Attn: Boston Pedestrians, Re: Bicycles
This thing pictured above is a bicycle. You're going to see more and
more of them in the coming weeks and months. Quick word of advice: if
you see one hurtling towards you, you may want to get out of its way.
Before
I even start speaking, I know what you're thinking: "great, here comes
some other entitled bike-riding asshole who's telling everyone else to
be safe while he's tearing ass in and out of traffic and running red
lights!" Understand: I agree, to an extent, that a lot of cycle
advocates preach a lot more than they practice. At times it seems like
when a cyclist discusses "sharing the road" what he or she really means
is "everyone get the fuck out of my way and let me do what I want." I
absolutely recognize this. We can go back and forth all day detailing
the various ways in which people on all three sides of this debate -
motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians - get on everyone else's nerves,
but that wouldn't be too productive.
Really, I just want to
address one very specific issue, one common courtesy that seems to be
getting ignored on a consistent basis by pedestrians. I'll paint a
mental picture for you: say you're waiting to cross a street, only
there's too much traffic for you to get all the way there yet. So you
step off the curb and stand in the street - not on the sidewalk, but in
that space between the curb and the traffic lane while you wait for
cars to pass so you can safely walk across the street. You probably do
this sort of thing all the time - I know I certainly used to. But what
most people don't realize is that that space is the bike lane, even if
the street doesn't have the stripes that indicate a dedicated bike
lane. That's the only space specifically reserved for bicycles, and
when you stop there, you're making yourself into an obstacle. Cyclists
might not see you stand there - especially at dusk - or it may be too
late for them to stop. Even if they do see you, though, those same cars
that you're waiting for are also things people on bikes would like to
avoid.
We really don't see much of an excuse for this. Put it a different way:
you wouldn't stop and stand in the middle of a lane of traffic when
there are cars coming, would you? Again, you can bring up the way many
cyclists run red lights, don't yield at crosswalks, and other such
infractions, and I'll agree with you. But that doesn't give you license
to flout both common sense and common decency, putting others and
yourselves at risk in the process. Maybe a collision with a bike won't
necessarily kill you like a car would, but it'll still mess you up
pretty good. So please, stay on the curb until you're absolutely sure.