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The fact that outdated laws permit bicyclists to compete for road space with cars and trucks doesn't mean it's a good idea. These laws will not protect bicyclists from the inevitable accidents, nor will they help heal their injuries or restore their lives.
Rod Phillips, Raleigh
Case in pointThank you for calling attention to the dangers and attitudes cyclists must endure in your May 12 article "Cyclists pedal scared on busy Triangle roads."
A group of six mothers cycled from Cary to Carrboro on a Saturday morning for a pre-Mother's Day ride. We rode single file on the shoulder and had no fewer than four angry drivers yelling obscenities out their windows, angry to have to wait to pass us on a two-lane curvy back road. One man even threw his cigarette butt at my friend, a mom of three, on an otherwise beautiful Saturday morning.
Juliann Zoetmulder, Cary
Beef up shouldersIn regard to "Cyclists pedal scared on busy Triangle roads" (news story, May 12), we as bikers do need to take responsibility for following the motor vehicle rules of the road. But with the poor road conditions around the Triangle area, it's difficult to stay far to the right when there isn't any room over there.
What would be a big help to both cyclists and motorist is for DOT to provide some paved shoulders at least 2 feet wide and some marked-off bicycle lanes on the major street arteries.
Of course, even with that, that won't prevent collisions between bicycles and cars or trucks -- especially when driven by people who are inebriated, arrogant, apathetic or otherwise oblivious to their surroundings.
F. Benton Ham, Raleigh
What motorists payThis letter is in regards to the article and picture of a cyclist on a bike in front of a truck. The cutline read that bikers ride a favorite route on Carpenter Pond Road, where an accident happened. I am not surprised to read that an accident happened on this road. Bikers are everywhere on this road as well as on Leesville Road, Olive Branch Road and Nichols Road. As many as 40 bikers are riding together at one time. The bikers ride four wide on the lane. They will not get over, and they do not use hand signals to help you get by them.
I read the biker's rights. Unless the bikers are required to register their bikes, pay high insurance premiums for liability and collision and pay for uninsured motorists, pay for inspections, pay property tax on their bikes, purchase license plates yearly, then I am missing something. Until the bikers are required to meet the requirements that I have to meet for operating a vehicle in North Carolina, I think they should be required to ride in a bike lane.
Norma McKee
Raleigh
Cycling and safetyThe May 12 article about bicycling correctly pointed out that cyclists have a legal right to ride on streets. However, the article implied that cycling on Triangle streets is unsafe because of some unfortunate recent accidents. Motorists are injured and killed nearly every day in the Triangle, yet we don't see articles questioning whether cars and trucks belong on the streets.
Cyclists can get hurt on the roads, as with any outdoor sport, but they can do many things to minimize the dangers. Some examples include wearing bright clothes, using head and tail lights, obeying traffic laws and choosing routes that avoid busy roads (when possible). I have ridden thousands of miles on Triangle roads over the years without getting hurt.
Motorists also have responsibilities, first by recognizing that bicycles do belong on the streets. Cyclists actually are doing motorists a favor by reducing demand for gasoline while prices are skyrocketing, in addition to conserving oil and reducing air pollution. If a cyclist slows down commuters by a few seconds, that is a small inconvenience compared with the injury that motorists can cause by passing too closely or driving recklessly.
Fortunately, most Triangle drivers seem to realize this and are polite toward cyclists.
Tom Mather
Raleigh
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