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Tell Assembly to Protect Bike Riders from Pretextual Traffic Stops

September 11, 2023/by Jared Sanchez

When a police officer uses a traffic stop as cover to check for a more serious crime, that’s pretextual policing. Unfortunately, this type of enforcement does little to improve traffic safety and isn’t effective at reducing other types of crime. When police pull over bike riders for minor offenses, they disproportionately target Black and Latino people on bikes and rarely find evidence of crimes, as an LA Times investigation demonstrated.

This week, the Assembly will vote on a bill already approved by the Senate, which would end pretextual traffic stops of people biking or driving. It will lead to fairer and more effective policing. Please email your assemblymember today.

Pretextual traffic stops do more harm than good

When police use traffic stops as a type of “stop and frisk” on wheels, they target drivers in high-crime areas, not streets prone to traffic violence. These traffic stops do nothing to prevent speeding or reckless driving, and they don’t make the streets safer for people biking or walking.

Pretextual stops are also a bad tactic if the goal is to combat crime. A report by Catalyst California and the ACLU found that traffic stops in several Southern California counties were racially biased and rarely uncovered serious crimes. Freeing police to spend more time on proven methods to solve and prevent crime would be a better use of law enforcement budgets and a benefit to communities.

Traffic stops are the most common time for citizens to come in contact with law enforcement, and sometimes those encounters can turn deadly. By reducing the number of traffic stops, we can reduce fatalities and make our streets safer for all Californians. 

Please tell your assemblymember to vote yes on SB 50. It just takes a minute.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/police-car.jpeg 956 1600 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2023-09-11 14:35:492024-07-22 09:16:59Tell Assembly to Protect Bike Riders from Pretextual Traffic Stops

3 Active Transportation Bills to Watch this Week

September 11, 2023/by Brian Smith

For Immediate Release: 9/11/23

Contact: Jared Sanchez, Policy Director, CalBike, (714) 262-0921, Jared@CalBike.org


CalBike – Legislation Watch, End of the Session 2023

SACRAMENTO – As the California state legislature approaches its final days to send bills to the Governor’s Desk in 2023 (September 14), CalBike is prioritizing three bills.

“Biking is not a crime. California has underinvested in safe infrastructure for decades and overinvested in traffic policing, sometimes with lethal results,” explained Jared Sanchez, policy director at CalBike. “These remaining bills will improve safety and access for every person who bikes, walks, or takes public transportation in California.” 

CalBike urges senators to vote yes on the Daylighting to Save Lives Bill (AB 413) and the Safe Passage for Bikes Bill (AB 825) and assemblymembers to vote yes on the Stop Pretextual Policing Bill (SB 50).

AB 413 – (Lee) Daylighting to Save Lives: This bill prohibits stopping, standing, or parking a vehicle within 20 feet of the approach direction of any unmarked or marked crosswalk to increase visibility and reduce potentially lethal collisions.

AB 825 – (Bryan) Safe Passage for Bikes: As part of CalBike’s “Biking Is Not a Crime” slate, this measure allows bicycle riding on a sidewalk adjacent to a street that does not include a Class I, Class II, or Class IV bikeway. It protects pedestrians by requiring people on bikes to share the space responsibly and gives local leaders flexibility to impose further safety restrictions. 

SB 50 – (Bradford) Stop Pretextual Policing: Police stops of people for minor infractions while biking or driving doesn’t improve traffic safety. These stops are often aimed more at deterring crime, but they do little to prevent crime, disproportionately target Black and Latino Californians, and can lead to lethal encounters. Stop pretextual policing and direct police resources toward effective crime prevention measures.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Girl-with-father-under-BART-tracks-Ohlone-Greenway-Bikeway-BIPOC-scaled.jpg 1440 2560 Brian Smith https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Brian Smith2023-09-11 12:11:252023-09-12 14:00:043 Active Transportation Bills to Watch this Week

Preventing E-Bike Battery Fires

September 5, 2023/by Laura McCamy

This post was updated to correct some technical information. Thank you to PeopleForBikes for providing additional information about lithium batteries and safety certifications.

E-bikes aren’t inherently dangerous on the road and may even be safer in some situations if the electric boost allows a rider to escape a dangerous traffic situation. Much of the current e-bike safety panic is thinly disguised bikelash. However, there is one e-bike safety concern that does have some basis in reality: battery fires.

The lithium batteries that power e-bikes (and electric cars, scooters, computers, and other devices) pack a lot of power into a relatively small space. These batteries allow e-bike riders to go 30 to 50 or more miles on a single charge. However, lithium batteries burn at high heat if they catch fire, presenting a potential hazard when riders charge their bikes inside homes or garages.

Fortunately, there are several things you can do to safely charge your e-bike battery.

Don’t leave the battery unattended while charging

Your e-bike is very unlikely to burst into flames while you’re riding; most documented e-bike battery fires have happened during charging. When a lithium e-bike battery gets plugged in to charge, it can get overheated if the membranes separating the individual battery cells are too thin. 

Don’t leave your battery plugged in overnight, and keep an eye on it while it’s charging. If it starts to get hot, unplug it immediately and take it outside of your home.

Buy a bike with a safety-tested battery

The bicycle industry advocacy group PeopleForBikes suggests buying a bike with a battery that meets UL 2849 or EN 15194 standard. The UL certification means that an independent laboratory has tested the drive system and battery to a voluntary US safety standard published by Underwriters Laboratories. The EN standard is an EU certification, and the two safety tests are very similar; either can give you peace of mind that your battery has well-constructed lithium cells and a battery management system (BMS) designed to prevent conditions like overheating, overcharging, or a short circuit that can lead to fires.

The only downside of these higher-quality batteries is that they’re expensive, adding to the price of the bike and the battery replacement cost. However, the safety tradeoff is worth it.

Don’t use aftermarket batteries or accessories

Many e-bike battery fires have been linked to aftermarket batteries. In New York City, where e-bike delivery workers can travel 100 miles or more in a day, some use batteries designed to hold a longer charge that lack the proper separation between lithium cells or lack a BMS. Poorly designed batteries can overheat during charging, which may lead to fires.

If you need to replace your e-bike battery, buy the battery designed for the motor on your bike.

Extension cords have also been linked to battery fires. Always plug your battery charger directly into an outlet.

Protect your battery from the elements

When e-bike batteries get damaged, they’re more susceptible to catching fire. Don’t use a battery pack with a damaged case. To keep your battery healthy, protect it from the elements and extreme temperatures as much as possible. 

How the California E-Bike Incentive Program could improve e-bike safety

In addition to a general movement across the country to ensure the safety of e-bike batteries, California’s E-Bike Incentive Program, which will launch soon, could have a positive impact on battery safety. The program, which will provide millions of dollars of incentives to help low-income Californians purchase e-bikes, mandates that eligible models must have safety-tested batteries. That could motivate manufacturers to focus more on battery safety and retailers to gravitate toward e-bikes with batteries that have been proven to be safe. CalBike applauds the California Air Resources Board for making this standard one of the elements of the program.

The greatest e-bike safety threat remains poorly designed streets

While lithium battery safety is important, it’s not the biggest safety threat for people who use e-bikes for transportation or recreation. Most of the e-bike-related fires in the US have occurred in New York City, but many more people have been killed by traffic violence while riding e-bikes. Over half the e-bike crashes nationwide during the study period of a recent NTSB report occurred in the five boroughs of New York City.

California has, fortunately, seen relatively few fires caused by improper e-bike charging or overheated batteries. But traffic violence poses a real and ongoing threat to people on all types of bikes and CalBike is committed to working toward safer streets for all vulnerable road users.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/e-bike-battery-scaled.jpg 1704 2560 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2023-09-05 17:46:362023-09-18 18:54:02Preventing E-Bike Battery Fires

The Case Against E-Bike Licensing

September 5, 2023/by Kendra Ramsey

Amid rising safety concerns, particularly in Southern California, proposals to add more restrictions to who can ride an e-bike and to require e-bike riders to have a license have gained steam. In 2024, the legislature will consider a bill to do just that. And the Huntington Beach City Council has announced its intention to develop a proposal to require bike licensing within its city limits.

Unfortunately, this is the wrong solution. Traffic violence is a serious issue; constraining e-bike riders isn’t the solution. 

Why bike education is good and mandating it is bad 

One of the challenges of this conversation is that education about how to safely operate a bicycle is a good thing. It would be great if every bike rider got training on how to ride safely. Teaching elementary school students how to ride a bike responsibly would be excellent. However, requiring a license will create opportunities for harassment of the most vulnerable riders and deter people from riding. 

Requiring riders to complete a safety course, even if it’s not called a license, is, in effect, the same thing. Police will be able to stop e-bike riders and ask for proof of safety course completion. We know that police are more likely to stop Black and Latino bike riders, and those stops are more likely to include harassment, expensive tickets for minor infractions, and sometimes even violence. The people least able to complete a course or get an e-bike license — because of lack of access, money, or time to complete the training — are also the most likely to be targeted while riding, even if they are riding safely.

Plus, restrictions on bikes, even in the name of safety, reduce ridership. A helmet law in Australia caused a dramatic dropoff in ridership. The bicycle is an efficient and essential tool to fight climate change, and e-bikes make bicycling accessible to a wider range of people. E-bike licensing requirements are unlikely to measurably reduce the prevalence of crashes (see below for why), but they will reduce ridership just as California needs to employ every strategy to mitigate the climate crisis.

People who drive cars should learn about bike riding

Some of the prejudice against people on bikes comes from people who don’t ride bikes and don’t understand safe bike riding. Vehicle driver education doesn’t adequately address how to safely share the road with someone riding a bike, even though bikes are fully legal vehicles on a majority of roadways. Advocates continue to work to add more about bicycling to driver education and bring bike riding handbooks to the DMV. In the meantime, car drivers, please take a bicycle education class! (Bike riders should take a class, too — even veteran riders may have something to learn.)

Many local bicycle coalitions and even some local governments offer in-person and online trainings, usually for free. New resources specifically for electric bikes are coming online as well: PeopleforBikes has created a series of short e-bike safety videos, the CHP has created online safety information pursuant to AB 1946, and the Air Resource Board will release a half-hour e-bike safety training video in the next few weeks. (We’ll review and compare all three once they’re live.) 

Regulating e-bikes won’t solve the problem of traffic violence

The US has a long and inglorious history of blaming and penalizing victims rather than perpetrators. We’ve thrown sex-trafficked women in jail for prostitution, thrown out rape charges based on the outfit the woman (or girl) was wearing, arrested and brutalized Black people for being victims of violence—the list goes on. 

Given this history and our car-centric culture, it’s not surprising that the first response to an increase in collisions that injure or kill people riding e-bikes is to regulate, control, and limit not reckless car driving or dangerous streets, but e-bikes.

Unfortunately, even if we removed all e-bikes (and classic bikes) from our roadways tomorrow, we wouldn’t solve the problem of traffic violence. Everyone still needs to walk at some point, and pedestrians now make up a quarter of California’s traffic fatalities, despite having a much smaller mode share than motor vehicles. 

Plus, people who drive cars will find other things to hit, such as homes, shopping centers, and movie theaters. Those three examples are all from California, all from the past three months; there are many more. 

People crash their cars into all sorts of things; they did it before e-bikes became popular, and they’ll continue to do it until we design our streets for safety rather than speed.

Who loses when you add obstacles to bike riding?

E-bikes are a terrific way to get around for people who are too young to drive or don’t want a driver’s license. Older adults and people with disabilities can greatly increase their mobility and get healthy exercise with e-bikes. The motor power allows people with long commutes, parents who need to transport children, and people who need to haul groceries or equipment to do it by bike. 

If we require a license to ride an e-bike, low-income people will be saddled with unaffordable tickets. Fewer people will ride. Communities of color, who often live in neighborhoods poorly served by transit, will be most impacted. 

More people will drive, and fewer people will bike. So, in the end, we all lose. 

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/e-bike-single-man-cropped.jpg 200 544 Kendra Ramsey https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kendra Ramsey2023-09-05 16:34:222023-09-05 16:34:23The Case Against E-Bike Licensing

Active Transportation Slate Hangs in Suspense in CA Senate

August 24, 2023/by Jared Sanchez
Read more
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/bus-bike-and-car-lanes-cut.jpg 642 1600 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2023-08-24 17:58:242024-07-16 13:59:52Active Transportation Slate Hangs in Suspense in CA Senate

Media Guide: How to Report on Collisions Involving E-bikes  

August 21, 2023/by Jared Sanchez

“Teens Are Dying on E-Bikes. Should California Regulate Them?” This recent New York Times headline exemplifies a disturbing trend in reporting on e-bike safety. Headlines like this imply that e-bikes are lethal (not motor vehicle drivers colliding with people on e-bikes) and perpetuate the dehumanization of people who ride bikes and make invisible the role of traffic violence perpetrated by motor vehicles.

To combat what is, at its core, anti-bike sentiment, we look at examples of reporting on micromobility, good and bad, and provide suggestions for more accurate and balanced coverage of e-bike safety. We hope this guide will assist journalists and help the rest of us become more savvy news consumers.

Collisions are not accidents 

One of the most basic tenets of reporting on traffic injuries and fatalities is that most traffic collisions are not accidents. An accident is something beyond the parties’ control that can’t be avoided. For example, a tree toppling onto a car is an unfortunate accident. 

Yet even the New York Times, the most respected paper in the US, included this sentence in the article cited above: “Several teenagers, in California, Oregon and other places, have died recently in e-bike accidents….” 

The first mistake here is the word “accidents.” These were fatal collisions between people riding e-bikes and people driving cars. The second mistake is labeling them “e-bike accidents,” which shows implicit bias against e-bikes and places the blame on bike riders for these collisions. Reporting like this makes the true danger (bikes sharing roadways that lack sufficient infrastructure with speeding cars and trucks) invisible.

A more accurate way to write this sentence would be: “Several teenage e-bike riders in California, Oregon, and other places have died recently after being struck by motor vehicles.” That doesn’t assign blame for the collision, but it includes both parties involved and leaves open the possibility that e-bikes are not the proximate cause of these tragedies.

Matt Richtel’s recent series of articles about the menace of e-bikes in the New York Times is beautifully deconstructed by Streetsblog’s recent article about how to spot bad bike reporting. In one piece, he says, “But the recent deaths of several teenage riders have raised concerns about the safety of some types of vehicles, and about whether they legally qualify as e-bikes.” The “vehicles” in this sentence are e-bikes, which is odd because the vehicles that led to recent deaths have all been cars or trucks. 

Once again, this renders the role of motor vehicles invisible and ignores the need for infrastructure investment, placing the blame for fatalities on the deceased riders and exonerating the system that led to their deaths. It’s also hard not to see the hysteria about e-bikes as hypocritical when we accept tens of thousands of deaths by car annually as the cost of modern transportation. 

Don’t paint e-bike riders as reckless thrill seekers

Recent e-bike rhetoric has borrowed an old anti-bike trope. People riding e-bikes are reckless! They don’t care about their safety or anyone else’s—especially teenagers! It’s similar to the way some have long demonized all bike riders as crazy and lawless.

The truth is, most e-bike riders, like most bike riders, ride cautiously, knowing their vulnerability on roads shared with heavy, fast-moving cars and trucks. In riding safely, sometimes people on bikes do things people driving cars aren’t expecting, such as take the lane. Of course, some bike riders make unsafe choices on the road at times, as do some car drivers. But implying that all e-bike riders (or even all teen riders) are reckless is incorrect and biased reporting.

A quote from the New York Times piece shows this bias: “In the span of a few days, two teenage boys riding electric bicycles had collided with cars.” From reading this, you might assume the e-bike riders rode recklessly, but that is not the case. 

One of the boys referred to in that sentence was Brodee Champlain-Kingman, whom witnesses described as following the rules of the road and “doing everything right.” He was rear-ended by a van. It’s hard to understand how that could be described as him colliding with a car. In the other instance, the person interviewed about the collision didn’t witness it but found the bike rider under the wheels of the car. While we don’t know who was at fault, it sounds as if the car struck the bicyclist, not the other way around.

Let’s rewrite this sentence for clarity: “In the span of a few days, two teenagers were struck by cars, and one later died from their injuries.”

10News gets it almost right in its account of the same incident: “Brodee Champlain-Kingman was riding his electric bike north on South El Camino Real when he tried to make a left turn onto Santa Fe Avenue. He was hit by a work van.” Change that to “the driver of a work van,” and it’s an accurate and fair description of the crash.

Be skeptical of official sources

ABC7 headlines a piece on those scary, scary e-bikes with a statement attributed to Huntington Beach police: “E-bikes pose dangers to novice users.” While all vehicles are more challenging for novices, especially cars, this headline makes it sound like e-bikes are dangerous speed machines that riders can’t control.

A little factual information might be helpful here. Yes, people are able to ride faster on an e-bike than they could on a regular bike, but the most common e-bikes top out at 20 mph, a speed that a fast road biker can easily surpass. People still generally ride e-bikes slower than most people drive their cars, even on narrow streets. If someone on an e-bike has a solo crash, they may get more injured than they would on a standard bike because of the greater weight of the bike. A person on an e-bike has no more defense against a 2-ton vehicle than any other vulnerable road user (people biking, walking, on scooters, etc.).

A more accurate way to say this might be: “Riding on roadways lacking safe bike infrastructure poses a danger to novice and expert bicycle and e-bike riders.” 

Another account of the crash that killed Champlain-Kingman, this one from NBC7 in San Diego, includes this sentence: “The San Diego Sheriff’s Department said he rode into the path of a work van, was hit and was taken to the hospital where he later died.”

While the reporter has plausible deniability because they’re repeating a statement from the sheriff, it’s irresponsible to repeat a statement that heavily blames the bike rider, as if he recklessly “rode into the path” of the van. Again, we know that he was aware of safe bike riding practices and did what he was supposed to do.

This statement implies that the van owns the road in front of it (“the path of the van”), rather than the van driver having a responsibility to not run into other road users. In addition, the use of passive voice (“was hit”) reinforces the inevitability of this collision. 

The sheriff’s statement removes agency from the van driver and places the blame squarely on the bike rider: He rode into the path of a van and was hit. It’s part of a larger trend of treating traffic violence as a crime without a perpetrator, a force of nature. The bike rider is mentioned but not the van driver, removing culpability from the human behind the wheel to drive cautiously, look out for vulnerable road users, or even brake in time.

This framing also renders the role of infrastructure invisible. Why was the bike rider forced “into the path” of a motor vehicle? Probably because he was trying to get somewhere on his bike, and that required him to mix with fast-moving motor vehicle traffic.

The way we talk about traffic violence bolsters our society’s “cars will be cars” attitude, one that accepts roadway deaths as inevitable. A better way to report on this might be: “The San Diego Sheriff’s Department said the driver of a work van hit him, and he was taken to the hospital where he later died of his injuries.”

Take the time to get the facts straight

In one of its pieces on Brodee Champlain-Kingman’s death, NBC7 includes this informational nugget: “The state of California does have some laws regarding e-bikes, including a minimum age of 16 years old for anyone riding an e-bike that can go over 28 miles per hour.” Unfortunately, this is incorrect. Class III e-bikes are restricted to riders at least 16 years old, but they have a maximum speed of 28 mph. California’s e-bike classifications top out at 20 mph (Class I and II) and 28 mph, information easily accessible from the DMV.

Even government agencies sometimes mangle the truth in their rush to paint e-bikes as dangerous. A 2022 National Transportation Safety Board report that, while rightly highlighting the need for better data collection to determine the number of collisions involving micromobility devices, is chock full of misstatements. For example, the report says, “In fact, a study conducted using data from 180 University of California, Los Angeles, outpatient clinics, found that e-bikes may have a higher rate of fatalities than motorcycles and cars (Kimon and others 2022).” The only thing correct in this sentence is the name of the primary author and the number of clinics whose data were surveyed. The cited study is of e-scooter injuries, not e-bikes, and the abstract concludes: “Our observed e-scooter injury rate is likely an underestimate, but is similar to that previously reported for motorcycles. However, the comparative severity of injuries is unknown.” And injury rate is a percentage based on mode share, not an absolute number. In absolute numbers, cars are the biggest menace to pedestrians, bike riders, other cars, and often themselves.

Here are the facts:

  • More people ride e-bikes now, so more bike-involved crashes involve someone on an e-bike.
  • Deaths of vulnerable road users have risen over the past several years. The proximate cause of most of those deaths was collision with a motor vehicle. The largest increase has been in pedestrian deaths.
  • Occasionally, someone on a bicycle or e-bike hits a pedestrian and injures or kills them. These incidents are so rare that it’s impossible to determine trends. 

Stories that got it right

There are, unfortunately, many more examples of how to get it wrong when reporting on e-bike safety. But there are also reporters and news outlets that get it right. Here are a few positive examples of reporting on bike and scooter collisions.

  • NBC Bay Area. Headline: “Electric Bike Rider Killed in Crash With Tesla in Fremont.” The first sentence repeats this basic information. No mention of an “accident,” and both parties to the crash are cited.
  • The Coast News Group, reporting on the death of Christine Embree in Carlsbad. Despite calling the crash an “e-bike death” in the headline, the article states: “The city is reeling after a Carlsbad woman riding an e-bike with her 16-month-old child was struck and killed by a vehicle….”
  • KPBS reporting on Embree’s death. This article mentions the need for “safer roads” in the headline, includes the fact that the victim’s husband complained to the city about speeding in their neighborhood just weeks earlier, and has perspective from the San Diego County Bicycle Coalition. It also includes this description of the incident, in a quote from Embree’s husband: “Never in a million years did I think three weeks later, my wife, would be hit by a 42-year-old female who lived in the neighborhood traveling approximately 40 miles an hour and blew a stop sign.” That clarity in describing the driver and her actions should be a model for reporting, when the information is available.
  • The Delmar Times did a deep dive into the data on collisions involving bike riders to find the data behind Carlsbad’s 2022 declaration of emergency around e-bikes. While the piece doesn’t question police attribution of fault, it provides a trove of data and data visualizations, something we’d like to see more of as discussions around e-bike safety evolve.
  • ABC7 Los Angeles offers a model for how to write a headline about a crash between a motor vehicle driver and a bike rider.

Tips for fair and accurate reporting on collisions involving e-bikes

Many reporters can and do get it right when reporting on e-bike safety. Here are some tips for accurate reporting on e-bike safety and bike-involved collisions:

  • Talk to bike coalitions and advocates from safe streets advocates, not just car drivers. Consult with organizations like the Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals, which have committed to helping reduce bias in crash reporting. If you’re not sure who to call, call us at CalBike and we’ll help!
  • Look for evidence. Don’t conflate anecdotal accounts with a huge rise in collisions due to e-bikes.
  • Don’t rely on law enforcement to provide the full picture of a collision. Information on the size of the vehicle, the roadway conditions (especially in a bikeway), and actions taken (or not taken) by drivers is often absent from these accounts. 
  • Don’t take official data about the parties responsible for accidents at face value. Police attribution of blame in crashes may be skewed by anti-bike bias, especially in collisions involving bike riders under 18.
  • Compare data on fatalities among all vulnerable road users to find trends and potential causes. For example, the rate of pedestrians killed by cars is rising faster than the rate of people killed while riding bikes. That points to other culprits, such as distracted driving and new car and truck designs that are more lethal to vulnerable road users.
  • Unless the situation appears to involve equipment failure or a solo crash with injuries, don’t imply the e-bike is responsible for the injuries due to the speed of the bike. No vulnerable road user will fare well when tangling with a motor vehicle, whether they are riding an e-bike or not.
  • Don’t imply that a “car hit a bike.” Unless it’s a self-driving car, a person was behind the wheel, and they’re responsible for the safe operation of their vehicle. Include the driver in the story.
  • When missing or inadequate infrastructure plays a role in conflicts between people on bikes and people in cars, call that out. 
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/CB_EBike_Ad_800x320_C_NOTEXT.jpg 320 800 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2023-08-21 12:08:442023-12-15 14:20:47Media Guide: How to Report on Collisions Involving E-bikes  

CalBike Response to New York Times E-Bikes Article

August 11, 2023/by Jared Sanchez

Matt Richtel’s July 29, 2023, New York Times article on the “dangers” of e-bikes draws exactly the wrong conclusions from the tragic death of an Encinitas, CA, teen (who, the article admits, “did everything right”) killed by a driver in a van. This irresponsible piece suggests electric bicycles are responsible for increased collisions between e-bike riders and people driving cars. 

The truth is traffic violence is accelerating: 55% more bike riders were killed by cars in 2021 than in 2010. So we do have a crisis on our streets. But restricting e-bike use won’t solve it. 

The real culprit in cities like Encinitas and Carlsbad (where two bicyclists were killed by cars a few months after Carlsbad declared an e-bike emergency in 2022), which have failed to provide safe infrastructure for people on bikes.

Bicycles of all kinds are here to stay and are critical to combating climate change. Cities and states must move quickly to create roadways where people who get around using all modes of transportation can share the road safely.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Yuba-e-bike-POC-e1616451276226.jpeg 1056 2400 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2023-08-11 14:31:582023-08-14 14:58:22CalBike Response to New York Times E-Bikes Article

Joint Statement on E-Bike Safety from California Bicycle Advocates

August 10, 2023/by Jared Sanchez
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https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Allan-Crawford-separated-lanes-2594.jpg 838 1258 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2023-08-10 07:26:262023-12-15 14:24:16Joint Statement on E-Bike Safety from California Bicycle Advocates

Meet CalBike’s New ED: Kendra Ramsey

August 2, 2023/by Laura McCamy

After a year-long search with many outstanding candidates, we’re delighted to announce that Kendra Ramsey (she/her), AICP , will be joining the California Bicycle Coalition and the California Mobility Fund as our new Executive Director!

Ramsey is a seasoned active transportation and land use professional with over 15 years of experience in planning, policy development, and community engagement. She is an experienced change maker in the non-profit, government, and private sectors who comes to CalBike with a strong history of leading programs and developing plans that center community voices and make strides to undo historical patterns of disinvestment. 

Ramsey has worked to bring resident voices to long-range planning efforts, guided local agencies to rethink their engagement efforts to reach historically disadvantaged communities and respond to their needs, and sees every new project as an opportunity to create a just transportation system. She also seeks to deepen diversity and build inclusivity in the active transportation profession in her role as Vice President of the Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals, alongside some of North America’s leading practitioners.

Ramsey joins the team from Sacramento, where she has most recently worked as Active Transportation Project Manager for civil engineering firm GHD, developing innovative mobility options, Complete Streets plans, and corridor studies for local and regional agencies throughout the state. 

Ramsey is a nationally recognized expert in planning active transportation networks that meet community-identified needs, as well as developing policies and programs to help diverse constituencies choose walking and biking for daily trips. She shares CalBike’s vision that all Californians should have safe, accessible, and affordable transportation options and that improving access to safe mobility for underserved communities is of critical importance.

“I am thrilled to be joining CalBike at such a critical time for active transportation and mobility justice, and look forward to working with the board, staff, and partners to build on recent successes and launch new efforts to make walking and bicycling safer and easier for people in all of our communities.”

Kendra Ramsey, Incoming CalBike Executive Director
Kendra Ramsey

With appointment of Kendra Ramsey as Executive Director, CalBike deepens its commitment to equity

CalBike has been and remains committed to centering our advocacy efforts on the intersection between mobility choice and racial and economic equity. Ramsey’s track record in spearheading equity initiatives makes her the ideal ED to lead our organization. Over the past decade, she has worked with dozens of communities throughout the state to prioritize the transportation needs of underserved communities, primarily low-income communities and communities of color. Further, she understands the critical nature of meeting the transportation needs of caregivers and families as a way to shift away from auto dependence and toward active transportation. 

Ramsey says, “As someone who grew up in a household without a car, I have always associated transportation with opportunity. Our transportation options influence what schools we attend, what jobs we can access, the friends and family we can visit, and what recreation we can enjoy.”

Ramsey is also one of a growing number of women leaders in bicycle advocacy. In a field long dominated by men, and with male-identified people making up the majority of bike riders in California, we think women leaders bring a critical perspective to statewide bicycle advocacy. In European cities that are far ahead of the US in building safe bike infrastructure, women often make up more than half of all people on bikes, so we know there is an enormous unmet demand for safer streets in California.

“I’m absolutely thrilled to have Kendra’s expertise, vision, and passion joining our team at CalBike. It’s gratifying to see the trend of such talented women stepping into key leadership roles in organizations throughout our state.”

Cynthia Rose, CalBike Board Chair.

Looking to 2023 and beyond

In the coming year, Ramsey will take the lead on several key priorities for CalBike. She will join the team in advancing our ambitious 2023 legislative agenda, help plan the 2024 California Bicycle Summit, and work with the board and staff to develop CalBike’s new strategic plan. And, of course, she will help us craft an even more ambitious agenda for 2024 and beyond.

“Working with local agencies and community members throughout California to plan bicycling and walking networks, I’ve seen the disconnect between policy and implementation, as well as the gaps left by historical investment patterns and our current oversubscribed funding programs,” Ramsay says. “I look forward to working with the CalBike board, staff, and partners to make a more equitable transportation network for all Californians.”

We are grateful to our Interim Executive Director Kevin Claxton and his leadership over the past year. Claxton will remain an integral part of our CalBike staff and transition to the position of Operations Manager once Ramsey steps into the Executive Director role in mid-August. 

“Kendra joins CalBike at a pivotal moment, with an incredible opportunity to build on our past successes and lead our movement to greater heights.” 

Kevin Claxton, CalBike Interim ED

CalBike’s amazing team is excited to start its new chapter, and we think you will be inspired by Kendra Ramsey’s leadership in building just, sustainable, and equitable transportation in California. Look for more information about her vision and a chance to meet our new ED in the near future.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Ramsey-Headshot-1.jpg 650 1131 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2023-08-02 11:15:042023-08-02 11:15:06Meet CalBike’s New ED: Kendra Ramsey

Talking Back to Bikelash

July 24, 2023/by Kevin Claxton

At CalBike, we hear it all: Bike riders get in the way of car drivers. We should get off the road. Why are we promoting dangerous behavior, like the Safety Stop? 

If only those crazy bicyclists wouldn’t…

We’re sure you hear variations of this, too, ranging from rude (uninformed comments from acquaintances) to downright scary (threats hurled from the window of a two-ton vehicle). As more people are using bikes for fun and transportation since the pandemic, particularly with the rise in popularity of e-bikes, bikelash (a backlash against the popularity of bike riding) has gotten noisier. 

We’ve been thinking about how to respond to some of the more common comments from people who are hostile to biking or simply misguided. Here are a few suggestions for talking back to bikelash. 

General principles: Bike riders and car drivers are not enemies

A while back, The War on Cars podcast had sex advice columnist Dan Savage on as a guest. In drawing parallels between the campaign for marriage equality and the movement for safe streets, Savage highlighted the importance of straight allies in winning gay marriage.

“Drivers are cyclists sometimes, and almost all cyclists are passengers sometimes. And we need to blur those lines just like we blurred the lines between queer people and straight people by convincing them that, like, we’re right there. We’re in your workplace, in your family, in your community, on your block, and maybe getting on with us is gonna be better, not just for us, but for you, too.”

Dan Savage on The War on Cars Podcast, November 15, 2022

Protected bike lanes have been shown to reduce fatalities for people in all modes of transportation, including people in cars. Everyone is a pedestrian for at least some space of time during the day, even if it’s just walking from their car to the door. We all want safe streets where we don’t have to live in fear that our children or grandparents might be struck by a car without warning. 

It’s easy to be angry at people in cars, especially if a careless or spiteful driver has menaced you (something that has happened to many of us at one time or another). But bike riders are in the minority, and our success in winning acceptance and support for the infrastructure we need to make biking safe relies on support from people who aren’t bike riders (yet). 

That sets the stage as we consider how to respond to people who complain about bike riders, on and off the road.

Responses to bike naysayers

Here are some of the more common negative things we hear about people on bikes and some responses to pivot to a more productive conversation (or at least respond constructively).

Bikes should get off the road. 

People driving cars get stuck behind lots of things, most commonly other cars in traffic jams, road construction, etc. However, driving behind a slower-moving bike seems to generate an extra level of frustration in some drivers.

How to respond:

  • To a driver who honks and yells, wave and smile! 
  • Don’t engage in a situation on the street that’s getting heated. You don’t want to be dead right.
  • When discussing with a friend after the fact, ask them to look at their clock when they get stuck behind a bike and look again when they are able to drive faster. The short duration of the slowdown may help put it in perspective. 

The War on Cars had a discussion on whether to confront drivers that offers more perspectives on this topic.

Bikes should get off the sidewalk. 

Bike riding on the sidewalk isn’t ideal, but on busy roadways with no bike lane, the sidewalk may be the only safe space where a bike can pass. Sidewalk riding can close gaps in bike networks and allow people to get to destinations that aren’t adjacent to bike facilities, like protected lanes or off-road trails free from traffic.

How to respond:

  • A common walking speed is about 3 mph. Bike riders commonly travel at around 10 mph. If the Sidewalk Riding Bill (AB 825), which CalBike supports, passes, bikes will be limited to no more than 10 mph on sidewalks and required to defer to pedestrians. The danger to pedestrians from bikes on sidewalks is much smaller than the danger to bike riders from potential collisions with speeding cars.
  • We need more protected bike lanes and bike paths and lower speed limits. Then there would be little or no need for bikes to share the sidewalk. Until then, sidewalk riding is essential to bike safety.
  • There may be a few people who ride unsafely on the sidewalk, which is understandably scary. Sidewalks are safe spaces from car traffic. Imagine having to walk along the edge of a street full of speeding motorists without the protection of a curb — that’s what we ask bike riders to do when we don’t allow sidewalk riding in areas without bike facilities.

Bikes are a menace on shared-use paths.

There will always be a minority of rude or careless people using any mode of transportation. Most of us have seen car drivers blow through red lights or stop signs, fail to stop for pedestrians in crosswalks, menace other drivers or vulnerable road users with their vehicles, and so on. That doesn’t excuse bike riders who ride too fast or too close to walkers on shared paths, but we suspect that happens way less frequently than close encounters with cars. 

How to respond:

  • Let the person know that you always ride carefully around pedestrians and that you don’t hold them personally responsible for poor path-sharing etiquette you witnessed from someone else.
  • If paths are too crowded, that community probably needs more recreational paths, including bike-only paths where people who want to ride faster can have the space to do so. In the meantime, we should all watch out for each other.

Conventional bikes are okay, but e-bikes are a menace. 

As e-bikes have become more popular, an e-bike panic has begun to circulate. Much of the anti-bike rhetoric from past years now focuses on e-bikes (while non-electric bikes are suddenly just fine). This has led to measures that will deter new riders and a broader adoption of bicycling, such as a recently introduced bill (AB 530) that would require e-bike riders to get licenses. 

How to respond:

  • E-bikes are bikes. Repeat: e-bikes are bikes. They aren’t scooters or mopeds or motorcycles. They handle pretty much just like any other bicycle but with an electric assist to supplement the rider’s energy with battery power.
  • Most e-bikes (Class 1 and 2) don’t engage faster than 20 mph. Road bikes can easily go that fast without motors, and most e-bike riders don’t operate their bikes at top speed all the time. So e-bikes aren’t significantly faster than classic bikes.
  • The average e-bike is heavier than a standard bike. Because of this, most e-bikes have beefy brakes so they can stop quickly. But an e-bike is much lighter than a moped or motorcycle. E-bikes are still bikes.
  • Bicycle safety classes are terrific. We hope they will become more available and more riders of all kinds of bikes will take them. But no safety class or e-bike license can save a bike rider’s life if they’re hit by a speeding or careless car or truck driver. The best thing to protect people on bikes from being hit is better infrastructure, such as protected bike lanes, protected intersections, and traffic calming measures to prevent speeding. Infrastructure changes take time, but they can happen much more quickly than they currently do in California. If we made a commitment and allocated the funding to back that commitment, we could have roads that reduced deaths for all users in less than a decade. Let’s work toward that future!

Bike riders are at fault in at least half of bike/car collisions. 

Accident statistics from police investigations of collisions between bikes and cars reinforce the trope of “those crazy bicyclists!”

How to respond:

  • People in cars often say, “The bike came out of nowhere” when they hit someone. That doesn’t necessarily mean the bike rider was irresponsible; it might mean the driver of a vehicle that weighs thousands of pounds wasn’t turning their head, scanning the roadway, or accounting for their blind spots.
  • Police have a “windshield perspective” because most patrol officers spend their days behind the wheel of a car. Bias toward motor vehicles and a lack of awareness of what constitutes safe cycling can skew collision reports. The determination of fault in car/bike crashes is unreliable at best and biased at worst.
  • We need better driver education to share the road safely with people walking and biking. 

Nobody bikes anyway. Why should we build bike lanes? 

A common pushback to building bike infrastructure is that bike lanes serve too few people, so bikes don’t deserve to have precious road space allocated to them.

How to respond:

  • Just as motor vehicles rarely drive on roads that aren’t built yet, people can’t ride in bike lanes that don’t exist. In cities like Amsterdam and Copenhagen, more than 50% of trips are made by bike because those cities have made biking convenient and safe.
  • Bike lanes make all road users safer. Studies have shown that, on streets with protected bike lanes, fatalities go down for people biking, walking, and traveling by car. A bike lane could save your life!
  • Nobody will be forced to stop driving, but creating infrastructure that makes it safer and more convenient to bike, walk, and take transit gives people more options, allowing those who don’t want to or can’t drive to get around more easily. That means more space on the streets for those who need or choose to drive.

People don’t want to ride bikes.

When bike advocates offer biking as one part of the solution to climate change, some people scoff at the idea that enough people would want to get around by bike to make a difference.

How to respond:

  • Many people enjoy swimming, but they probably wouldn’t be enthusiastic about swimming in shark-infested waters. Our unsafe streets are a deterrent to trying biking. There are many people who fall into the “interested but concerned” category: They don’t ride now because of safety but would try it if they felt they could ride without risk. 
  • When was the last time you were on a bike? It’s fun! Come on a ride with me!

For more on how to respond to bike naysayers, see Momentum Magazine’s bikelash tips.

How do you talk back to people who don’t see the value of biking? Share your tips with us on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Bikingiwthoutalane-scaled.jpg 2560 1704 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2023-07-24 09:28:002023-07-22 13:39:58Talking Back to Bikelash
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