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Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 15th 05, 03:17 PM
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Default Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

September 14, 2005

latimes.com : California

Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

Construction forced the two men to ride in the road instead of a bike lane.
Catering truck driver is charged with vehicular manslaughter.

By Nita Lelyveld, Times Staff Writer

The breathtaking views on the Pacific Coast Highway carry risks for cyclists,
who ride in the sea breeze at considerable peril as cars on the narrow road zoom
by.

On Saturday morning, a catering truck hit two cyclists, who had been forced off
the northbound shoulder and onto the road by a construction project. The driver
did not stop immediately after hitting the men, who died soon after being
airlifted to UCLA Medical Center.

It was the first fatal bicycle accident in at least five years on this stretch
of PCH, said Philip Brooks, traffic sergeant for the Malibu-Lost Hills Station
of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.

The collision, which occurred about 10 a.m., killed Stanislav Ionov, 46, of
Calabasas, an accomplished physicist at HRL Laboratories in Malibu; and Scott
Bleifer, 41, of Santa Monica, a vice president at Union Bank of California. The
two avid cyclists do not appear to have known each other.

On Tuesday, Victor Silva, 27, of Compton was charged with two counts of felony
vehicular manslaughter and two counts of felony hit-and-run in their deaths.
Silva apparently has no prior record.

In an interview just after the accident, Silva said he hadn't seen the men
before the accident. After hitting them, he said, he couldn't stop for fear of
injuring a person cooking in the back of his truck, said Sheriff's Det. John
Caffrey. Cooking in the back of a moving vehicle is illegal, Caffrey said.
Authorities believe Silva was traveling around the 50 mph speed limit.

Witnesses said the impact flung the two cyclists 150 feet forward.

Both Bleifer and Ionov were wearing helmets. They appear to have been riding in
the bike lane until orange traffic cones forced them into the right-hand lane.
The cones signaled the start of a construction project for a synagogue at the
Malibu Jewish Center. For the length of the construction site, concrete
barriers cut off the shoulder.

The men were riding side by side when they were hit, and it's possible that one
was passing the other, which is legal, Caffrey said. Riding side by side in
other circumstances "is highly not recommended," he said.

So far in 2005, eight cyclists have been injured on PCH, according to the
Sheriff's Department. Seven were injured in 2004 and six in 2003.

Bleifer had been training for the Arthritis Foundation's Amgen California Coast
Classic, an eight-day, 500-mile charity ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles,
which starts Sept. 24. Now his friends and other members of his cycling club,
the Velo Club La Grange of Westwood, plan to join the last leg of the Classic,
riding in his honor from Ventura to Los Angeles on Oct. 1.

Friend and fellow club member Bruce Mitchell said Bleifer was "very engaging,
very smart, had very good ideas." The two often attended spinning classes
together at the Spectrum Club, but they didn't cycle together, he said.
Mitchell said he prefers the club's regular group rides, which take place
earlier in the morning, before the traffic picks up. Bleifer, he said, would
head out later in the morning on his own.

Nearly every morning before riding, Mitchell and Bleifer would meet at Peet's
Coffee & Tea in Santa Monica. Bleifer arrived every morning with Kona, his
6-year-old chocolate Labrador, Mitchell said, adding, "He made a whole army full
of friends up at Peet's Coffee."

Bleifer's sister, Karen, of Century City said she'd received hundreds of e-mails
from her brother's friends, many asking about Kona.

"Kona was the love of his life," she said. "Everybody wants Kona. I say, 'Oh,
I'm sorry, you're going to have to wrestle my parents for Kona because she's all
they have left of Scott.'"

Karen Bleifer, a jewelry designer, said her brother was very happy and an
adventurer who took cycling trips in Tuscany and Hawaii, traveled by himself to
Vietnam and hiked to the top of Machu Picchu, the ancient Incan city in Peru.
Bleifer grew up in Beverly Hills, where he attended Beverly Hills High School.
He earned a bachelor's degree at UC San Diego and a master's in business
administration from USC, his sister said.

Ionov, who was born in Russia, had worked at HRL Laboratories since 1994.

Employees found out about his death in a message from the lab's president and
vice president Monday, said spokesman David Weeks.

An accompanying bio said Ionov had studied physics at Moscow Physical Technical
Institute, where he worked as a research assistant to Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa,
a Nobel laureate. He received a bachelor's and master's degree and his
doctorate from the Institute of Spectroscopy in the Soviet Union and became the
director of an experimental group at the Research Center for Technological
Lasers at the Soviet Academy of Sciences. In 1980, he emigrated to the United
States, where he did postdoctoral work at UCLA and USC. He became an American
citizen in 1999, and had a wife, Irina, and a daughter, Sophi, the bio said.

Ionov often rode his bike to work and went on long rides with co-workers. He
also ran in numerous marathons.

Weeks said Ionov had a previous close call on his bike, riding with friends in
Westlake Village. They were taking a break, standing and sitting with their
bikes on the sidewalk, when a car lurched toward them. One of the riders was
killed, Weeks said.

FOR THE RECORD:
Cyclists' deaths —An article in Wednesday's California section about cyclists
killed on Pacific Coast Highway said they had been riding in the bike lane.
There is no bike lane on that stretch of the highway. They were riding on the
shoulder.
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  #2  
Old September 15th 05, 05:47 PM
C
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Default Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

In article ,
wrote:
Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils


The problem is not the PCH. The problem is incompetent drivers.
Incompetent drivers kill other drivers, passengers, and pedestrians
as well as cyclists.
  #3  
Old September 15th 05, 09:04 PM
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Default Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

Yes irresponsible drivers are to blame. But Los Angeles, where I used
to live and ride, suffers from a shameful lack of safe bike routes. PCH
is particularly deadly; in many places, regardless of construction, the
shoulder narrows and virtually disappears. The cities of Los Angeles,
Malibu and Santa Monica would do well to provide more bike-friendly
routes with wider shoulders. The article doesn't mention that other
infamous death trap -- Sunset Blvd.

  #4  
Old September 18th 05, 10:45 AM
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Default Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

In article , hbaker1
@pipeline.com says...
September 14, 2005

latimes.com : California

Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils


[....]

It was the first fatal bicycle accident in at least five years on this stretch
of PCH, said Philip Brooks, traffic sergeant for the Malibu-Lost Hills Station
of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.



The first fatal bike accident in at least 5 years on a busy, popular
cycling route, and they say it points to the "perils" of the road?

I assume there were truly hysterical headlines nearby about all the
motorists killed in the same period?

--
is Joshua Putnam
http://www.phred.org/~josh/
Updated Bicycle Touring Books List:
http://www.phred.org/~josh/bike/tourbooks.html
  #5  
Old October 4th 05, 12:37 AM
Matt O'Toole
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Default Cyclists' Deaths Point to PCH Perils

wrote:

Yes irresponsible drivers are to blame. But Los Angeles, where I used
to live and ride, suffers from a shameful lack of safe bike routes.
PCH is particularly deadly; in many places, regardless of
construction, the shoulder narrows and virtually disappears. The
cities of Los Angeles, Malibu and Santa Monica would do well to
provide more bike-friendly routes with wider shoulders. The article
doesn't mention that other infamous death trap -- Sunset Blvd.


Sunset is dangerous only from Beverly Hills to the ocean. But there's no reason
to ride that stretch anyway, since nearby parallel streets are available, and
far less dangerous.

The problem with PCH is that it's the only route through Malibu. Cars, trucks,
bikes, etc., must share a narrow, 4 lane, high speed stretch of highway.
Traffic is heavy, and drivers expect to drive this stretch of road as if it were
a freeway. Yes, they're all wrong, but I'm not about to go out there and jostle
with them. This stretch of road has a stunning fatality rate, for pedestrians,
cyclists, and motor vehicle drivers alike. It would be great to have a wider
roadway with bike lanes, but unfortunately there's nowhere to put it -- with
houses practically touching the roadway on the ocean side, and an unstable bluff
on the other. The houses are too expensive to condemn, and cutting into the
bluff would be impossible. The never-ending construction is often just
repairing damage from previous landslides. A good solution for this road would
be draconian speed enforcement, but local residents would never put up with
that. They want to be able to jump in their Porsche or Hummer and blast into
Santa Monica in 15 minutes. That's why they paid $10m+ for their houses, "close
to" the city.

All in all, cycling in LA is better than most people think. Except for a few
"superstreets," most of the city is quite rideable. BTW, Sunset from West
Hollywood eastward is a fine cycling route, and even has bike lanes from
Silverlake to downtown.

There are certainly worse places to ride than LA. Many cities in the South --
Atlanta, the DC area, Myrtle Beach, etc. -- have nothing but sprawl and
superstreets, but with lanes only 12' wide. (CA lanes are rarely less than
14'.) Cyclists I know from the DC area rarely ride from home, but put their
bikes on the car and take them to the local rail-trail or park. (Adding to the
traffic problem.) What a pathetic existance.

Matt O.


 




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