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Bike Safety Stop Bill Passes CA Assembly

Now the Senate must weigh in
Bike Safety Stop Bill Passes CA Assembly
Still from CalBike's video explaining how stop signs affect bicyclists.

To celebrate Earth Day (not really, but let’s pretend), the California Assembly passed A.B. 122, a bill from Assemblymember Tasha Boerner Horvath (D-Encinitas) that would make it legal for bicycle riders to treat stop signs as yield signs. That is, if no traffic is present, it would be enough for bike riders to slow and proceed cautiously, without having to come to a complete stop.

Streetsblog has discussed this issue and the many reasons this bill is needed many times. Stop signs were invented to make sure car drivers don’t pass carelessly through intersections, but the same rules were applied to bikes even though they pose much less risk to themselves and others. There are many arguments for acknowledging the vast difference between the two modes, among them that it takes longer for a person on a bike to clear an intersection if they come to a complete stop, the energy costs to a bike rider are huge, and other states have made similar changes to their laws and have found that bike crashes have decreased significantly.

It’s also a step towards removing yet another excuse for police to harass and ticket bicyclists who are riding safely.

A.B. 122 easily passed the Assembly Transportation Committee as well as the Assembly Appropriations Committee before it was passed by the entire Assembly today on a vote of 53 to 11. More than 75 organizations across the state signed a letter in support of the bill, and the only official opposition has been from the California Highway Patrolmen’s Association – not the CHP, but a lobby group for law enforcement – which wrote to the bill’s author that that “there is a lot going on at intersections and we feel that allowing bicyclists to simply yield rather than stop will create a public safety risk.”

However, data doesn’t back up that assertion. CalBike, the bill’s sponsor, reports that none of the states who have implemented the “safety stop” law – that is, Idaho, Delaware, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Delaware, Arkansas, Utah, and North Dakota – have reported any safety problems with the new rule, and that “a recent study in Delaware found that collisions involving bicycles at intersections decreased by 23 percent since the safety stop became legal.”

CalBike also created a video to explain how the bicycle safety stop works.

Next stop for A.B. 122 is the California Senate, where it will most likely be assigned to the Transportation Committee.

Photo of Melanie Curry
Streetsblog California editor Melanie Curry has been thinking about transportation, and how to improve conditions for bicyclists, since her early days commuting by bike to UCLA long ago. She was Managing Editor at the East Bay Express, and edited Access Magazine for the University of California Transportation Center. She also earned her Masters in City Planning from UC Berkeley.

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