OFF THE WIRE
agingrebel.com
Nevada will probably become the second state to legalize lane splitting.
Nevada Assembly Bill 236, sponsored by Representatives Skip Daly, Richard
Carrillo and Jame Healey, was approved by the state assembly on April 18th and
is now in the Senate Transportation Committee. If the bill is approved by the
state senate, it will go into effect on January 1, 2014.
California has always permitted something called “lane sharing,” which allows
bikes to “safely” occupy a lane with another motorcycle or car. But the
definition of riding safely was always vague. Technically, stopping at a light
with your left boot in one lane and your front tire in another was an illegal
lane change. Earlier this year, the California Highway Patrol issued a set of
guidelines that told bikers how to split lanes legally. Splitting lanes is legal
in most countries except the United States.
California’s tolerance for lane sharing dates from the days when virtually
every motorcycle was air-cooled – including the ones ridden by the Highway
Patrol. Motorcycle patrolman understood that air-cooled engines overheat in
freeway traffic jams on hot days. Anyone who has ever been stuck in traffic on
the strip in Vegas in the daytime in August understands that the proposed Nevada
law is just common sense. It is already legal for cops to split lanes in Nevada.
It’s is just not legal for anybody else.
What Will Be Legal
The current version of the Nevada bill would allow motorcycles to split lanes
but not mopeds. Bikers would be required to white line “in a manner that is
reasonable and proper, having due regard for the traffic, surface and width of
the highway, the weather, and other highway conditions.” The law also forbids
splitting lanes while moving at more than 30 miles per hour and forbids
splitting at more than ten miles an hour above the prevailing speed.
The California guidelines let you split at 40 if the surrounding traffic is
only going 30.
Skip Daly, the author of the bill, also thinks lane splitting will reduce the
number of bikers who are hit from behind. Daly told The Associated
Press, “When you have the ability to do lane splitting, it increases the
statistics about the safety of the road.”
The Moron Opposition
The Bill is opposed by people who couldn’t find the start button on a bike if
their lives depended on it, the fun house mirror that is Vegas television news –
multiple news stories described lane splitting as “bikers zooming in and out of
traffic” – and some, but not all, Nevada police.
After the bill passed in the Assembly, a Nevada Highway Patrol Trooper named
Loy Hixson was everywhere. He told Las Vagas ABC affiliate
KTNV “Drivers are not used to seeing motorcycles. A vehicle may be
tempted to make a lane change and that’s where we can see an accident occur.”
Then during his standup with CBS affiliate KLAS Hixson
declared “The biggest thing is, it’s unsafe. They (meaning us) will take that
chance and they will do it because it will help them get to their destination
quicker.”
But before the bill passed, Bob Roshak of the Nevada Sheriff’s and Chief’s
Association told lawmakers that legalizing lane splitting would “significantly”
reduce the number of motorcycles struck from behind. “I think it’s safe if it’s
followed in the way the bill is written,” Roshak said. “With the low speeds it
makes sense.”
video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A99blGJm_Es&feature=player_embedded