay Stand .. be aware .. that we share the space, place, and lanes .. whereever we are - with Pedestrians, Walkers, Runners, Other Cyclists and Other motorised traffic - and we will be AWARE of this fact at all times and then conduct and park ourselves in a such a Way .. that there is least hindrance and chaos .. ensuring maximum safety for all.
- We respect Traffic Signals, respect Right of Pedestrians - do not pedal on Footpaths, and Zebra Crossings
- We will not litter, and will keep the Environs Clean and Green
- We seek all of Bangalore and India to support us
This should be the personal pledge of All Cyclists / Cycling Groups. And then it should go out publicly on Banners across the City .. and in adverts in Prominent Newspapers and local News Letters, as an appeal from all Cyclist Groups in the City. Thus also show how many Cycling Groups there are in the City and they stand as a Collective and Collaborative community. This I Strogly believe, will make aware and discipline 90% of the Cyclists in the City and also win the support of 90% of Bangalore.
Also in future:
Sit across and negotiate with Walkers, Runners and Other Cyclists - in Cubbon Park - the most happening place and Collaborate, CO-Operate.
Establish proper spaces / lanes for different activities, to make it safe and pleasant. I realized we were criss crossing and also not properly focussed .. what with all our Excitement .. potentially hazardous .. and one two incidents will mark Cyclists as Black Sheep.
Also Cycling is now firmly on Bangalore's Map. Hereafter instead of making Cubbon Park the Central Place - and Clogging it up .. better to operate as de-centralized groups from multiple locations, thus spreading the message better across the city.
Best Regards,
-Sagi Krishna Prasad / NGV / 9972060394
Quoting Adiga Balakrishna <badiga@gmail.com>:
OPINION
Is It O.K. to Kill Cyclists?
By DANIEL DUANE
Published: November 9, 2013
SAN FRANCISCO — EVERYBODY who knows me knows that I love cycling and that I’m also completely freaked out by it. I got into the sport for middle-aged reasons: fat; creaky knees; the delusional vanity of tight shorts. Registering for a triathlon, I took my first ride in decades. Wind in my hair, smile on my face, I decided instantly that I would bike everywhere like all those beautiful hipster kids on fixies. Within minutes, however, I watched an S.U.V. hit another cyclist, and then I got my own front wheel stuck in a streetcar track, sending me to the pavement.
Related in Opinion
ROOM FOR DEBATE
The Rules of the Road
Should the laws and infrastructure be altered to recognize differences between bikes and cars, or should cyclists and drivers be treated the same?
I made it home alive and bought a stationary bike trainer and workout DVDs with the ex-pro Robbie Ventura guiding virtual rides on Wisconsin farm roads, so that I could sweat safely in my California basement. Then I called my buddy Russ, one of 13,500 daily bike commuters in Washington, D.C. Russ swore cycling was harmless but confessed to awakening recently in a Level 4 trauma center, having been hit by a car he could not remember. Still, Russ insisted I could avoid harm by assuming that every driver was “a mouth-breathing drug addict with a murderous hatred for cyclists.”
The anecdotes mounted: my wife’s childhood friend was cycling with Mom and Dad when a city truck killed her; two of my father’s law partners, maimed. I began noticing “cyclist killed” news articles, like one about Amelie Le Moullac, 24, pedaling inside a bike lane in San Francisco’s SOMA district when a truck turned right and killed her. In these articles, I found a recurring phrase: to quote from The San Francisco Chronicle story about Ms. Le Moullac, “The truck driver stayed at the scene and was not cited.”
In stories where the driver had been cited, the penalty’s meagerness defied belief, like the teenager in 2011 who drove into the 49-year-old cyclist John Przychodzen from behind on a road just outside Seattle, running over and killing him. The police issued only a $42 ticket for an “unsafe lane change” because the kid hadn’t been drunk and, as they saw it, had not been driving recklessly.
You don’t have to be a lefty pinko cycling activist to find something weird about that. But try a Google search for “cyclist + accident” and you will find countless similar stories: on Nov. 2, for example, on the two-lane coastal highway near Santa Cruz, Calif., a northbound driver lost control and veered clear across southbound traffic, killing Joshua Alper, a 40-year-old librarian cycling in the southbound bike lane. As usual: no charges, no citation. Most online comments fall into two camps: cyclists outraged at inattentive drivers and wondering why cops don’t care; drivers furious at cyclists for clogging roads and flouting traffic laws.
My own view is that everybody’s a little right and that we’re at a scary cultural crossroads on the whole car/bike thing. American cities are dense enough — and almost half of urban car trips short enough, under three miles — that cities from Denver to Miami are putting in bike-share programs. If there’s one thing New York City’s incoming and departing mayors agree on, it’s the need for more bike lanes.
The American Medical Association endorses National Bike to Work Day, and more than 850,000 people commute on a bicycle, according to the League of American Bicyclists. Nationwide, cycling is the second most popular outdoor activity after running, supporting a $6.1 billion industry that sold 18.7 million bikes last year.
But the social and legal culture of the American road, not to mention the road itself, hasn’t caught up. Laws in most states do give bicycles full access to the road, but very few roads are designed to accommodate bicycles, and the speed and mass differentials — bikes sometimes slow traffic, only cyclists have much to fear from a crash — make sharing the road difficult to absorb at an emotional level. Nor does it help that many cyclists do ignore traffic laws. Every time I drive my car through San Francisco, I see cyclists running stop signs like immortal, entitled fools. So I understand the impulse to see cyclists as recreational risk takers who deserve their fate.
But studies performed in Arizona, Minnesota and Hawaii suggest that drivers are at fault in more than half of cycling fatalities. And there is something undeniably screwy about a justice system that makes it de facto legal to kill people, even when it is clearly your fault, as long you’re driving a car and the victim is on a bike and you’re not obviously drunk and don’t flee the scene. When two cars crash, everybody agrees that one of the two drivers may well be to blame; cops consider it their job to gather evidence toward that determination. But when a car hits a bike, it’s like there’s a collective cultural impulse to say, “Oh, well, accidents happen.” If your 13-year-old daughter bikes to school tomorrow inside a freshly painted bike lane, and a driver runs a stop sign and kills her and then says to the cop, “Gee, I so totally did not mean to do that,” that will most likely be good enough.
“We do not know of a single case of a cyclist fatality in which the driver was prosecuted, except for D.U.I. or hit-and-run,” Leah Shahum, the executive director of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, told me.
Laws do forbid reckless driving, gross negligence and vehicular manslaughter. The problem, according to Ray Thomas, a Portland, Ore., attorney who specializes in bike law, is that “jurors identify with drivers.” Convictions carry life-destroying penalties, up to six years in prison, Mr. Thomas pointed out, and jurors “just think, well, I could make the same mistake. So they don’t convict.” That’s why police officers and prosecutors don’t bother making arrests. Most cops spend their lives in cars, too, so that’s where their sympathies lie.
Take Sgt. Richard Ernst of the San Francisco Police Department, who confronted people holding a memorial at the scene of Ms. Le Moullac’s death. Parking his squad car in the bike lane, forcing other cyclists into the very traffic that killed Ms. Le Moullac, Sergeant Ernst berated those gathered, according to witnesses, and insisted that Ms. Le Moullac had been at fault. Days earlier, the department had told cycling activists that it had been unable to find surveillance footage of the crash.
Provoked by Sergeant Ernst, people at the memorial decided to look for themselves. It took them all of 10 minutes to find an auto shop nearby with a camera that had footage of the incident. The police eventually admitted that the truck driver was at fault, but they still have not pressed charges.
Smart people are working to change all this. Protected bike lanes are popping up in some cities, separated from car traffic. Several states have passed Vulnerable User Laws placing extra responsibility on drivers to avoid harming cyclists and pedestrians. Nobody wants to kill a cyclist, but the total absence of consequence does little to focus the mind. These laws seek to correct that with penalties soft enough for authorities to be willing to use them, but severe enough to make drivers pay attention. In the Oregon version, that means a license suspension and a maximum fine of $12,500 or up to 200 hours of community service and a traffic-safety course.
Cycling debates often break along predictable lines — rural-suburban conservatives opposed to spending a red cent on bike safety, urban liberals in favor. But cycling isn’t sky diving. It’s not just thrill-seeking, or self-indulgence. It’s a sensible response to a changing transportation environment, with a clear social upside in terms of better public health, less traffic and lower emissions. The world is going this way regardless, toward ever denser cities and resulting changes in law and infrastructure. But the most important changes, with the potential to save the most lives, are the ones we can make in our attitudes.
So here’s my proposal: Every time you get on a bike, from this moment forward, obey the letter of the law in every traffic exchange everywhere to help drivers (and police officers) view cyclists as predictable users of the road who deserve respect. And every time you get behind the wheel, remember that even the slightest inattention can maim or kill a human being enjoying a legitimate form of transportation. That alone will make the streets a little safer, although for now I’m sticking to the basement and maybe the occasional country road.
Daniel Duane is a contributing editor for Men’s Journal.
Balakrishna Adiga
A-503, Sterling Terraces
BSK III Stage Ring Road
Bangalore 560085
COMMENTS

murali772 - 25 March, 2016 - 12:39
A British Airways executive on her morning cycling routine was killed after she was mowed down by a speeding cab, near the IAF base on Ballari Road on Thursday.
Menaka Gulvady, 38, was pedaling on the left edge of the road, when the airport-bound cab hit her while trying to overtake her from the left, around 6.20am, at Bharatinagar Cross, Hunasamaranahalli.
The impact of the collision was so severe that Menaka was thrown at least six feet away into the roadside drain, while the cabbie lost control over the vehicle and rammed the roadside lamp post before stopping.
For the full text of the report in the ToI, click here.
Menaka was not quite as lucky as Sunita Narain. The question arises again as to whether we can make our city roads safe enough for cycling, as say in European cities (check here).

blrpraj - 4 April, 2016 - 06:08
@Murali
A 100% guaranteed way to shorten one's life is to ride a bicycle or 2 wheeler on any city's roads (and that too especially Indian cities). Inspite of this why do people insist on doing this? It is understandeable that less well to do people can't afford a car and have to make do with 2 wheelers; but a BA executive risking her life this way doesn't make sense.
The only way safe cycling facilities can be provided is by completely segregating bicycle traffic from other traffic.
Sadly, people are yet to wake up to the reality that road accidents are the no. 1 killer and if the govt & other bodies recognize this and put their thought and mind to it; it can be significantly brought down.

The many victims of western hype
xs400 - 7 April, 2016 - 09:54
Bicycles and motorcycles (and scooters) are unsafe contraptions in a city. But the main problem is being influenced by western media and lifestyles. It will not be possible for Bengaluru to transform itself into Amsterdam just because a few people would like to cycle to work. Where is the dedicated cycle lane in Jayanagar/JP Nagar now? A convenient parking lot for the influential rowdies.
Like blrpraj pointed out, people are forced use two wheelers as cheap transport and those who ride them by choice are risking their lives - the 2-wheeler industry the world over spends billions of dollars to convince gullible humans it is "adventurous" to ride a motorcycle.
Note that there have been very few improvements to motorcycles or scooters safety wise and it is even considered "macho" not to have any kind of protective cage around the rider. And there will be no Ralph Nader for the two wheeler industry, otherwise they would have been banned by now.
The same goes for romantic descriptions of train travel which would have one believe that travel by unreserved compartment would be a joy. There is a reason why people struggle to book tickets and prefer flying in India. The railways are abysmal and the authorities are determined to make it worse. One train ride in India and all that brainwashing will be neutralized!
Don't buy the hype, you could get killed!!

srinidhi - 9 April, 2016 - 15:15
Amsterdam started where we are now decades ago, with way lot of cars on the streets with very high accident rates..but they made the right choices and have got to the current state with low accident rates..and a polulace which is committed to riding green!
So please do not talk low of the riders who are doing their bit right now..cycles are healthier and can easily take care of the many errands around home easily without concern of fuel or parking..

xs400 - 12 April, 2016 - 15:56
India's top woman biker Veenu Paliwal dies in road accident
Veenu Paliwal, 44, was on a nationwide tour on her Harley Davidson when the accident took place. She was accompanied on another bike by fellow biker Dipesh Tanwar.
One of India's top women bikers, Veenu Paliwal , died in a road accident in Vidisha district in Madhya Pradesh late on Monday evening.
Paliwal, 44, was on a nationwide tour on her Harley Davidson when the accident took place. She was accompanied on another bike by fellow biker Dipesh Tanwar.
Also read - RIP Veenu Paliwal: 10 things to know about India's daredevil woman biker we lost too soon
Paliwal died after her bike went out of control on a turn and she skid off a road near Gyaraspur about 100km from Bhopal. She was rushed to a primary health centre and later to the Vidisha district hospital, where she was declared brought dead.
Paliwal and Tanwar were heading to Bhopal from Sagar when the accident took place.
Paliwal, a Jaipur resident, was known for her skills with the motorcycle and for having driven the Harley Davidson bikes at 180kmph. She was planning to make a documentary on her nationwide bike journey.
The police said that her family and friends had been informed and that they would be reaching Jaipur soon. The post-mortem on Paliwal's body was to take place today morning.
Veenu Paliwal had recently been named the Lady of the Harley 2016.
I guess "Top woman biker" was awarded by Harley Davidson in pursuit of profits. Another one bites the dust. But the two wheeler industry needs its pound of flesh.
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