Was he wearing
a helmet, headphones and under the influence of drugs or alcohol? Hello? To
get hit twice. I think he should buy a lottery ticket… oh wait, he has to pay
for the ticket CKPS finally issued. Ya, CKPS. Keep up the good work.
Cyclist… maybe
he needs some group counselling on Wednesday nights? May a little CAN Bike
refresher course?
Jennifer Laevens
519-436-4600 Ext 2926
From:
ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca [mailto:ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca] On Behalf
Of James Lively
Sent: August 5, 2010 11:35 AM
To: 'Chatham-Kent Commmunity Cycling Group'
Subject: Re: [CKcycle] Anybody see this???.
Randy,
Are
you saying you completely ignore Stop signs? Shame on you! J
Nah!
While we tend to read STOP as YIELD (legally not correct but neither is a
rolling stop), we’re prepared to stop if something’s coming. To be hit twice at
the same intersection means this guy, for whatever reason, was ignoring the
sign completely.
Glad
to see CKPS eventually issued the ticket to add insult to his bruised ego!
James.
From:
ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca [mailto:ckcycle-bounces@lists.ncf.ca] On Behalf
Of randy.perdu@bell.ca
Sent: August 5, 2010 11:19 AM
To: ckcycle@lists.ncf.ca
Subject: [CKcycle] Anybody see this???.
From
Sent: August 4, 2010 11:28 AM
To: Perdu, C Randy (N167330)
Subject: Yikes, this could have been me ......
Shortly after 6:00 p.m. yesterday, a man riding a bicycle failed to stop for
a stop sign at the intersection of Selkirk Street and Elizabeth Avenue in
Chatham. While in the intersection, he was struck by a vehicle that did not
face a stop sign (this intersection is a two-way stop – vehicles travelling
Selkirk have to stop but vehicles travelling on Elizabeth do not). The cyclist
was not injured.
The cyclist, a 29-year-old Chatham man has been charged with failing to stop
for a stop sign.
The investigation revealed that the same cyclist had been struck by a
motorcycle at the same intersection on July 26, 2010. He attended the
Chatham-Kent Health Alliance to be treated for minor injuries. On that day, he
was charged with failing to stop for police to identify himself.
The Chatham-Kent Police reminds all cyclists that the Highway Traffic Act
defines a bicycle as a vehicle. Cyclists are therefore required to obey all
traffic laws just as drivers do.