This hits close to home for me - I used to commute out to Mount Prospect for work and the Melas Park basin race for Chicago Cross Cup is right by where this happened. :-( My thoughts are with the cyclist and her family.
Mount Prospect police and firefighter/paramedics responded about 9:41 AM Friday to a report of crash with injuries at Central Road and Weller Lane Mount Prospect, IL. Police and firefighter/paramedics received a report that a bicyclist was struck by a car.
The preliminary investigation by Mount Prospect Police Department revealed a female bicyclist, Joni Beaudry, 55-years-old of Mount Prospect, was attempting to cross northbound across Central Road at the designated crosswalk. Beaudry had activated the crossing signal and began to cross after the vehicles in the eastbound curb lane of Central Road stopped. A black Lexus SUV driving in the eastbound median lane of Central Road did not stop and struck Beaudry. The driver of the Lexus, Hanna Burzynska, age 56, of Elk Grove Village remained on scene after striking the bicyclist.
http://www.arlingtoncardinal.com/2016/06/bicyclist-killed-in-crash-...
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For the investigators to conclude that the bicyclist was partially at fault because of entering the roadway even though the crossing signals - illuminated next to a cross walk - were lit is incomprehensible. That is no different than concluding that any bicyclist who enters the roadway even though cross traffic has a stop sign, yield sign, or red light could be partially to blame. In essence, the investigators conclude that motorists - even those disregarding traffic control devices - always have the right of way.
This is why Dennis's Law is so important. It absolutely clarifies that bicyclists are entitled to the right of way and are just as much as "vehicle" as a motor vehicle.
No. The new law reinforces that our rights include "right of way" laws. So anytime a bicyclist has a claim to right of way under the law, there is a clarification of that issue. Pursuant to Section 11-1512(c) of the Illinois Vehicle Code, when a bicyclist is using a crosswalk to cross a roadway, the rider is treated as a "pedestrian" under the law. And Illinois law is clear on the responsibility of an Illinois motorist to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians in a crosswalk at an intersection. Section 11-1002 of the Illinois Vehicle Code states that “the driver of a vehicle shall stop and yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within a crosswalk.” This responsibility is made even more clear when the pedestrian is both in a crosswalk and with walk signals.
Okay, if a ghost bike is a driver distraction (actually that sounds like a lame excuse someone gave to the reporting officer,) what about -oh, let's say- roadside signs such as election posters and bus stop adverts?
How about better driver training and licensing requirements? Oh, no, that would be an infringement of drivers' rights...
What about ENFORCING the law against texting while driving? This has been the cause of most of my recent close calls, including a woman who nearly ran me over while walking in a crosswalk. I pounded on the hood of her car, and she stopped, thank God.
What can we do as a community to raise awareness of all sorts of distracted driving? The distractions (mostly involving cell phones in one way or another) are ubiquitous, which would mean hammering on every police and sheriff to enforce existing laws.
Perhaps a more directed political approach would help. Under certain specific circumstances (which ones?), notify a specific set of politicians? By that, I mean mayors (not just Mayor Rahm), city council members/aldermen, sheriffs (Dart is elected, right?), and that whole steaming mess in Springfield. Maybe a set of journalists?
I think we could identify the target list pretty easily, but what events should trigger a notice? The easiest is deaths or serious injuries which make the paper, but (thankfully) that happens rarely enough that the mean notification interval would be too large. Ideally, every time we see some sort of infraction we'd snap a picture of the offending driver and post it. In my experience, it would be dangerous to whip out my cell phone and snap that picture. I don't have a GoPro-type camera, and I question how good that would be at seeing cell phone craziness unless it was helmet-mounted.
An emphatic YES! to both Mike's and Paul's comments above.
What a load of BS.
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