Bicycles and cars don't mix

http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/columnists/vassilaros/s_82631.html

 By Dimitri Vassilaros
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Tuesday, July 23, 2002 

I don't want to share the road with a bicycle. However, you and I must
because if we did not, it could lead to tragedy. Drivers have to follow
the law, but that does not mean we have to like it. 

The Tour de France seems to have spawned the Tour de South Hills < if
you'll pardon my French. 

Are your secondary arteries clogged by clumps of Lance Armstrong-esque
bicyclists sporting aerodynamic helmets, colorful skintight synthetics
and baseball-size calf muscles? 

Drivers anywhere near East McMurray Road are plagued by these swarms
most weekends. Do you have the same problem where you live? 

If you see them up ahead, you are forced to drive slower than the
slowest one of the pack while you ponder if you can pull out without
grazing one and not plowing into an oncoming car around the next bend. 

Bicyclists are an accident waiting to happen. 

Your municipality should be doing whatever it can to get them off the
road. It can start by taking down those yellow street signs with black
silhouettes of bike rider and car that encourage road sharing. 

Common sense tells you roads are designed for most motorized vehicles:
golf carts, riding mowers and farm equipment being some of the
exceptions. Yet flimsy, two-wheeled vehicles powered by huffing and
puffing are allowed < even welcomed, according to those yellow signs.
The governments' values are upside down. 

Since bicycles are allowed on our streets, why not in-line skating and
skateboarding? 

Cars, trucks and motorcycles pay for our roads. State and federal taxes
siphon about one-third of the cost of a gallon of gas, according to the
stickers on some gas pumps. Take the time to read one the next time you
defy the EPA by topping off your tank. 

A motorist must pay for all the stickers on his car every year < two on
the windshield and one on the license plate < even if no repairs are
warranted. He also pays for a driver's license and auto insurance in
case of an accident. He pays dearly if he gets a speeding ticket, and
he even pays a tax for the privilege of throwing away his old tires. 

And do not forget the government makes every motorist pay the hidden
costs of all safety features mandated for our vehicles. We are forced
to wear seat belts, and motorcycle riders are forced to wear helmets.
Do you think many bicycle riders have been stopped and ticketed for
safety violations? 

If the government is so concerned about highway safety  seat belt
this, air bag that and crash test after crash test  why does it allow
bicycles anywhere near traffic? Can you name another vehicle on our
streets that has no safety features? Does the government care about
safety or not? 

When those spoke-thin road hogs start paying their fair share of road
costs  like motorized vehicles do  then maybe we could consider
allowing them on a few isolated roads like in our city, county and
state parks, where the only drivers they could threaten would be the
teenagers whose parents are teaching them to drive. 

The politically correct crowd loves bicycles. They don't use fossil
fuels They don't pollute. And the more people can be convinced to ride
them instead of cars, the more people will want to move back into the
city so their ride Downtown and back would be doable. I have even seen
bike racks on PAT buses. 

Bicycling is a practical way to commute, if you live in Beijing. Cars
are a luxury there, but they are a necessity here. Safety should be a
necessity, too. 


Dimitri Vassilaros can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or (412)
380-5637. 


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