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Give me room, Gordon, Tim Dawson (2009)
Original article, first published in
The Sunday Times on 15 November 2009
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Iwas meandering down a minor road outside Edinburgh, and I had entered
that kind of pedalling trance when thoughts wander. Suddenly, the air
was sucked from around me, and a monstrous roar filled my ears as a motorcycle
scythed past just an inch from my arm.
God knows what speed it was doing from my vantage point, it could
have been shot from a cannon. As the wheeled Exocet left, I braked and
sat down, and it was a good 10 minutes before I stopped shaking. I never
saw that motorcyclist again, but I'm pretty sure that this had been an
attempt to terrorise me.
Was it illegal, though? The Highway Code states that a motorist must
leave "sufficient" space for a cyclist, but doesn't define what
that is. Now a campaign plans to persuade legislators that 3ft should
be defined, in law, as the absolute minimum gap a motorised vehicle should
leave when passing a cyclist. Had such a law been in force and
obeyed there would have been 2ft 11in more of a gap between me
and that motorcyclist on the B6371.
US cycle advocacy groups have persuaded 14 states to make just such
a law, and the idea comes to these shores in the form of a No 10 website
petition to which nearly 2,000 people have already subscribed in the hope
that Gordon Brown will act.
But even 3ft is too close for a speeding vehicle, and what provision
could there be to enforce such a law? There was no one else on the road
when that motorcycle missile swerved beside me, and I was far too disoriented
to take note of its numberplate. Not that these are reasons to dismiss
it; millions of incidents could be avoided by getting people to think
about this sort of thing.
Cyclists have a formidable reputation when it comes to expressing their
opinions online. In 2005 the BBC asked viewers and listeners to vote for
what they considered to be the most significant technological innovation
since 1800, and thanks to a concerted online campaign, 59% of respondents
voted for the bicycle. If cycling advocates weighed in behind this petition
in similar style, it would create a very persuasive amount of noise.
It is certainly timely. Figures released earlier this month by the Department
for Transport show that 820 cyclists were killed or seriously injured
in the three months to June a 19% rise on the same period in 2008.
Happily, just publicising this petition has raised the subject of passing
distances; having had the issue brought to their attention, some motorists
will modify their behaviour beneficially. Considered that way, the more
noise generated around this petition, the better even if you disagree
with its specifics.
If the response to the petition is spectacular by the time it closes
in January, it might persuade the main parties to consider cyclists' safety
when finessing their commitments prior to the coming election.
In fact, the real moral here is one that cyclists should have running
through them like the legend in Blackpool rock.
The first law of self-preservation for cyclists is to make sure they
are noticed; this applies in the sphere of public persuasion, just as
much as it does on the road.
TD Nov 09
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