| Road Safety and RDRF |
The Guardian |
7 Jun 2006 |
 It's
motorists, not cyclists, who are the dangerous lawbreakers.
Many two-wheelers need to grow up, but forcing them to register won't
make roads safer, says Robert Davis
Catherine Bennett has given up her resistance to "the school of
thought that says that too many cyclists are now possessed of an absurd,
impenetrably smug belief that they are ... entitled to defy all petty
regulations" (Column, May 25). Cyclists should, she says, have "compulsory
registration" and "training in road/pavement recognition".
As a local authority officer, I organise cycle training programmes to
discourage cycling on pavements and disobeying traffic signals. I find
her argument for imposing restrictive regulations on cyclists simple
and attractive - but wrong.
The only arguments for compulsory registration of cyclists, mimicking
regulation on motorists, would be proof that such controls would work
and that the problems associated with cycling are comparable to those
of motoring. Clearly, the number of cycling accidents that result in
pedestrians being hurt is tiny compared to the number of accidents caused
by motorists - despite the controls of vehicle and driver testing.
Of course, just one cyclist - or pedestrian, or motorist - who defies
regulations is one "too many", and they do indeed "need
to grow up". But the real issue is that we live in a society where
everyday rule- and lawbreaking by motorists has become acceptable.
There should be no special dispensation for cyclists - just the continuing
need for equitable control of anti-social behaviour on the road and of
lawbreaking which endangers others. That includes questioning the refusal
of the Great British Motorist to obey the law, which - despite endless
discussions on speeding, not to mention literally billions of law infractions
and insurance claims annually - is as persistent as ever. Indeed, part
of the problem we confront with bad driving derives from motorists feeling
that they are special, simply because they have passed a test.
Of course, if Bennett wants to regulate everybody, she could try bringing
pedestrians (who can also selfishly endanger others) under the control
of the law as they are in Germany and the US. Conversely, no country
currently requires cycling tests.
All minorities - and Bennett "having cycled around for years" identifies
herself as a cyclist - tend to believe that pandering to the prejudices
of those who oppress them will liberate them. It won't. And backing up
this prejudice - voiced for decades before cyclist misbehaviour was commonplace
- will end up making it worse for all road users' safety.
High-quality cycle training and equitable law enforcement should be implemented,
and might work to prevent further incidents involving pavement cyclists,
like the one described by Bennett. However, punitive regulation for cyclists
will not work - after all, has registration worked to stop motorist misbehaviour?
I have had the same "argument with myself" as Bennett about
rule-breaking cycling. But the numerous complaints about badly behaved
cyclists are utterly disproportionate to general bad road-user behaviour.
We need a civilised approach to road safety which has to be based on
recognising the different potential to harm others of each form of transport.
Robert
Davis is chair of the Road Danger Reduction Forum

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