As a 2022 LA Times investigation showed, police are more likely to stop Black and Latino people on bikes, more likely to search people stopped while biking, and less likely to find any evidence of criminal activity during those stops.
The 2023 report from California’s Racial Identity and Profiling Board (RIPA) finds that Black and Latino individuals are disproportionately likely to be singled out for police-initiated traffic stops.
In California, Black people are 4x more likely to be asked to waive their rights and be searched compared to their White neighbors.
CalBike is committed to working toward safe streets for all Californians. That means protection from traffic violence through better infrastructure and and end to police violence that disproportionately targets people of color.
If our current traffic policing policies were effective at preventing injuries and fatalities, we wouldn’t have the escalating deaths of people walking and biking over the past few years. Traffic stops by armed officers are often designed to combat crime rather than reduce collisions, and they effectively achieve neither goal. Removing armed officers from traffic enforcement frees police departments to focus on tactics proven to reduce crime and reduces the frequency of interactions that too often turn lethal for Black and Latino drivers and bike riders.