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the reason i ride a bikew is because after like 6 75$ red light camera tickets for my car i said f that im not paying any more car tickets. f the man and his rules of the road. he only sorta blew the light. bot outright no stop blew it. i think a warnig ticket would have been more suitibale since the "rolling start isnt exactly blowing the light . take it to acourt and fight it. follow the law but know your rights
notoriousDUG said:How is paying the fine for breaking the law letting 'the man' steal from you?
Wouldn't it be more like taking responsibility for your actions?
roofis lee king said:fight it man, dont let the man steal 75 dollars from you
I see a bicyclist as half vehicle, half pedestrian, with advantages from both worlds. I've always maintained that one of those advantages is ignoring red lights when there is no traffic to yield to. I like to think that the people in cars, waiting at the light, get angry and jealous when they see how awesome and rebellious me and my bike are.
Yeah. Big white suburban thing. I see him at Lawrence and Elston all of the time pulling cars over. He sits in the bike lane so I notice it quite often as I veer around him. So I guess that's a "speed trap" or whatever... and I should just be on my best behavior there from now on.
And everyone has pretty much nailed down the issue - it's legality versus common sense practice. I'm pretty sure those battles don't get fought and won in traffic court, though.
wig [ isaac ] said:was the COP in a SUV?
The ticket isn't even the only issue here. The more laws you visibly break in front of drivers, the less respect they have for cyclists. Every red light you blow burns up a little bit of good will for our community. Cyclists already have very little respect on the road, why make it even worse?
I'm ok with taking stop signs as yields if the road is entirely clear, but I follow stop lights to the T. I might make an exception if there were absolutely no cars around, but when there are cars you should follow the law.
Ryan,
In response to your specific question, if you have the time it is very possible that you could enter a plea and get the fine reduced in exchange for supervision, etc. Bottom line is you probably have little to lose by going to court if you have the time. Who knows, maybe the cop doesn't show up and your case gets thrown out.
I very much agree with notoriousDUG that there should be bicycle specific traffic laws in place in our state. (See Idaho stop here.) Rather than wasting your time in court fighting your ticket (and it would be a waste of time), contact your state representative and/or the Active Transportation Alliance and learn how to advocate for real change in Springfield.
Brendan.
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