>From today's DP.

http://www.dailypennsylvanian.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2003/06/12/3ee8132979234

Share the Road campaign elicits tickets, complaints

 When fifth year medical student Alex Wang was riding his bicycle down
Locust Walk a few weeks ago, he was hit with a surprise. And in his mind
-- with a student's budget to consider -- it was an expensive one.

Wang received one of 51 tickets that have been issued to cyclists since
May 16th on the 3400 and 3600 blocks of Locust and Walnut streets. The $49
citation includes a fine for riding on the sidewalk and associated court
costs.

"Parking tickets are less than that," Wang wrote in an e-mail. "My bike is
only worth less than $100."

The recent ticketing wave comes in the wake of the initiation of the
second phase of Philadelphia's Share the Road campaign. Launched last
January with a press conference and demonstrations, the program is an
educational effort aimed at spreading awareness about bicycle safety.

Share the Road targets both motorists and cyclists for violations
including riding bicycles on sidewalks, crowding or driving in bike lanes
and other related violations.

Though motorists and cyclists initially just received warnings, offenders
are now served with citations.

And while many like Wang are unhappy about the tickets, police are
optimistic about the safety campaign.

"Overall the reaction has been positive," University Police Deputy Chief
of Operations Michael Fink said.

"We're choosing to issue the least expensive of the tickets," Fink added,
noting that the city code stipulates a less expensive fine for riding on
the sidewalks than the state code does. "It's a $98.50 violation of the
Pennsylvania vehicle code otherwise," he said.

Yet in the opinion of Psychology Professor and avid cyclist Saul
Sternberg, even the $49 ticket is unreasonable.

"My feeling is that that's punitive for students -- it's
extreme," Sternberg said of the fine. Sternberg also added that the new
measures and fines could deter people from cycling.

Wang, who reported never having received a warning this past spring,
expressed a similar sentiment.

"I feel discouraged [from] using bicycles," he wrote. The "University
needs to create better conditions."

Arguing that University City conditions contradict the new measures,
Sternberg commented that sidewalks are safer for cyclists because bike
lanes are often obstructed by delivery trucks.

"There's a conflict between wanting these commercial establishments and
having a bike lane," he said. "There hasn't been enough imagination to
think about the implications of cyclists in the road."

Nevertheless, "most cyclists, after discussions with officers, understand
the reasons behind [the tickets]," Fink added, a testament to the fact
that the program's goals -- safe riding and driving -- are hard to
disagree with. 


Thanks, 

John Ellingsworth
http://ellingsworth.org/john/

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