Friday, October 30, 2009

Wheelie, wheelie angry

There has been a noticeable campaign in the media to document and highlight the road rage and inconsiderate behaviour of cyclists on our local roads. That reached a new high today when the Honourable Trevor Mallard, Member of Parliament for Pencarrow was reported to have kicked the bag of a driver who had just been in an incident with a group of cyclists, including Mr Mallard.
This is not surprising given Mr Mallard's interest in cycling and his reputation as a hot head, but the whole campaign to paint cyclists as the bad boys on our streets runs in the face of the reports of cyclists injured and even killed in collisions with cars. The opposite is almost inconceivable.
I picked up today a quote by Zoe Williams in The Guardian 4th February 2006:
“There is something about the miscreant cyclist that seems to get people more exercised than they are about the misbehaving motorist…When people get into cars, their metal encasement turns them into robots in our minds, and we’re grateful to them for any act of courtesy. We’re grateful that they don’t deliberately kill children, then laugh a rasping, metallic laugh…[Cyclists] are more civic-minded than anyone else travelling in any other manner, bar by foot. If they do run into someone, they at least (like the bee) do their victim the favour of hurting themselves in the process, which is why, if you had any sense, you’d save your hatred for the motorist, who (like the wasp) injures without care.”
As well as demonstrating that this campaign of blaming the cyclist has an international quality, Zoe Williams makes a very pertinent point.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Feel like a twit on a bike

TWITTER TACKLES BIKE THIEVES
29 July 2009-
One of the interesting things which makes following new media so interesting is how users find new uses for the medium which were never envisioned by the developers of the original application. Another example to appear in this northern summer is Twitter and bicycles. While it isn't safe to tweet while cycling, any more than it isn't safe to text while driving, if you happen to be unable to cycle. then perhaps tweeting is more than just OK.

Cyclists in Boston, Massachusssetts have a new weapon in their
arsenal against bike thieves - Twitter. The Stolen Bike Alert programme, run by Boston Bikes, a department of the City of Boston, sends an
alert to police, local bike shops, hospitals, schools and subscribers when a
bike is reported stolen . The alerts are sent via Twitter, Facebook or email,
instantly raising awareness of the stolen bike.

Read
more here:
http://www.bikebiz.com/news/30890/Twitter-tackles-bike-thieves

Friday, June 12, 2009

Driving with blinkers

When horse drawn carriages were the preferred method of getting around town, horses which were inclined to be skittish would be fitted with blinkers, short flaps of leather which restricted the horse's peripheral vision and so decreased the likelihood of the horse rearing or bolting. It often seems to me that policy makers in transportation feel more comfortable wearing their own metaphorical blinkers.
In the current recession, there has been much talk of stimulating the national economy by improving the infrastructure. When it comes to transport infrastructure so many people think only of roads. They do not consider there are other means of land transport like rail, walking and cycling. What makes this blinkered attitude so frustrating is that cycleways and footpaths don't cost as much to build as roads. We get more bangs for our buck if we put the money into these types of infrastructure.
When we read the New Zealand Council for Infrastructure Development's report on transport infrastructure needs, we see not just an obsession with roading, but also with roading which will reduce congestion. The cost to the economy from road congestion is much less than the cost from road crashes caused by poorly designed roads, yet making roads safer is not the major concern of the Council. If we wanted a quick way to reduce congestion then improving cycling and walking facilities will produce a better result because cycleways are quicker and easier to build and a bicycle takes up lass space than a car.
The detractors of the National Cycleway project seem to be long on derision and short on argument. The experience of the National Cycle Network in Great Britain is that a route developed primarily for tourism and recreation soon becomes the preferred route for people commuting to work or using their bicyles for other transportation purposes like shopping.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Fashion on wheels

While traffic engineers experiment with cycle lanes and traffic calming, social researchers are suggesting that perhaps a better approach might be to ask that old question: What do women want? http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=getting-more-bicyclists-on-the-road .

In an article in The Guardian, Helen Pidd quotes some significant statistics from Sustrans that 79% of British women do not cycle at all even though 43% have access to a bike. In the article she suggests that perhaps one reason for this situation is the fact that cycling clothes make women look as if they have "been attacked by a highlighter pen". She goes on to talk about clothing designers such as Cyclodelic who have recently secured an agreement for the British retail chain, Topshop to stock their products. The implication is that looking good while cycling may encourage more women to cycle.
Certainly cycle clothing for women riders has been a significant issue in the past. Patricia Grimshaw, in her landmark book, Women's Suffrage in New Zealand, on the struggle for universal suffrage in New Zealand traces the beginning of the movement to a group of cyclists in Christchurch. lead by Kate Shepherd. The problem was that women's clothing in the late Nineteenth Century did not lend itself to cycling. Mrs Amelia Bloomer's radical proposal made in the 1850s, now the object of popular derision, did not gain the approval of the leaders of the community and so encouraged resistance by women to attitudes which restricted them and limited what they could do.
Cycling then lead to a major social reform but can it now lead to a major environmental and health reform by making cycling attractive to women? I had not heard before now that looking unfashionable was the reason most women do not cycle. Yet we have groups like Frocks on bikes who promote women riding bicycles without having to "lycra up" and a growing number of bicycle chic websites and blogs. Have we had it wrong all this time?

Meanwhile, the Beauty and the Bike project is getting girls back on bikes in the UK:http://www.bikebeauty.org/english/ . And Taiwan's "godmother of the bicycle", Bonnie Tu (executive vice-presidentand chief financial officer of Giant Bicycles), is on a mission to end maledominance in bike design: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/engineering/article6946506.ece

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Apathy rules OK?

"Science may have found a cure for most evils; but it has found no remedy for the worst of them all -- the apathy of human beings." Helen Keller

It seems to me to be rather obvious, that people having a common purpose would find it easy to form a common goal and work towards the achievement of that goal. Our contemporary society is full of examples of how this approach achieves success for those who adopt it, from political parties and trade unions to industry groupings, community organisations and criminal conspiracies. So why do so many good causes languish and fail to make progress? Sometimes it is the force of opposition to their goals. It would be difficult for many groups to achieve much in Zimbabwe, for example. However as the quote from Helen Keller suggests, it is as likely to be that people are unconvinced about their ability to work for change or that they are content to let other people shoulder the burden.

In Wellington, the formation of Bicycle Users Groups, (B.U.G.) seems obvious. Despite the terrain, the narrow roads and the strong winds, cycling is increasing as a recreational, sporting and commuter activity. Cyclists have nothing to lose but their fear, by agitating for improved facilities yet the work of promoting these legitimate goals is left to small. committed groups.

When we consider also that much of the activity seems to be directed at the local authorities and their endless bureaucratic processes, we can almost understand why so many cyclists do not take part. The process is slow and arcane. Setbacks are commonplace and the people who finally convert policy into action are at the best lukewarm to the intent of the policy and produce a watered down version of what was proposed.

In addition, elected politicians have a very short time scale: - the next election and a keen interest in appeasing the majority of the people who will bother to vote. Where cyclists' interests appear to come into conflict with motorists' interests, then radical and significant changes are very unlikely since these changes will be unpopular with the politicians' constituency.

B.U.G's represent an alternative approach to achieving change. When I worked and studied in Christchurch in the late 1960s and early 1970s, my employers provided simple but adequate cycle storage facilities and more staff cycled to work. This does not seem to be the case in Wellington where the environment is less friendly towards cycling. However, in spite of all this cycling is growing in Wellington and BUGs represent a means to harness the impetus of this social change and direct it to useful ends.

My proposition is that if employers provide improved facilities for cycling then even more employees will cycle. When the numbers of cyclists reach critical mass, then political candidates will see value in adopting cycle friendly policies and promoting these policies in their pitch for votes.