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31 votes
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Volvo is celebrating its 97th birthday with the opening of what it calls "World of Volvo" in the company's hometown of Gothenburg, Sweden
7 votes -
Long untouchable, fire departments are causing death and homelessness in American cities by advocating for bad policies
28 votes -
US police are using GPS tracking darts to avoid dangerous pursuits
34 votes -
France plans mobile school force after headteacher resigns over death threats
21 votes -
San Francisco city leaders look to bring back emergency sirens by end of 2024
8 votes -
2021 Rust movie set shooting tragedy: The product of low-budget, cost-cutting filmmaking
17 votes -
All the ways car dependency is wrecking us – car harm: a global review of automobility's harm to people and the environment
15 votes -
Tesla's gear-shifting problems known long before Angela Chao's death
36 votes -
100,000 years and counting – how do we tell future generations about highly radioactive nuclear waste repositories?
20 votes -
Deadly morel mushroom outbreak highlights big gaps in fungi knowledge
20 votes -
Sorry. Your car will never drive you around.
27 votes -
'If anything happens, it's not suicide': Boeing whistleblower's prediction before death
52 votes -
Boeing is withholding key details about door plug on Alaska 737 Max 9 jet, NTSB says
29 votes -
Spacesuits need a major upgrade for the next phase of exploration
8 votes -
A mistake in a Tesla and a panicked final call: The death of Angela Chao
27 votes -
What Boeing’s door-plug debacle says about the future of aviation safety
13 votes -
European crash tester says carmakers must bring back physical controls. In 2026, Euro NCAP points will be deducted if some controls aren't physical.
50 votes -
Shipper groups sound alarm over Norfolk Southern proxy fight: say activist investors threaten US safety standards
9 votes -
Diversity in the skies: US FAA’s controversial shift in air traffic controller hiring
17 votes -
UK requesting comments for updating ebike power laws
9 votes -
Elon Musk’s Vegas tunnel project has been racking up safety violations
23 votes -
The plastic chemicals hiding in your food. Test results for bisphenols/phthalates.
14 votes -
New report from US Federal Aviation Administration: Boeing lacks key elements of safety culture
19 votes -
When US railroad workers get hurt on the job, some supervisors go to extremes to keep it quiet
29 votes -
US rail safety legislation still stalled one year after East Palestine Ohio disaster
36 votes -
The insane engineering of the space shuttle
9 votes -
Tests show that guardrails possibly do little to stop EVs and other heavier vehicles. And US transportation officials are concerned.
16 votes -
Boeing wants US FAA to exempt MAX 7 from safety rules to get it in the air
103 votes -
Higher vehicle hoods significantly increase pedestrian deaths, US study finds
33 votes -
You don't need a license to walk
41 votes -
Iceland residents of Grindavík, first evacuated in November, have been told to evacuate again after volcanic fissures opened
17 votes -
Citing safety, dozens of Jewish families are leaving Oakland public schools
37 votes -
Why autonomous trucking is harder than autonomous rideshare
12 votes -
Aripiprazole (Abilify and generic brands): risk of pathological gambling
14 votes -
Hooked on volcanoes? Tourists vie to catch Iceland's eruptions.
9 votes -
Daihatsu, Japanese automaker owned by Toyota, halts domestic production after admitting it forged results of safety tests for more than thirty years
33 votes -
In a win for the climate (and safety), urban US speed limits are dropping
27 votes -
US traffic control device standards get long-awaited update
14 votes -
Tesla faces an inquiry by Norway's traffic safety regulator into suspension failures in the company's electric cars that could result in a recall
13 votes -
Insulin pump software drops leading decimal points
38 votes -
Amsterdam to cut speed limits 40% to improve road safety
46 votes -
Danish parliament has voted to ban the burning of religious scriptures after a series of Qur’an desecrations in the country and neighbouring Sweden
26 votes -
When the great apes at Furuvik Zoo in Sweden broke free from their enclosure last winter, the keepers faced a terrible choice
19 votes -
Swedish A-traktors, vehicles modified to not go above 19mph, became a teenage rite of passage – amid a rise in accidents there are calls for a ban
16 votes -
US National Transportation Safety Board calls on automakers to install speed-limiting tech in new vehicles
32 votes -
My friend was hit by a car
Recently a close friend of mine was riding a bicycle along a city street. They had the right of way. A careless driver making a fast turn either did not see my friend (somehow... it's not like...
Recently a close friend of mine was riding a bicycle along a city street. They had the right of way. A careless driver making a fast turn either did not see my friend (somehow... it's not like there were obstructions) or did not even bother to look. The driver and their 2000-pound steel machine slammed into my friend, throwing them off the bike.
The bike was completely destroyed/unusable. My friend was scraped up, and shaken, but by a miracle did not hit their head or have to be hospitalized. They were lucky: the car was traveling fast enough to kill. The driver was apologetic and paid for my friend's bicycle and medical bills. But this should not have happened. My friend could have died or been permanently paralyzed.
I don't know all the details. But I do know that intersection. This was so ridiculously avoidable.
- Had the bike lane been fully protected with a clearly visible (but not sight-line-blocking) concrete curb or at least a bollard at the intersection, the driver probably would not have taken the turn so fast, or would maybe have been more generally aware of cyclists. They may have had time enough to stop before crashing into my friend, or the impact may have been small enough not to hurt them.
- Had there been a raised crosswalk or had the entire intersection been raised (as a speed table), requiring cars to slow down, the driver would definitely not have taken the turn so fast. The driver may also have been more aware of pedestrians/cyclists and more likely to yield.
- Had there been a curb extension shortening the crosswalk (in this case a pedestrian crossing island past the bike lane, I guess), the driver would probably have subconsciously taken the turn more slowly, as they would probably have felt more enclosed within the intersection.
- Had signal priority been given to cyclists/pedestrians, the driver probably also would not have made the turn at that point in the light cycle, and would probably not have hit my friend. (I'm pretty sure my friend was going straight on green, but if they were making a right turn, then had no right turn on red also been enforced for cars, the driver would probably not have made the turn at that point in the light cycle, and would probably not have hit my friend.)
(This wasn't a parking-protected bike lane: the city had just removed parking from that side of the street and left it fully unprotected. If it were parking-protected, I would also suggest that two parking spaces be removed approaching the intersection to ensure that the driver could see cyclists in their peripheral vision. As it stands, I have no idea how this person did not see my friend. Gross negligence. They should not be allowed to operate a motor vehicle.)
Driving shouldn't be considered such a mundane thing. When someone steps into a car they should be aware that, at any point, they could kill someone. But really infrastructure is an easier, more repeatable, and less exhausting solution than trying to change attitudes directly. Probably had any one of these infrastructure changes been implemented, my friend would not have been hit by a car. Had more than one or two been implemented, there would realistically never be a cyclist collision here.
It irritates me that my friend's life was put in danger because a driver was being careless. But also that they were able to make a careless mistake. And incidents like this remind me that traffic safety is not a theoretical problem. At any time, without warning, the life of someone you care about could be immediately taken away because we have a culture that normalizes driving a dangerous vehicle with basically zero oversight; and because our roads are designed for car throughput and not to be safe for vulnerable people.
Someone called me "militant [about traffic safety]" once. This is why.
54 votes -
US Ninth Circuit judge allows social media lawsuit to proceed. Section 230 doesn't automatically protect against liability for platform design defects.
16 votes -
“Do your job.” How the US railroad industry intimidates employees into putting speed before safety.
18 votes -
The odd history of goalie masks
11 votes