Close passing ok in...
 

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[Closed] Close passing ok in South Yorks according to police

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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OYQUwjwAres


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 10:55 am
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So, basically, they are saying that as long as there’s no actual collision, there’s no problem at all, and that the highway code is to be ignored.

wow.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:03 am
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And totally out of step with the 1.5 metre guidance other forces are promoting


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:04 am
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That is absolutely bloody appalling. No wonder the majority don't want to cycle in this country


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:21 am
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Same in cambridge.  Apparantly 1.5 m passing clearance would make passing too difficult in cambridge.  Complain loudly to the police force involved.  Highway code is clear.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:23 am
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Don't know the Derbyshire Police position on this but on the few occasions I've needed to report stuff, including dangerous driving and close passes, they've made it pretty clear that they're keeping crime down by considering pretty much everything as a non issue.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:33 am
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One of the most inept constabularies in the country. They never fail to amaze me.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:38 am
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Truly scary. Have you considered sending this to your MP etc? Newspapers?


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 11:51 am
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S Yorks police 10yrs ago have:

- hit me with one of their own vans, officer didn't notice.

- told me that a deliberate ramming of me on a bike, then two punches from driver, with witnesses to whole event, was not a prosecuteable case...until I complained to senior officer and then they discovered driver was local miscreant with all sorts of warnings, at which point (three weeks later) did they go and interview and then prosecuted.

Dreadful force then, sounds like little improvement.

The OP's video officer may (and I'm not sure) be right that a court won't prosecute. BUT they fly in the face of other forces that are now taking on these things with face to face warnings and letters. Policing isn't just about the prosecution - it's about prevention. That's where the attitude in that call is just plain wrong.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:25 pm
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Apparantly 1.5 m passing clearance would make passing too difficult in .....

Do you REALLY want this enforced ?

Think carefully in terms of reciprocity before you answer.  Should every cyclist who passes a car with less than 1.5m be prosecuted?


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:26 pm
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Yes I want the highway code enforced.  There is no obligation in the highway code for cyclists to do the same as car drivers are not "vulnerable road users"


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:31 pm
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Enforcing the highway code leads you down a dark path. No reflectors on your pedals at night? Riding on a pavement for a few metres? You're nicked my son.

Yes, the pass was close, I didn't bother listening to the whole thing but I gather they thought it was an OK pass and aren't going to do anything.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:39 pm
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Thankfully I am not the cyclist in this vid, I came across it on another site.

Matt_aob  exactly what I was thinking, it might not be prosecutable but a 5 minute call from the police could have changed this drivers behaviour for good but syp dont seem to care about that


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:39 pm
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1.5m is unenforceable, it's an aspirational target set to try to at least get drivers a few feet away.

But to look at that clip and see anything approaching a safe pass is ridiculous, not that it surprises me with SYP.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:41 pm
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It's hard to judge anything from a GoPro video, nothing looks like it does in real life.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:44 pm
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1.5m seems to be perfectly enforceable in other countries.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:48 pm
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This video has shocked me.

Not a good advert for the police.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 12:56 pm
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Delibertae punishment pass by the SUV . Has 7 - 8 ft of spare tarmac, but sees  the cyclist in front and thinks to himself.-  ' I am going to get as close as I can to that guy without hitting him, just to scare him, as it will amuse me". And that is what he does. SUV driver  is a monster cock, no doubt.

S Y P officer  however ranks up  there as well. If the cyclist had had to go round a pothole, or a cracked bit of tarmac or sunken manhole cover then he would have  been hit from behind. By 2ton of steel at , what looks  pretty fast , I reckon 55- 65 mph. Hospital job no doubt.  Its using a vehicle as a weapon to scare someone. You cannot walk around  brandishing a Samuri sword without armed Police appearing very quickly, even if you havent attacked anyone  yet. However using a car as a means to intimate someone not  in a car is perfectly fine.

And as for that bollocks about deviating from you line, jeez, without constantly watching your rear veiw mirror how is that going to work, and  why should the cyclist have to deviate anyway .- To get out of the way of speeding SUV's driven by a-holes who are  above / beyond the stubby arms of the law...


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 1:29 pm
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Tallpaul - my bike is 100% legal bar the pedal reflectors are not CE certified ( but that is actually fairly irrelevant - case law blah blah blah)  I don't (well very very rarely) break the highway code.  I am in favour of zero tolerance for illegal road use no matter who or what.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 1:36 pm
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1.5 m is enforceable.  a few high profile prosecutions and behaviour would change.  Plenty of examples of driving behaviour being changed from LRT buses to better driving in 20 mph limits


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 1:38 pm
 aP
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Well, that's another county I'll never to go to.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 5:50 pm
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Yes I want the highway code enforced.  There is no obligation in the highway code for cyclists to do the same as car drivers are not “vulnerable road users”

There is no obligation at all, the highway code is not law.

 my bike is 100% legal bar the pedal reflectors are not CE certified ( but that is actually fairly irrelevant – case law blah blah blah)  I don’t (well very very rarely) break the highway code.  I am in favour of zero tolerance for illegal road use no matter who or what.

1.5 m is enforceable.  a few high profile prosecutions and behaviour would change.  Plenty of examples of driving behaviour being changed from LRT buses to better driving in 20 mph limits

So you want a non legal code enforced but refuse to follow the law???

Any distance is enforceable so long as it applies to EVERYONE...

There is no obligation in the highway code for cyclists to do the same as car drivers are not “vulnerable road users”

So what ???

Either they make an actual ACT for 1.5m and it applies to everyone... OR they don't.

Most drivers don't ride bikes... as far as they are concerned bikes pass far too close, pass on the inside etc.

Any cyclist (or vulnerable road user) breaking it then gets the book thrown at them and preferably a custodial sentence.. simples. Then drivers will know it's fair and applied evenly... or they just won't follow it unless there are cameras.

If vulnerable road users REFUSE to follow the actual LAW ... then why would drivers follow a best practice code?    After all they are not the ones getting hurt????


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 6:46 pm
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Any cyclist (or vulnerable road user) breaking it then gets the book thrown at them and preferably a custodial sentence.. simples

😆😀😁😀 what a idiot. Even by stw standards thats pretty special.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 7:22 pm
 Bez
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Any distance is enforceable so long as it applies to EVERYONE

Except that it's difficult to enforce and it needn't apply to everyone.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 7:22 pm
 rs
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FFS! its a losing battle when even people on a bike forum don't understand the difference between riding a bike and driving a car!


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 7:36 pm
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TBH, while close passing bothers me - and there are roads around here (in South Yorkshire and conveniently between my home and work) that I won't ride because of the traffic speed/density - what really concerns me about every time one of these diagrams get posted with distances marked is that it adds fuel to the idea some/many drivers have that there is somehow a distance between bike and kerb that should be maintained.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 7:46 pm
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That's appalling. He just misses that drain. Had he decided to give it a wider berth he'd have been hit.

Terrible attitude from the police.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 7:57 pm
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Wow I'd not known stevextc to be such an idiot, not seeing any difference between a 1+ton car at 30-60mph and the cyclist he passes at whatever tiny distance he thinks is ok .


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 9:40 pm
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FFS! its a losing battle when even people on a bike forum don’t understand the difference between riding a bike and driving a car

I can't gap a Renault clio... Can you


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 10:00 pm
 kcr
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Think carefully in terms of reciprocity before you answer.  Should every cyclist who passes a car with less than 1.5m be prosecuted?

I'd suggest "think carefully" before posting a response as daft as that.

What threat do you think a cyclist poses to the safety of a driver if they pass closer than 1.5m? Do you think scratching someone's paintwork is on a par with killing someone when deciding preventative safety legislation?

I've had experience of this today, with multiple dangerous close passes at speed by drivers and even motocyclists. There are too many people out there who don't care about the safety of other road users. Having reported a deliberate, life threatening manoeuvre to Police Scotland in the past, I can confirm they don't appear to take it seriously. They have run some "close pass campaigns", but I reckon it was just window dressing.


 
Posted : 02/06/2018 10:20 pm
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I have found the cops in Edi9nburgh both sympathetic and helpful when I have reported idiots in cars - searching CCTV for evidence.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 12:19 am
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South Yorkshire Police in being shit shocker


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:43 am
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If vulnerable road users REFUSE to follow the actual LAW … then why would drivers follow a best practice code?    After all they are not the ones getting hurt????

Hmmm, except in this instance where a cyclist was complying with the law, was subjected to a punishment pass and found the police response lacking. So the system works if we're all good little boys and girls on bicycles then does it?

You're using the same sort of tired toss clarksonites like to throw about, to paraphrase;

"If you lot insist on RLJing, not wearing hiviz, etc, etc... Then expect Billy big bollox in his Navara to buzz you."

Punishment passes have nothing to do with cyclists not following rules, they happen because people have become impatient, entitled, hate filled arseholes in a society that provides lots of reinforcing messages for that sort of behaviour and seldom presents them with any consequences...

I'd be fine with the police actually enforcing current road traffic law for all road users, and if I rode at night without pedal reflectors I would have to accept the consequences, if that acceptance was the price of having them bother to persue drivers for punishment passing, driving and texting or the myriad of other offences I see people get away with every day that would be just fine. But they won't they lack the money, people and will.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:36 am
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As for punishment passes, they only seem to be done to cyclists.

Never seen one done to a tractor for example...


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 9:03 am
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As for punishment passes, they only seem to be done to cyclists.

Never seen one done to a tractor for example…

I think this highlights their mindset. They are bullies, they will do it to smaller cars and cyclists etc. The more vulnerable the other road user the more dangerous they become. A tractor would give them the response they deserve (not necessarily the correct or morally right response though).


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 9:22 am
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I’ve been punishment passed many times.

Whilst driving a 50’ bus.

as noted above, the problem is caused by the fact that there is virtually no chance of drivers being called to account for their behaviour.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 12:55 pm
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I think they have special exemptions for older vehicles that won’t meet modern safety standards, makes them feel even more superior picking on bigger vehicles!!

Edit.

You meant 50 ft didn’t you?

I guess they feel that a bus driver will be held to account by their company for retalliation, that and they can speed off.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 1:45 pm
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I'm not surprised by the inconsistency between police forces on this.  I was knocked off 2 years ago while riding in a cycle lane in a no dropping off zone by a taxi door opened by the passenger getting out into the cycle lane by the big sign saying No Setting Down and the police officer who turned up told me off for riding in the cycle lane!  I've also had no real luck in reporting bully drivers - 2 in the last year - as the response has been one of apathy.  Yesterday I had some young guy in a BMW yell at me for ''not paying road tax" and being in his way, don't even bother reporting that kind of stuff now as nothing is done about it.

All while Cardiff is placing itelf as a Cycle Friendly City 😐


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 1:47 pm
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Tosser in car; tosser in police.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 1:55 pm
 DezB
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they are saying ..

Just one inept copper it sounds like to me. Haven’t watched the whole thing.

TJ and his 1.5M on every road law again. Didn’t we have this years ago? All roads are different, conditions, traffic and all that comes into account -roads I ride home on for example, I pass cars coming the opposite direction with a few cm to spare! Actually on the main road I do too and I’m on a cycle lane! 1.5m would mean I’d have to queue with all the numpty drivers wouldn’t it? Or is it ok for me to filter with less than 1.5m but not them to pass with less. Just a bloody nonsense.

However, when I’ve reported close passes down here, either to the company of a liveried vehicle or to the cops, I’ve had perfectly decent responses.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 1:59 pm
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Here's a radical idea to make dangerous, close pass prosecutions more enforceable...

Paint some sort of intermittent line that is at least two metres (if not 2.25m) away from each kerb on roads greater than ~5m wide, giving the cyclist room to not be hugging the kerb and avoid obstacles like drain covers, plus the the overtaking 1.5m space.

If a car is caught on camera footage to pass a vulnerable road user like a cyclist inside that painted zone, throw the book at them, no excuses like "I need my vehicle to earn a living" will be accepted.

Get rid of current cycle lane demarcations on roads.

What colour do you use for this new zone demarcation, so it can be clearly seen day and night? Yellow?

Obviously gets more complicated on narrow roads.

Maybe cyclists should just attach metal burning lasers to the right side of their bikes to destroy anything that passes within 1.5m of them. 😉


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 2:00 pm
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Back to the video for a minute is it just me but is there something really nasty and condescending in the tone the copper is using, some sort of implication that the cyclist is wasting everyones time by nearly getting killed.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 5:49 pm
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 is there something really nasty and condescending in the tone the copper is using

I recognise that tone from the last time I spoke to Derbyshire police. Perhaps it's been added to the training program recently.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 6:01 pm
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I notice the officer says "we have reviewed the footage" I was willing the guy to ask precisely who had reviewed the video. I also wanted him to ask the rozzer if he personally believed it was a safe pass, he never actually does.

You can usually tell when someone thick has picked up a new big word, today's word was "deviated" and he made thorough use of it...

That copper had one job really, spend five minutes bullshitting some whiney MAMIL to save another 40+ hours of police time persuing a "minor" case with little chance of a conviction, it's a shame SYP don't just volunteer to at least have a discussion with the driver, that probably would have placated the cyclist better than the response he got...


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:26 pm
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I’m going to stick my head above the parapet here. I’ve been commuting for over 20 years, a mixture of country lanes and large city roads. I am passed as close as that or closer several times each and every time I ride. Should I report each and every occasion? I believe the officer is right in that there is barely a magistrate in the land that would prosecute that. That’s a fact unfortunately. Until there is a better infrastructure and more room for cyclists on our roads then this sort of thing will continue to happen. I’m not defending the driver but there was an HGV approaching and if it’s a national speed limit road the closing speeds would have been quite high and maybe that was a consideration of the driver?


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:35 pm
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 Should I report each and every occasion? I believe the officer is right in that there is barely a magistrate in the land that would prosecute that. That’s a fact unfortunately. Until there is a better infrastructure and more room for cyclists on our roads then this sort of thing will continue to happen.

If close passing isn't a problem then why do you need more room or better infrastructure?

If it's not reported then it doesn't happen.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:39 pm
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Yes, the words and tone have a nasty edge.

Prosecution is clearly not going to happen, but a 5 minute call to the driver would be something.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:43 pm
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I’m not defending the driver but there was an HGV approaching and if it’s a national speed limit road the closing speeds would have been quite high and maybe that was a consideration of the driver?

Because slowing down and waiting for a more suitable opportunity to overtake never entered the drivers head. That's what needs to change, the infrastructure is fine, it's driver attitudes that are the problem.

If SYP were willing, as many other forces are, to help get that message across, the roads would be a nicer place for everyone. Just because we've all survived a similar pass at some point, does not, by any stretch of the imagination, make it acceptable. If we are all encouraged to shrug and just carry on, nothing is ever going to improve for us.

Are we all aware of the risk pyramid? If we can shrink the base of that pyramid, then it won't get as tall, ie, fewer dead cyclists and drivers getting a slap on the wrist.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 7:53 pm
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**** me some of the replies on here considering its supposed to be a cycling forum 😕 the driver was a ****. The police were ****s and if you disagree then you're even bigger ****s


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:00 pm
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Yes, maybe the officer could have spoken with the driver and that’s probably what should have happened but beyond that why create expectation for the courts and cps to dismiss it? Did you complain to SYP about your unhappiness and their response to your complaint?


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:07 pm
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the driver was a *. The police were * and if you disagree then you’re even bigger ****

Nah, that's not actually helpful. We can understand everyone's motives and point of view and remain civil while disagreeing.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:20 pm
 poly
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Highway code is clear.

TJ - no it is not.  It says something like “give at least as much room as when passing a car”.  People pass cars with all sorts of different clearances depending on the circumstances (such as speed, available room, road position of the car, attitude of the driver, oncoming traffic); perhaps the HC was intentionally left vague to encourage a similar thought process, but what it is certainly not, is clear.  On busy narrow roads people pass cars with well under 1.5m, whether they should or not is a matter for debate.

ironically earlier today a friend of mine liked a picture of a “roadmat” with the 0.75 and 1.5m measurements a bike and a police car.  He lives somewhere in Yorkshire - but I don’t know which force it was (I can’t find the original post), he is definitely not a serious cyclist.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:30 pm
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Yes, maybe the officer could have spoken with the driver and that’s probably what should have happened but beyond that why create expectation for the courts and cps to dismiss it?

A conversation with the driver may be all that is required. It's a very cheap and effective form of keeping people alive.


 
Posted : 03/06/2018 8:33 pm
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What threat do you think a cyclist poses to the safety of a driver if they pass closer than 1.5m? Do you think scratching someone’s paintwork is on a par with killing someone when deciding preventative safety legislation?

1.5m has got nothing to do with a car being scratched and everything to do with the cyclist getting hurt or killed...

Either 1.5m is safe or not.

If a bike can pass a car at a safe distance then a car can pass a bike at the same relative speed and distance.

Of course smacking wing mirrors is just going to add fuel to drivers but the simple point is a safe passing distance for a speed is the same regardless of a car passing a bike or a bike passing a car.

TJ and his 1.5M on every road law again. Didn’t we have this years ago? All roads are different, conditions, traffic and all that comes into account -roads I ride home on for example, I pass cars coming the opposite direction with a few cm to spare! Actually on the main road I do too and I’m on a cycle lane! 1.5m would mean I’d have to queue with all the numpty drivers wouldn’t it? Or is it ok for me to filter with less than 1.5m but not them to pass with less. Just a bloody nonsense.

That sums it up ... take a situation that happens thousands of times every day - not even on filters but just normal riding

Cyclist passes motorist the driver is doing 20mph in traffic ...the cyclist is doing 22 mph

The cyclist then slows down... perhaps due to a hill.  It is now illegal for those want want the 1.5m rule enshrined in law for the motorist to pass the cyclist with the same relative speeds and the same gap.

The whole "but it's OK for me because I'm on a bike" simply reeks of special pleading.

A Citroen C1 is listed as 1.6m wide without mirrors a Mondeo 1.8m  a typical road is not much bigger.

1.5m will in many places involve passing in a complete other lane or the other side of the road.

Whereas that may well be appropriate for higher speeds it's completely unworkable for traffic going 15-20mph which other than 20mph restricted zones is 90% of the time due to volume of traffic.

I’ve had experience of this today, with multiple dangerous close passes at speed by drivers and even motocyclists. There are too many people out there who don’t care about the safety of other road users. 

I completely agree ... however my point is

Having reported a deliberate, life threatening manoeuvre to Police Scotland in the past, I can confirm they don’t appear to take it seriously.

It all goes back to 1.5m and a speed being safe or not and road users who don't respect their OWN safety.

It must be a decade ago now but I watched a whole pack of racing commuters shoot a red light... a good 20-30 of them in central London right in front of 4-5 police.  I decided to ask why they didn't do anything... (I was early for work)... The officer was straight up to be fair .. he said something like "they have no respect for their OWN safety and to stop them I have to run into the middle of a busy road in front of them... I have kids at home and even supposing I did manage to stop one then nothing would happen - why would I risk my own life for someone who obviously has no respect for their own?"

This is a cop on traffic duty.... his view from observing "cyclists" as a group seems to be they are hell bent of dying.  I disagree but based on my own observations I can see where that view comes from.

Your average motor driver observes the same things...

This is why a one-way blanket 1.5m rule won't ever work in anything close to our road infrastructure.

Punishment passes have nothing to do with cyclists not following rules, they happen because people have become impatient, entitled, hate filled arseholes in a society that provides lots of reinforcing messages for that sort of behaviour and seldom presents them with any consequences…

Agreed ... but it's a 2-way thing.

About a month ago I was on the Surrey hills A25 going up the big hill.... 3 roadies ahead and I was in no particular hurry at all... the road was coned off on one side and one way traffic lights... and 2 roadies did the sensible thing and just rode up the safe area.  The other wove up the hill ... through 2-3 traffic light cycles causing a complete mess.  Some of the cars had set off down and others were already inside the one way going up behind the cyclist we couldn't see when the lights had changed.

His 2 mates were embarrassed as hell.... there was just no need for this except to assert some sort of entitled, hate filled arsehole behaviour.

I’d be fine with the police actually enforcing current road traffic law for all road users, and if I rode at night without pedal reflectors I would have to accept the consequences, if that acceptance was the price of having them bother to persue drivers for punishment passing, driving and texting or the myriad of other offences I see people get away with every day that would be just fine. But they won’t they lack the money, people and will.

It's a start ... perhaps?

I still think there needs to be a whole set of public perception change though to demonstrate that this is 2-way.

I was riding some fire trails yesterday from a race start to a car park... riding a [b]very[/b] moderate speed. (Slow enough to be passed by people running).. YET despite me going about 5mph several walkers rushed to the side in an exaggerated manner as if I was going 25mph... giving me hard glares and a couple shouted abuse...

95% or more of these people were drivers....

I've no idea why except to speculate someone had previously been down the same fire trail  at 20-25mph....  there is mountain bike rental at the place but the distinguishing feature is race numbers?

As far as their perception... (when it comes to public protests about having a race next year at the same place) who will they remember?  The self entitled asshole blasting down the fire trail or our group coasting at 5mph?

This is why their needs to be some high profile dangerous cycling arrests and convictions made or the wider public will simply make their mind up from similar memories.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 8:08 am
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1.5m will in many places involve passing in a complete other lane or the other side of the road

OMG!

You finally got it.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 8:14 am
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1.5m will in many places involve passing in a complete other lane or the other side of the road.

Yes - That's a good thing though

2 roadies did the sensible thing and just rode up the safe area. The other wove up the hill … through 2-3 traffic light cycles causing a complete mess. Some of the cars had set off down and others were already inside the one way going up behind the cyclist we couldn’t see when the lights had changed.

His 2 mates were embarrassed as hell…. there was just no need for this except to assert some sort of entitled, hate filled arsehole behaviour

Interested here - This was for roadworks? was there a sign suggesting that they ride in the coned-off area?  I'm seeing "bloody cyclists riding in the roadworks section - who do they think they are ?"


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 8:20 am
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OMG!

You finally got it.

but also the same for you when overtaking or filtering past a car.

When commuting how often do you have the oncoming lane clear enough that you can enter it for the duration of filtering past a car ?


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 8:31 am
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but also the same for you when overtaking or filtering past a car.

Which nobody sensible is actually suggesting are they.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/new-nsw-cycling-fines-and-metre-passing-laws-what-you-need-to-know-for-march-1-20160225-gn34fi.html

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-28/wa-to-introduce-minimum-safet-passing-laws-for-cyclists/9096024

https://www.rsac.tas.gov.au/campaign/new-road-rules-passing-cyclists/

Happening elsewhere, there was a noticeable improvement on it's introduction in Tasmania.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 8:49 am
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OMG!

You finally got it.

This just isn't possible in many places... (it is in the video) but that is the difference between having a universal rule and not.

Personally I find the officers assessment of this being non-viable to proceed as shockingly amazing ... and the fact that he didn't HAVE to deviate as absolutely crazy as neither the driver nor cyclist could know that in advance.  There was no reason the driver couldn't have used the entire other lane in this instance on a NSL road with room to pass.

HOWEVER:  my main point is for this to be enforced it needs more rule than 1.5m everywhere and  apply in both directions.  It also needs more structure for example on single lane roads, in the case of slow moving traffic <20mph etc.

Simply saying you can't pass a cyclist for 20 miles unless they decide to pull over into a passing place won't work and it still wouldn't be 1.5m anyway... and regardless of speed. Its the same as riding two abreast when it's dangerous... just because you can.

If I leave my mothers house I can cycle down single-passing places for 30 miles (after the first 100').. the only reasonable safe way is riding the corners to get maximum visibility of a car or tractor coming in the other direction.  Riding 2 abreast is stupid as is trying to maintain 25mph around blind bends.  Even going slowly there is a big chance of running into a tractor around a bend that might be stationary and running up into the hedgerows is not usual.

As I often ride this road with my kid I'm amazed just how many cyclists are ripping around as fast as they can two abreast who then squeeze past cars going n the opposite direction .. what worries me more is the attitude of these cyclists to the other road users.. including those trying to cycle safely.  After they force a car to swerve into the hedgerow I have to deal with the SAME cars who are understandably pissed at being run off the road and then shouted at.

Whilst we rely on a best practice code rather than actually defining proper rules then we are at the mercy of assessments like the one on the video.

Whatever the rules are will need to be a compromise and take in more than only applies to cars.

Perhaps the automatic entitlement to two abreast needs looking at on single track roads with passing places?  Perhaps vulnerable users should have to stop and let other traffic through?  Perhaps cyclists jumping red lights needs to be taken seriously..?  Perhaps some roads other than motorways need to be designated no cyclists even ??

Perhaps the rule doesn't apply when the cyclist is in a physically separate cycle lane?

(or if they do then lots of cycle lanes will make it impossible for a car to pass)

Whilst this is down to judgements like the officer in the audio on the video there will continue to be similar judgements.

A conversation with the driver may be all that is required. It’s a very cheap and effective form of keeping people alive.

This might well be good in debatable cases.... but the video isn't OR shouldn't be debatable case.

What makes it debatable is that 1.5m (or in this case 0.5m) isn't able to be applied universally in a single direction.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:00 am
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Yes – That’s a good thing though

It's a good thing when there is a lane or other side of the road....

Interested here – This was for roadworks? was there a sign suggesting that they ride in the coned-off area?  I’m seeing “bloody cyclists riding in the roadworks section – who do they think they are ?”

No roadworks in sight .... just cones and traffic lights.

But at the end of the day if there were roadworks they can get off and push.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:03 am
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 DezB
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I nearly always thank drivers for proper overaking these days. Mad innit? They do something how they should and you thank them.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:17 am
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Perhaps the automatic entitlement to two abreast needs looking at on single track roads with passing places?  Perhaps vulnerable users should have to stop and let other traffic through?

That is what passing places are for though, doesn't have to be for oncoming only. As usual there will be edge cases to any situation, passing on a single lane road should be done cooperatively and with consideration from both sides. Basing the rest of the UK's cycle/road policy on that situation would be foolish.

As with the Australian examples it's quite simple, cars to give 1m up to about 40mph and then 1.5m after that.

A bike passing a car - if your over 40kph/25mph then I'd be giving the 1.5m to the car, under that I probably wouldn't but would still be giving the car room. Filtering through traffic? Much the same as the when motorbikes do it.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:26 am
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1.5 m passing is possible and right everywhere.  If you cant pass with 1.5 m clearance you cannot pass safely.  imagine if it was a tractor.  Yo would have to wait until the opposite lane was clear so do the same for a bike

I do find it astonishing how some folk on here still look at this from a drivers point of view not a cyclists.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:31 am
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Filtering is a completely different case AS THE CARS ARE STATIONARY


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:32 am
 Bez
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Perhaps the automatic entitlement to two abreast needs looking at on single track roads with passing places?

But I don't want to saw my car in half.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:41 am
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Perhaps the automatic entitlement to two abreast needs looking at on single track roads with passing places?

How many miles of road are we talking about here? Sounds like a complete red herring to be concentrating on these doesn't it as they are such a tiny % of the UK's roads and already have a don't be a dick clause in them


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 9:45 am
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1.5 m passing is possible and right everywhere.  If you cant pass with 1.5 m clearance you cannot pass safely.  imagine if it was a tractor.  Yo would have to wait until the opposite lane was clear so do the same for a bike

I do find it astonishing how some folk on here still look at this from a drivers point of view not a cyclists.

That is just your opinion ...

As with the Australian examples it’s quite simple, cars to give 1m up to about 40mph and then 1.5m after that.

Seems a far more workable solution.

I do find it astonishing how some folk on here still look at this from a drivers point of view not a cyclists.

The problem is entirely different... it seems some people only look at this with a cyclists point of view rather than a road user's point of view.

One one hand a driver should stop or go slowly when conditions dictate but for some reason cyclists should be free to cycle as fast as they like and not be inconvenienced by things like pulling over to let other road users

The thing I find amazing is everyone seems to agree that a car having to a stop and pull over or go more slowly is expected of drivers but for some cyclists shouldn't have to .. everyone else should do it but them

If you wish to overtake a car that is going slowly then wait until you have 1.5m of passing ... if that is your idea of a safe distance. If there is a separate cycle lane you choose not to use then there is your 1.5m that was taken off the road width.  Sure you may have to go much more slowly... but surely that is OK.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:05 am
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One one hand a driver should stop or go slowly when conditions dictate but for some reason cyclists should be free to cycle as fast as they like and not be inconvenienced by things like pulling over to let other road users

It's  part of the highway code that you use the road responsibly and allow others to pass if it's sensible to do so.

How often do you overtake cars?


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:12 am
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The thing I find amazing is everyone seems to agree that a car having to a stop and pull over or go more slowly is expected of drivers but for some cyclists shouldn’t have to .. everyone else should do it but them

In general, a common sense rule is to favour the more vulnerable road user, unless there is a clear priority. In the same way that a cyclist shouldn't be blasting past horses on roads, or horses/pedestrians on BWs.

I've got no problem with slowing or stopping completely in those circumstances.

From a practical viewpoint, I've got no problem with being passed carefully at <1.5m by a car in many circumstances. The problem starts when you are getting close-passed at speed/carelessly, or the driver is chopping back in dangerously or trying to squeeze past very close against traffic or through narrowings, or at blind bends.

It's a shame that 'Don't be a Dick' isn't a legally enforceable standard.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:12 am
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Try driving and riding in North Devon where leaving 1.5 m gap would be impossible on some of the single track roads. Even closer to home around Surrey Hills, it would prove tricky. If you are stuck behind farm traffic, chances are you may be going slower than a push bike in some circumstances yet on the whole they are able to pull in at a convenient point and let traffic pass. Why can't a cyclist do the same if the situation necessitates?

Surely common sense shoud prevail? Plenty of times on a bike I've pulled off or take to a pavement as I can see the potential for clogging up traffic behind me and eliminate to possibility of an idiot driver taking a chance and hitting me or passing too close.

On the flip side I've seen plenty of instances of bad cycling including 2 abreast chain gangs on some of the narrow lanes around Newlands and Peaslake so surely these should also be enforced? Simple answer is it's very difficult to do so just like it is to enforce middle lane motorway hoggers.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:14 am
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@bsims, yeah, i meant 50ft. (Actually 49ft 4.5inches)

and yes, that’s exactly what i think, drivers expect my company to hold me responsible for any accident.

it’s a flawed train of thought though, all of our vehicles are fitted with cctv, I’ve had a fair few allegations made against me over the years, some of them serious, cctv has cleared me.

One allegation came in, they had every detail correct, the time, place, reg no, a description of the driver (which accurately depicted me).

it was me, at the time and place they mentioned, they also mentioned the (true) fact that two people got on the bus, and that they had a suitcase.

the piece de resistance though, was when they alleged that i had lit a cigarette, took a couple of puffs, then snuffed it out on the tyre of the bus.

i have never smoked in my life.

my manager told me this type of thing happens all the time, stories get embellished, or completely fabricated.

I wonder if the police get the same thing.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:18 am
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I do make it easier for cars to pass when its safe.  I ride in primary almost allthe time.  When a car comes up behind me I make sure they know I have seen them then when its safe to allow them to pass wave them thru

again - if you couldn't pas a slow moving tractor safely then you cannot pass a cyclist safely.  Again on the devon roads - the same applies.  the car driver does not have a god given right to get past - they have to wait until its safe.

I ride a fair amount on single track roads up north.  Its only non locals who seem to have issues.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:25 am
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Folk should take the example of edinburgh ( lrt) busses.  20 years ago they used to be an utter menace.  Some really good training was put in place for them and now they are the most courteous drivers out there.  Never passing with less than 1.5 m, never passing then pullin in to a stop.  Never following 2 feet behind you.  What has happened I believe is that following the training meant they found their route suddenly became much less stressful and stopped all unpleasant interactions.  cyclists found bus drivers being courteous and reacted with courtesy.  Win win.

On a single track road I ride right in the centre - no car can pass until I say its safe.   As soon as its safe I wave them thru stopping if needed.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:30 am
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 if you couldn’t pas a slow moving tractor safely then you cannot pass a cyclist safely.

Would completely disagree with this. There may be certain stretches which are too narrow/unsighted to allow a safe overtake, or if you are travelling very quickly, but a perfectly safe overtake is possible on many of the lanes I ride on.

As above, I'm prepared to accept <1.5m if it is done carefully and courteously, which it almost always is.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:30 am
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That video,and some of the attitudes shown on here, are the reason I spend as little time as possible cycling on the roads.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:32 am
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As above, I’m prepared to accept <1.5m if it is done carefully and courteously, which it almost always is.

Which is where the Australian 1m below a certain speed comes in, which means the driver should slow down, however if the road is not wide enough to pass a cyclist with a 1.5m gap what is the road width? Is it a road that is suitible to be doing more than 40mph with other traffic around?


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:36 am
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I'd be more annoyed having to listen to the patronising, doesn't-let-you-finish, doesn't-understand-the-argument-being-presented policeman than I'd be annoyed at the driving.


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:38 am
 Bez
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Just for Steve: two articles to help explain why someone making their own decision to come relatively close to a steel cage is not the same as the person in the steel cage making the unilateral decision to come close to someone without a steel cage: not only are the vehicles massively (in every sense) different, but the owner of the decision is, too.

https://beyondthekerb.org.uk/newtons-laws/

https://beyondthekerb.org.uk/karrs-choice/

And, while we're here, one on why (despite the above) the proposal of a distance passing law is not only far from a silver bullet, but potentially a significantly worse tool than is currently available.

https://beyondthekerb.org.uk/passing-laws/


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:39 am
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It’s  part of the highway code that you use the road responsibly and allow others to pass if it’s sensible to do so.

How often do you overtake cars?

I used to do it all the time when traffic is slowed down*...then I started driving more regularly and realised just how dangerous it is.  Especially two people passing a car on either side at the same time.

I drove 22 miles back from a race yesterday.... it took me over 1.5 hours... I could have cycled back faster even though 10ish miles of that were at 40-70mph.  The other 10 miles I'd bet my average speed was 10-15mph...I was really stopped, just going through heavy traffic.  (I can't tell you exact splits... I know the distance and I now it took 1.5 hours)

I also got passed by tens perhaps hundreds of cyclists...I wasn't counting


 
Posted : 04/06/2018 10:40 am
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