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What about tricycles, monocycles, kiddies bikes, skateboards, wheeled shoes that kids wear, etc. Isn't it only vehicles with motors that must register ?
If you hit someone with a car bumper and kill them you'll get 15 years (or whatever) but if you attach that same piece of metal to a car and hit the same person, killing them, you'll get 3 years at the most.
" 30 years ago drunk driving was socially acceptable. "
No it wasn't. I started driving in 1966 and drink driving was regarded as a disgrace then.
But, more to the point. Belgium had a system of bike registration in 1974 and I assume still does. Every bike had to bear a number plate and the cost was negligible.
I've actually been hit in addition to the near misses. I was on the pavement - so was the rider - and it hurt! He didn't stop, or even look back; it was lucky I'm not frail or elderly.
So I'm very keen on the idea that all cyclists should be registered and display a number. It should preferably not be on their machines but rather on their backs where everyone could see it, especially in the situation where a rider is fleeing the scene of their dastardly deed!
I think cycle insurance should be encouraged but I don't think it should be made compulsory as it is for cars. The potential a cyclist has to cause damage to property, fire, injury or death, far in excess of their means to pay, is just not of the same order. Anyway, if the people responsible could be identified and have claims lodged against them, I'm sure they would behave themselves much better and cycle insurance would become very popular too.
Oh, and of course there would be lots of lucrative contraventions the Council could fine them for.
I should have added that it wasn't a cycle lane - he suddenly appeared in front of me at speed on the pavement from behind a parked vehicle; I froze and he barely avoided a head on collision. If I had been one or two paces ahead I would have been seriously hurt; an older person or a child might have been killed. But in all my life (nearly half a century of it) I've never seen anything similar happen with a car.
There are lies, damned lies, and statistics. Of course more people are killed by motor vehicles; that's just because there are so many of them compared with cycles not because they're more dangerous, necessarily.
And there's no reason why a registration scheme would cost cyclists more than a nominal fee so it shouldn't act as a deterrent. I think that everyone would actually benefit including some cyclists put off from sharing the road with others who ride recklessly.
I'll answer you point by point:
I was never comparing being hit by a motor vehicle with a knock from a cyclist but simply criticizing your statistical analysis of the frequency of fatalities. However, you raise an interesting point. I would think collisions with motor vehicles are certainly potentially more damaging but this depends very much on the type of vehicle & its speed. Expect to die if you're hit head on (even relatively slowly) by a lorry or bus or go under their wheels. A huge 4x4 wouldn't do you any favours either. But if we're talking about the average private car it's rather a different matter. They are now designed to minimize injuries when in collision with pedestrians/cyclists with softer, sloping bonnets and bumpers which, I believe, means that @ 20 mph, the speed limit likely to be imposed soon across the borough, survival is the overwhelmingly likely outcome often with no serious harm. I think I might find it hard to choose between car or a cyclist to be hit by @ that speed.
I don't see big numbers with the cost of a scheme needing to be huge. It's the rider who needs to be registered - it doesn't need to be a tax on every bicycle akin to a tv licence with bicycle inspectors raiding homes which, they suspect, harbour unlicenced machines (I agree registration would, in effect, be a licencing scheme). I have a fishing licence which cost me £27 & the Environment Agency apparently make a tidy profit out of them; so surely cycling licences could be cheaper and still cover the administration cost. Of course there would also have to be a points and appeals system with regard to contraventions but this would probably be offset by penalty charges - you only have look at parking enforcement to see how these can generate a healthy "surplus" but I would wish something much fairer and less draconian for cyclists.
Regarding enforcement: Its obvious that most contraventions would need to be captured on camera and this might not be very difficult. The main problem would be the apprehension of riders failing to display their number (this would probably need to be a criminal offence) and this is a job the Police would be doing rather than catching the red light jumpers & pavement cyclists who would now be more easily caught by cameras. They would also have to make random stops to deter people from using a false or forged licence. I admit all this isn't simple but it's easily possible as it would be similar what's already being done with motor vehicles.
The only insurmountable problem would be mass disobedience by cyclists refusing to register.
You are right to say that we should focus on road safety as a whole and, to my mind, the key to this is respect & cooperation between all road users. Politeness & consideration for others is, of course, impossible to impose but a cyclist licencing scheme would, at least help reduce the resentment felt by many drivers when they see "it's one law for them and another for us".
Your criticism of the bad cyclists is exact, and I'm so glad to know your not one of them. I have cycled quite a bit myself, and still do occasionally also trying to "ride as part of the traffic", and usually avoiding cycle lanes especially as I got more punctures there!
Perhaps a media campaign would be worth a try, but I have my doubts. Campaigns of the past often got things started but they then needed laws and finally enforcement to back them up, and it was the threat of penalties which finally ensured mass compliance. Drink driving & seat belts are good examples. With cycling the existing laws would be sufficient if only there was a real threat of offenders being caught and subject to a penalty.
But you don’t have any real “statistics” either to compare cycling with driving! For the obvious reason that cycles are not registered like motor vehicles are and their mileages are not recorded in the same way. There is no comparable data; it can only be guesswork. And I never suggested that cycles were more dangerous. And of course their riders in styrofoam hats are at much more risk than someone securely belted into a steel cage; a fact which, with regard to safety, must help swing the argument in favour of motors.
But I agree that even a small car has the potential to cause vastly more damage than a velocipede; that’s why I don’t think compulsory insurance is appropriate for cycle riding. But this was never a car versus bicycle issue.
The point is that the bad behaviour of cyclists has become, at the very least, a terrible nuisance which people are now heartily sick of. At least something is in place to help reduce bad driving and much more could & must be done. But, at present, cyclists are flouting the law practically with impunity. If, as is hoped, many more people take to the saddle the situation will become yet more intolerable and there is a risk that politicians will bring in some draconian, ill-thought-out solution as a knee jerk reaction; cycle registration was mooted by Ken Livingstone a few years ago. Far better that ideas for some system should come from those cyclists, who would be happy to be registered, but it would, of course, need to be compulsory for all.
The reason I say register cyclists not bikes is that I think the only purpose of a scheme should be to make each rider accountable for his actions. His machine is irrelevant. Any scheme should be as simple as possible & not intended to ape the regime for cars and include an equivalent of the MOT, compulsory insurance, points for defective tyres, road tax etc. as some motorists vindictively suggest.
There’s no getting around the need for something to be displayed for camera enforcement though. It could be clipped to the bicycle, or stuck on the rider’s helmet, or worn on a high visibility sash or maybe a combination of these; no doubt other alternatives could also be devised if necessary. All cycle racers show a number which is clearly visible and it doesn’t seem to be an encumbrance or hinder them in any way. I just can't see a real practical problem with this.
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