[color=red]The following has come from Kentish times 3rd may 2007.[/color]
Transport for London has - at last - come out and said what I and other cyclists have been talking about forever - that obeying red lights when riding a bike can kill you.
Ok, it was a "secret" report, but now it's out, let's trumpet its message and save lives and, in particular, women's lives, writes Kate Bryson.
The TfL study reports that 86 per cent of women cyclists killed in London between 1999 and 2004 were in collision with a lorry. By contrast, lorries were involved in 47 per cent of deaths of male cyclists.
Tragically, the death rate among women cyclists has increased since the report was completed, with two killed in collisions with lorries within 24 hours last month.
The study states: "Women may be overrepresented in collisions with goods vehicles because they are less likely than men to disobey red lights."
As a woman cyclist (and motorist) I am not surprised. I have often seen women timidly hugging the kerb as lorries swoosh past; or patiently waiting in the fumes next to a row of red-light-stopped traffic before making an obedient hand signal to turn - even though this means taking a hand off the bars at the very moment all their strength is needed to control their machine. Being unsure and unclear is dangerous. Men are bolder. At junctions they make an assessment, hand signals are forgotten and, if they can get far enough away from the nearest vehicle, they'll jump the red.
It may not be what the road minister likes but it probably keeps more of them alive.
To date, the history of road design has been, for the most part, aimed at making life easier for the motorist. If, as this report suggests, that means deaths cyclists should challenge that.
What does it matter to motorists if they see a cyclist go through a red light? Annoying, perhaps, but imagine what the cyclist feels - as has happened to me on several occasions - when, setting off with the traffic from a red light, motorists have turned left across me having "forgotten" to indicate.
I've had a few "sorry, love" shouts from the window but that wouldn't have been much good if I had ended up under their wheels.
One quarter of cycle road deaths are caused by vehicles turning left across cyclists.
We are vulnerable every second we're on the road. So we should overtake queues of stationary vehicles on the right, and dominate the central space of junctions where everyone can see you and eye-to-eye negotiation is more logical than blind obedience to the law - even it the drivers hate you for it.
It's the one who doesn't see you who will do the real damage.
It's not just cyclists who break the law. Pedestrians don't always wait for the green man and motorists drive in cycle lanes.
And a friend suffered a split bowel after a passenger opened a car door into the cycle lane.
Of those who tut-tut at the thought of cyclists being so disobedient at junctions, I can bet not one rides a bike. Try it. Within 10 minutes, they'll be convinced that staying alive is more important than anything else.
That doesn't mean there are no rules of the road for cyclists - they should thank courteous motorists who give you a wide berth, or drop their speed to crawl behind you as you slowly pump up a hill when there's no room to overtake and respect those who DON'T shout rude, leary comments out their windows - and always, ALWAYS, give way to pedestrians.
Deliberate law-breaking is not to be indulged in lightly but I've yet to get a ticket.
To fellow cyclists who have, I say: "If you're not paying enought attention to spot the cops, you're not paying enough attention to jump the lights.
KATE BRYSON
[color=red]Your comments please[/color]
Nick