i was driving WB on Palatine rd. i slowed down to take a right into my neighbourhood. There was a minivan at that intersection waiting to turn right onto WB Palatine. He was pulled up past the crosswalk and edging into the turn.
Palatine rd is a 35 MPH street along that stretch, but most of the time (this was high rush hour -about 5PM) the average speed is over 50. i make that turn almost daily and i can't tell you how many times i've nearly been rear-ended just slowing for that turn (sometimes i get the brights-flash, a horn, or a finger.)
As i made my turn past the minivan, something told me to really slow down, and as i was just about to come off the brake, two young girls (8-9-ish) came out from behind the minivan (in the crosswalk,) and shot across my front end.
They were riding EB along the sidewalk (it runs past a park and middle school) and were hidden from my sight by the van up until they crossed in front of me.
i have to think that almost anyone else making that turn just then would've clobbered one or both those kids. People often take that turn at nearly full speed and tear off down the residential street at over 30.
These weren't your typical bone-headed careless pre-teen BMXer boys (sorry, but you know the type,) but just a couple of young girls riding home from the park, going slowly down the sidewalk and through a crosswalk... completely out-of-sight until the last second. They probably never knew how close they came to having a very bad day.
Most of a day later and i'm still shaking...
Tags:
contact the city about the conditions of this intersection.
iggi said:contact the city about the conditions of this intersection.
The problem isn't so much about the conditions of the intersection -it's a typical sidestreet/thouroghfare corner. The very basic problem there in general is one of speed limit enforcement on Palatine rd. -there is no good place to set up a speedtrap or even to pull over a speeder/aggressive driver.
The other problem is drivers' habit of creeping past the stop line to get a better view of passing traffic.
Sight lines there aren't too bad as these things go, but i'm sure we could all name dozens of intersections and streets all over the county with potentially deadly obscured views.
i guess that i posted this mainly to relieve residual angst over the near miss. Perhaps a safety lecture about defensive driving would have been better posted in a car and drivers' forum, but i just wanted to reinforce the notion that as cyclists, we need to be aware of our needing to be seen at all times, and to keep our own eyes open. We cannot depend on drivers seeing us, let alone avoiding contact. That's all been said before and better elsewhere in these fora, but i just wanted to put my 2 cents out here too.
Thanks for your time.
Hey Mike.
I'm really glad that you avoided a collision. I applaud your posting the details of this incident for others to comment on and learn from.
I don't wish to make you feel worse about the incident or jump on you for errors or demonize automobile use. I do seem to have a different take on this though. I'm going to be blunt in the interest of brevity.
From your description, I would say you were completely at fault for this near collision.
You were turning while the girls were heading straight, which means you yield to them. They were in a crosswalk, which means you yield to them. You started a turn when you had no sight line on who was coming in the crosswalk.
In both post & response, you blame this incident on two factors: speeding on Palatine Rd. and "drivers'... creeping past the stop line to get a better view of passing traffic." Neither hold up.
I sympathize with not wanting to be rear ended, but that doesn't excuse turning through a crosswalk you cannot see is clear.
Also, it is perfectly legal (and proper) to stop at at the stop bar, roll forward and stop again to get a better view before turning. The driver of the van that was blocking your view cannot be blamed for this.
Furthermore, the fact that intuition told you to slow down and that you were able to stop before hitting these children is NOT "defensive driving."
Defensive driving is making allowances for other road users mistakes and dangerous behavior. Say, slowing down at an intersection where you HAVE the right of way so that you can avoid a collision should another driver pull out. These girls did nothing wrong.
Sorry man, this one is on you.
Good job, funny how that intuition works. Maybe you saw them for a split second in the corner of your eye and didn't realize it. Or maybe you just felt funny due to the lack of visibility. The intuition in those situations is usually right, at least if you read Gavin DeBecker.
re: people behind me. I learned the hard way (no one hurt) to slow down way before turns. I used to get rattled by people behind me almost rear ending me and beeping and getting mad. Until one day someone did actually rear end me as I was turning, and after that I made sure to slow down even more. My not slowing down enough was what was causing problems behind me. If they get mad if I slow down too much, well that's all, at least they know exactly what I am doing.
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