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http://www.malibutimes.com/articles/2005/09/21/news/news2.txt
PCH
bike safety issue heats up
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
City members
are at odds over how to address bicycle safety issues along
Pacific Coast Highway. Bicyclists say they are being targeted
by Sheriff's deputies.
By Jonathan Friedman / Assistant
Editor and Hans Laetz / Special to The Malibu Times
Heated discussion on how to make
Pacific Coast Highway safer took place at Monday's City Council
meeting in the wake of the Sept. 10 incident in which two bicyclists
were killed by a car while riding on the highway.
Councilmember Pamela Conley Ulich
said she wanted the city to begin looking into ways to create
trails and bikeways along the dangerous highway, and did not
want the issue to be referred to the Public Safety Commission,
as the process would usually dictate. Meanwhile, Public Safety
Commissioner Carol Randall, a longtime Pacific Coast Highway
safety advocate whose son-in-law was killed in 2002 when he
was hit by a car while standing along the highway, said it was
important for the issue to go before the commission, of which
she is the chair. She also said she does not support building
bike paths along the highway.
Also attending the meeting were
several bicyclists who demanded something be done to increase
safety on the highway. Several city council members advised
them that the city had no authority to do anything with Pacific
Coast Highway, since it is under the jurisdiction of the California
Department of Transportation. Just this week, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
vetoed a bill heavily supported by Malibu that would have created
a double fine for speeders on major highways, including Pacific
Coast Highway. He said in a statement that he vetoed the bill
because there was no substantial evidence that double-fine zones
increased safety.
At one point in the meeting,
several council members agreed that the best idea would be for
the Public Safety Commission to hold a hearing on bicycle issues.
It would then make a recommendation to the City Council, which
would pass one on to the state. Conley Ulich said she was confident
she wouldn't support the Public Safety Commission recommendation.
When asked why she believed that, Conley Ulich said, "I
have discussed this with Carol Randall, and we disagree on many
issues."
The council voted to send the
issue to the Public Safety Commission before bringing it officially
to the City Council. Also, Randall and Conley Ulich were named
to represent the city on the Pacific Coast Highway Task Force,
which is being formed by Sen. Sheila Kuehl's staff to deal with
safety issues, primarily cycling ones. After the meeting, Conley
Ulich and Randall could be seen talking with each other and
said they were looking forward to the process.
Since the Sept. 10 accident,
the issue of biking on Pacific Coast Highway has risen in significance.
Some cyclists are incensed that tickets are being handed out
to persons riding two riders abreast on the highway. Santa Monica
resident John Velez was cited for riding one foot to the left
of the fog stripe last weekend.
Velez said prior to the meeting
that he was riding in a group of seven cyclists last weekend,
and could not ride any further to the right because of parked
cars.
"The lane is real wide and
there was plenty of room for cars to pass me without changing
lanes," he said.
"The deputies are targeting
the cyclists," Velez said, "when it was an incompetent
driver who killed Scott [Bleifer]."
Sgt. Philip Brooks of the Malibu
Lost Hills Sheriff's Station said in a telephone interview that
his deputies have not started a crackdown on packs of bicycles,
"but we are thinking about it."
"The law says you are required
to remain as close as possible to the right edge of the pavement.
Of course, our deputies will not cite anyone riding to the right
of the solid line on a nice broad shoulder."
The bikers point to another California
Vehicle Code section that they maintain allows bicyclists to
use a full lane at their discretion if the right shoulder is
blocked by parked cars.
Members of Velo Club La Grange,
a Westwood road touring bicyclists club with 400 members, said
they are planning a massive memorial ride on Pacific Coast Highway
Saturday in honor of Bleifer, a club member who was one of the
two bicyclists killed three weeks earlier on Pacific Coast Highway
near John Tyler Drive. Bleifer was reported to be planning to
ride in an Arthritis Foundation bike-a-thon from San Francisco
to Los Angeles Saturday, and the club members said they want
to honor his life by finishing the last leg of the charity fundraiser
for him.
Several hundred cyclists are
expected to leave Santa Monica at 8 a.m., rally at Zuma Beach,
and then turn south to hold a roadside memorial at the accident
site one-half mile north of John Tyler Drive.
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