Cycling safety is a massive issue. Cycling is a positive thing: it does
good things for your health, the environment, and takes pressure off the
roads & public transport. Unfortunately we have seen a massive
spike this year in cycling fatalities on our roads in this state (up 43% to 46 deaths in NSW). Unfortunately the debates and discussions as to why have gotten stuck in a rut.
In short, the car drivers blame the cyclists, and cyclists blame the
drivers. Drive a car for a week around inner city Sydney, and you'll
almost certainly see some examples of poor cyclist behavior (running red
lights, no helmets, riding the wrong way down one way streets, riding
at night with no lights, riding with mp3 players on), but if you ride around inner city Sydney for a
week you'll also emerge with tales of bad driving (running red lights,
talking on mobiles illegally, speeding, failures to indicate and give riders
adequate space) . In both the driving and riding camps you find around
90% of people behave entirely legally and responsibly, but that 10% of lawbreakers provides more than adequate number of examples to justify a given stance, hence both parties
remain entrenched in their corners. And people keep dying.
If we want to move this discussion forward, both sides of the debate
need to acknowledge the problem 10% that exists on _their_ side, then move
on and make the roads safer for the 90% rather than focussing solely on
the recalcitrant 10%.
Personally I'd like to see a major high visibility education campaign
undertaken focusing on cycling on our roads. Cyclists have their own
unique set of laws that are not well understood by drivers (such as the
laws pertaining to overtaking, and use of lanes), and this leads to
driver frustration and anger. Then having broadcast the rights and
responsibilities of both parties, the police need to launch an across
the board crackdown (which will address the 10%)
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