Trump Tariff Turmoil – An Impetus For Canadian Cycling?

Cycling is cheap. It does not require external fuel and it is healthy. In many instances business trips can be made by carrying modest amounts of cargo. All these points indicate that the bazaar tariffs on Canada by its southern neighbor may ultimately lead to some positives by forcing Canadians to become more self-reliant.

Threatened import tariffs by a deranged U.S. president have many Canadians believing its southern neighbour is the new “public enemy #1”. The transportation sector is an example where illogical tariffs could create turmoil on both sides of the border as some car manufacturing and parts plants may close and costs of motor vehicles may rise. If there is a silver lining in all this mayhem it is that cycling in Canada may get a boost.

Cycling is a non-technical mode of transportation that does not require expensive or complicated parts shipped across Canada’s border. Many things get done under the radar by the community of cyclists who are often invisible to the public eye. Yes there are the impressive-looking cargo bikes that could be useful in some circumstances. However a lot of work is done on simple bikes with no fancy design.

Cycles specifically designed to carry cargo are infrequently observed in the City of London. This may be due to their cost. Certainly they are able to carry significant cargo and, when accompanied by an electric motor, they can be far cheaper to operate than a gas-powered motor vehicle.

In remains a fact that small-scale business activities of Canadian society are often overlooked and never fully documented. This is because so much of it remains unofficial. Within the activities of cyclists there are numerous instances where business acts are completed without recognition of their importance. Yet there are a vast number of them.

This article will examine some recent observations of cyclists in London, Ontario taken from a broader study undertaken by Gorski Consulting over many years. The focus will be on the types of cyclists that are observed conducting non-official business activities, from very low-cost activities, to those that require greater expenditures to achieve their work. This will emphasize that cycling for business can be a viable option when dictatorial insanity to the south attempts to disrupt Canadian society. But this cycling activity needs government intervention to make it more organized and efficient. It also needs government involvement to provide public disclosure about how cyclist injuries and deaths are occurring so that corrections can be made and cycling can be a true benefit to Canadian society.

Low-End Cyclist Business Activities

Those at the lower end of the economical scale have developed unique ways to transport cargo and conduct personal business. At the cheapest end of the scale are those who carry cargo without any attachments to a cycle. Some of these instances have been observed on London’s streets recently and are shown below.

The person on the right shows how various carts and wagons are used by pedestrians to transport cargo. The cycle rider on the left shows how bulky cargo is transported in precarious ways throughout the City. In both instances these modes of transportation are extremely cheap and far more common than officially recognized.
Here minor cargo is transported on the cycle’s handlebar while the cyclist is also holding a coffee cup. The cyclist is also not wearing a helmet. Safety is compromised but this type of transportation is observed on a constant basis in the City.
For those murderers who must dismember bodies this view shows that the transportation of a chainsaw can be done on a cycle. Oh, and holding a cup of coffee, by the same hand, can be done at the same time.
Here a cyclist who has too much cargo resting on his handlebars simply steers by holding onto the cargo. Again, while such actions are not condoned, they exist and this is reality.
Even smaller pieces of cargo can become dangerous as shown here where the red scarf is hanging precariously in the spokes of the cycle’s front wheel.
Not every cyclist is capable of carrying cargo with the same level of ease. As shown here elderly riders may have difficulties when too much cargo weighs onto the handlebar. Yet, when necessity calls for it, such transportation is done, regardless of age.
Here we see another typical male cyclist with no helmet but riding with substantial number of bags hanging from the handlebars. This is done while higher speed motor vehicle traffic is nearby.
In younger years almost every cyclist has been a “taxi” to a friend. While many of these travels involved a passenger sitting on the top-tube those tubes do not exist on many newer cycles and they are no longer horizontal. In the modern age this passenger rides with his feet on the back axle. Still cheaper than Uber.
Here a larger table seems to be no problem for transportation on a cycle without any additional equipment. Yet in the narrowed environment of a protected cycling lane such an activity could be hazardous or incapable of occurring.
This may be an example of a cycling waiter or bartender. A tray filled with coffee cups is being delivered by cycle to persons unknown.

These are just a few of the many examples observed around the City of London where unofficial business is being conducted on a cycle without any specific designs or attachments. There are instances where cargo carrying on a cycle involves additional attachments and some observed examples of this are shown below.

Personal Business Cycling With Additional Attachments

Official “pannier” saddlebags are common in transporting limited amounts of cargo on cycles but that attachment involves a cost which, even though moderate, is not accepted by those with very limited incomes or no income at all.
The pushing of grocery carts while riding a cycle is a common activity in London that is not even discussed. While these carts can carry a substantial cargo they also can be difficult to manuveur while also attempting to steer the cycle on or across an urban roadway.
Given the lack of official recognition, a number of views of cyclists pushing grocery carts will be shown in this article because of the importance of this issue. This activity is common yet it is also unsafe. In this view the cyclist is also not wearing a helmet so any collision event could cause a needless increase in injury.
Here we see a cyclist who has stepped off his cycle and is walking on a sidewalk while also pushing a grocery cart. In a short distance this rider will mount his cycle. Again, no helmet is worn here.
In another example here we see a male cyclist with no helmet pushing a grocery cart but he rides on the sidewalk. This is safer for the cyclist but may not be safe for any pedestrians if care is not taken.
And here we see a somewhat uncommon situation where a cycle is being carried on top of a loaded grocery cart. It needs to be acknowledged that, although this seems unusual it is also not unique. Actions like these are occurring in the City of London.
This view shows a common situation where baggage is attached in various ways to a carrier on a cycle. Again, various methods are employed to enable the carrying of cargo through various attachments.
Here we see a situation where the cyclist has decided to dismount while pulling a loaded wagon. This is not always the case. In many instances cyclists will ride while pulling such wagons.
Here we see an entrepreneurial cyclist who has attached a large garbage bin to the back of his cycle. While uncommon a variety of such attachments are used by cyclists to complete some form of business.
Pushing grocery carts while riding a cycle is common in London. But the additional width of the cycle and cart lead to problems when attempting to fit within the limited confides of a painted cycling lane. Here we see that the cyclist is already at the extreme edge of the cycling lane but then he encounters an obstacle which causes a greater problem, as shown in the next photo.
A garbage can has been discarded into the cycling lane causing a cyclist to travel outside of the cycling lane and into the lane designated for motor vehicle traffic. Such complications are not officially acknowledged and dangerous scenarios like these persist without public recognition.
In this photo we see an extreme reliance on multiple cargo-baring carts while a cyclist walks his cycle in an urban area of London. These unique solutions are helpful in accomplishing a business need but also creating potential safety problems.

Having reviewed some unique cycling combinations there is one which, in our view, is most promising and it has been left for this last discussion. Cycles with mini-trailer attachments at the back of the cycle are the best solution because they can carry substantial cargo, are narrow enough to fit within the confines of typical cycling lanes and they are also the safest combinations of all. The photos below provide some examples of cycles and mini-trailers observed in London.

This photo provides a typical scenario where a cyclist has attached a mini-trailer to the back of his cycle. Even though the rider is not wearing a helmet the mini-trailer provides him with greater stability. Also any cargo in the trailer is positioned at a low level and this also improves stability. If the cyclist was carrying cargo above his wheel for example this could create an unstable situation even with moderate steering inputs.
In this example a female rider is transporting a child in a mini-trailer attached to the rear of the cycle. Again this does not reduce the stability of cycle. However it is not the safest situation for the child which might not be visible to drivers of motor vehicles.
In this example a cyclist has modified the mini-trailer by removing its sides thus allowing to carry cargo of larger dimensions. Even so this combination would fit within the confines of a typical cycling lane.
Here is another example where the sides of a mini-trailer have been removed thus allowing for the transport of a wider range of cargo.

Cycling Insecurity Due To Theft

While unofficial business activities take place in the City of London, there are hazards that remain and need greater government intervention. One of the greatest problems for cyclists is theft. Whenever a cycle is left in a public, or even private space, it is vulnerable to being stolen. Some examples of observations are shown below.

While this view does not show any additional attachment, it shows that other cycles are transported, possibly for dubious reasons, by simply steering them in a riderless fashion. Unfortunately stealing cycles in not that difficult to do but it is a business in which some persons excel.
As a demonstration that possible cycle theft is not uncommon, here is another rider who is pushing an unoccupied cycle for unexplained reasons.
And again, here we have another unoccupied cycle that is being transported for suspicious reasons.

Cycling has the potential of being a great benefit to Canadian society but headwinds like theft exist that prevent it from being what it could be. This mode of transportation is fragile. It requires public attention and action to expand its benefits.

Discussion

These photos have shown unorthodox ways in which cyclists in London carry cargo to achieve unofficial business. Each rider and their circumstance is unique. Because of these homemade alterations the efficiency of them is mixed while the threat to their safety is real. Mini-trailers attached to the rear of cycles provide the best combination, both in terms of cargo carrying capability but also in terms of cycling safety. Governments could improve these conditions by making mini-trailers more available especially to those a the bottom of the income bracket. Many cyclists use their cycles as an essential mode of transportation because they cannot afford other alternatives and they tend to develop home-made improvisations due to necessity. These improvisations may solve their initial problems but they add to the likelihood that a collision will occur either with motor vehicle traffic or via single-cycle loss-of-control. Yet carrying cargo and conducting business in these inexpensive ways can provide Canadians with independence from foreign agencies that would wish to destabilize the Canadian economy.

Access to Vehicle Infotainment and Camera Data Complicates Court Evidence and Owner Rights

A page taken from a typical, modern, vehicle owners manual shows just some of the numerous options available. Those complicated options come with a wide variety of data stored throughout a vehicle’s complex electronic system of modules and software. While this data should be available to a vehicle owner in reality it is not.

The technology existing in newer motor vehicles is quickly becoming more complex while causing questions to be asked about ethics and vehicle owner rights. Data from Event Data Recorders (“Black Boxes”) have been available to download from vehicles as early as 1999 (GM products). As technology has evolved so have the complications of what kind of data is captured, who can retrieve it and how this affects the rights of vehicle owners involved in collisions who should be able to use that data in their defense.

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration set out rules to be followed by vehicle manufacturers as to what kind of data those manufacturers were required to capture and how that data was to be made available to vehicle owners. That law was to become effective with 2013 model vehicles. The success of that rule was marginal. Although most manufacturers complied with that ruling in terms of capturing the required parameters, the availability of that data has fallen short. Many manufacturers have allowed their vehicles to be compatible with crash data retrieval hardware which has been purchased by almost all police forces, insurers and research institutes, However a number of manufacturers have opted out and created their own hardware. All this hardware is expensive and requires trained personnel to conduct a download which adds more cost to the activity. The bottom line is that the average owner/consumer is in no position to obtain the data from their own vehicle. Yet police can access the data for criminal matters and insurers can access it by requiring the owner to surrender their rights of defense to the insurer. And large research institutions can assess it for “benign” purposes.

In recent years matters have become even more complicated. Vehicles no longer have a single EDR module, but the complete vehicle electronics system is a complex of integrated modules that store a variety of data in a variety of locations. Now vehicle infotainment systems can be interrogated by specialized software (Berla) and many vehicles are now equipped with multiple cameras whose views can also be downloaded by specialized equipment.

As an example, Nissan is offering owners the option to purchase an app which will allow them to download camera data on select 2024 and 2025 vehicles. Some details of the plan are discussed on the Nissan website but the cost is not revealed.

It remains questionable how these complications will apply in court proceedings where a vehicle owner ought to have the right to examine evidence in their own defense. If hardware, software and technician costs are too high does that take away the owner’s right to the evidence? What happens if police do not download all the available data in a criminal case because there could be significant costs associated with that? Will this be a matter of “evidence spoilation” that have been a point of argument in historic criminal cases?

Unfortunately the laws are slow to react to quickly developing technologies and vehicle owners may suffer these consequences for many years before the “wild west” is brought to order. Or it may never be brought to order.

Observed Differences In Cyclist Characteristics & Safety Across City of London Ontario

Cyclist observations by Gorski Consulting in the City of London Ontario reveal important facts. There are large differences in the characteristics and safety of cyclists depending on what area of the City is examined. Such findings could help those interested in cyclist safety. This article will discuss cyclist observations as a whole within London and then this city-wide data will be compared to four sites where obvious differences were observed.

Review of City-Wide Cyclist Observations

Zygmunt Gorski has been conducting road safety research and motor vehicle collision analysis in the City of London and southern Ontario for over 44 years. While the focus of that work has been varied, cyclist collisions and safety have always been a part of that work. In the last 12 years a greater focus has been applied to cyclist safety as society has recognized that it needs to increase the number of persons using bicycles for their mode of travel. Special studies involving synchronized, multiple video cameras have always been part of collision analysis at Gorski Consulting however these became more focused toward cyclists, particularly since 2018. These studies provided details of cyclist motions and characteristics. Some of this testing was conducted along the Thames Valley Parkway in London but also at other sites where cyclist issues needed to be assessed. This focus was increased even further in 2020 as Gorski Consulting began to make specific observations of cyclists, either riding on roads, or existing on roadsides and sidewalks. The data from these roadside observations in the topic of the present article.

Since 2013 over 5000 cyclist observations have been made by Gorski Consulting along various roadways in London. The majority of these observations took place since 2020. The table below provides a glimpse of some of the characteristics of these cyclists. This table also provides some information about the differences found at four sites in London.

In the above table it can be seen that the percentage of observed female cyclists throughout the City of London has been about 13.8%. This is obviously small. There have been a number of theories discussed in the research, much of it based on interviews of females and why they do not ride bicycles.

The above table also shows that the percentage of cyclists wearing helmets throughout the City has been about 35.5%. If one were to relate this to seat-belt usage in motor vehicles the percentage of helmet users is substantially smaller than those wearing seat-belts in cars. Yet occupants of cars are protected by an additionally wide range of safety devices which generally make occupants of motor vehicles much safer than cyclists, beyond the mass difference.

The above table also shows that cyclists observed to be riding in the lane of a roadway or in a designated cycling lane is 34.6%. The rest of the cyclists were found either riding on a sidewalk, walking their bike on a sidewalk of stopped on a sidewalk. Since laws of the City of London and the Province of Ontario prohibit cyclists from riding on sidewalks this result makes for interesting discussion.

The results from the selected four sites shown in the above table will be reviewed in the following segments of this article.

Views of Sites Where Comparisons Were Made

1. Hamilton Road

Hamilton Road is an arterial roadway in the south-east of the City of London. Historically it used to carry motor vehicle traffic out of the City and toward the slightly larger City of Hamilton, Ontario. The area of Hamilton Road selected for study here is about 4.4 kilometres in distance from Maitland Street at the edge of downtown, up to Highbury Ave in the south-east of the City.

Over time many small, independent businesses developed along this road which was originally just two lanes in width. A number of years ago Hamilton Road was widened to four lanes with no median between the two directions of traffic. While this widening helped with the flow of motor vehicle traffic it also created a problem for vulnerable users, such as pedestrians and cyclists, who sometimes needed to get across the four lanes.

Recently several cyclist fatalities have occurred along this stretch of Hamilton Road. While basic information about these occurrences was released by local news agencies nothing of any usefulness was revealed about how these fatalities occurred and therefore how cyclists and drivers of motor vehicles could prevent such incidents.

Observations of cyclists along this roadway revealed that there were slightly less female cyclists (12.8%) than the City average. Larger differences were noted in helmet use (only 25.2% versus 35.5% city-wide) and more cyclists were observed not riding on the road (26.4% versus 34.6% city-wide. When compared to the other three sites these data suggest that Hamilton Road is an unsafe location for cyclist travel.

In this eastward view from April, 2022 we can see the four lanes of motor vehicle traffic on Hamilton Road and a westbound cyclist riding on the north sidewalk of the road. While laws prohibit cyclists from riding on a sidewalk this view shows the danger posed to the cyclist if indeed he followed the law and rode in the lane shared by motor vehicles.
This view on Hamilton Road at Adelaide Street shows a cyclist stopped within the westbound lane with minimal room between the curb and adjacent SUV. Similarly, an elderly female with her back turned reminds viewers that vulnerable users of Hamilton Road also exist.
In this view of Hamilton Road looking west from west of Rectory Street we can see a cyclist attempting to cross the four lanes while holding a parcel and not wearing a helmet. These are the types of cyclists and behaviours that need to be documented and considered before decisions are made about permanent solutions to the road’s safety problems.

2. Dundas Street

Much like Hamilton Road, Dundas Street east of Highbury Ave is an arterial roadway with conditions that are unsafe for cyclist travel. The segment of Dundas reviewed in this study is from Highbury Ave eastward to Clarke Road. Dundas has remained a four-lane roadway for well over half a century. It benefits from a centre-left-turn lane which is often used by pedestrians and cyclists when needing to cross this busy roadway.

In this view of Dundas Street looking eastward near First Street two cyclists are observed in the centre left turn lane at an unusual time of minimal motor vehicle traffic. Normally such motions would be difficult for cyclists when traffic volume is normally more dense. Unlike Hamilton Road here cyclists gain some protection from the existence of the centre turn lane.

The above table shows that significantly less female cyclists have been observed on this roadway (9.8% versus 13.8% city-wide). Helmet use is also less than the City average (22.7% versus 35.5% city-wide). And cycling on a lane is very low compared to the City average (10.2% versus 34.6% city-wide). These data indicate that, like Hamilton Road, Dundas Street is an unsafe location for cyclist travel.

In this view looking eastward on Dundas Street at Second Street a cyclist is observed riding in the eastbound lane while a pick-up truck is changing lanes to pass the cyclist. While the cyclist is wearing a traffic vest it is partially covered by a black knapsack. This is a dangerous area for cyclist travel in the lane and the vast majority of cyclists prefer to break the law and ride on the sidewalk.

3. Ridout – Upper Queens

In contrast to the data from Hamilton Road and Dundas Street, the data from the busy collector road of Ridout-Upper Queens shows far safer cycling conditions. The section of Ridout examined here is from Horton Street at the south edge of the City’s downtown, through the community of Old South and toward the newer community toward Ferndale Ave where Ridout is re-named Upper Queens. This roadway travels north-south. It carries traffic from trendy locations such as Wortley village which is one of the more desirable locations of the City. The City has installed a painted cycling lane along this roadway and the benefits of this can be seen in the cyclist observational data.

In this view looking north along Upper Queens near Chiddington Ave the existence of the cycling lane is clearly visible and a cyclist with bright clothing, a bright headlight and a helmet is seen riding southbound within the cycling lane. Painted cycling lanes become less safety when they exist in areas of horizontal and vertical curves. Although Upper Queens contains some minor vertical curves the full length of Riddout-Upper Queens is generally straight with minimal horizontal curves.

Female cyclists along this roadway were observed to be higher than the City average (15.7% versus 13.8% city-wide). Helmet use by cyclists along this roadway was exceptionally high (78.9% versus 35.5 city-wide) and the percentage of cyclists observed using the cycling lane was very high (78.9% versus 34.6% city-wide). Thus female cyclists would appear to have less concern riding on this roadway and all cyclists used their helmets at an exceptionally large percentage.

This view is looking northward along Ridout Street near Grand Ave. This “zoomed in” view has been purposely selected to highlight an important fact about the differences in roadways experienced by drivers of higher-speed motor vehicles and cyclists riding at lower speeds. Roadways that appear to be straight in a cyclist’s point-of-view are experienced differently by drivers of motor vehicles because the length of the roadway is compressed or “zoomed in” because of the higher speed motor vehicle travel. Thus, as shown above, slight horizontal curves are more exaggerated and must be accounted for by turning a steering wheel to stay within the centre of a lane. Often motor vehicle drivers are not attentive enough to these changes and can allow their vehicle to wander into a painted cycling lane. This concept is rarely discussed with cyclists.
In this view of a southbound cyclist on Upper Queens we see a more expensive cargo bike that would a rare sighting in areas like Hamilton Road and Dundas Street. This view highlights the importance of cyclist observations and understanding the characteristics of cyclists using a particular roadway and the purpose of their trip.

4. Colborne North Of St James

Results similar to the Ridout-Upper Queens roadway were observed on Colborne Street near St James Street. Colborne Street runs north/south north of the City’s downtown. Colborne travels through the Old North neighbourhood which is also a desirable real estate location. Here observations were made at a point just north of St James Street. This specific location was selected because in 2022 Gorski Consulting was in the process of gathering cyclist data in preparation for the City’s installation of a new, painted cycling lane. The site has been included in this discussion because of the unusual character of the observations made in 2022.

This Googlemaps view of Colborne Street is looking south toward St James St before a cycling lane was installed in 2023. The southbound lane is exceptionally wide and there are wide grass boulevards on both sides of the road. The road is also straight. These features made it desirable for a cycling lane however a vast majority of cyclists were already using the road for their travel rather than riding on the sidewalk.

From the 2022 data at the Colborne site the number of observed female cyclists was significantly higher than the City average (25.6% versus 13.8% city-wide).

The number of cyclists wearing helmets at this site was much higher than the City average (62.2% versus 35.5 city-wide. But this average was lower than at the Ridout-Upper Queens site. What was interesting however is that there was a large difference between males and females with respect to helmet use. Only 56.7% of males were observed to wear helmets yet 78.3% of females were observed to wear helmets.

Even though a cycling lane was not yet in existence in 2022 the number of cyclists riding within the road lane was exceptionally high (97.8% versus 34.6% city-wide).

This photo was taken in 2022 on Colborne St at St James. Red markers were placed on the pavement in order to study the lateral position of cyclists and motor vehicles before a painted cycling lane was created in 2023.

Discussion

This article has reviewed the results of cycling observations in London, Ontario. Data has been presented from a city-wide perspective showing the characteristics of over 5000 cyclists over a period from 2013 to 2024. These data were then compared to characteristics of cyclists at four local sites in the City. Two sites, Hamilton Road and Dundas St presented evidence of poor safety for cyclists. Two other sites, Ridout-Upper Queens and Colborne Street showed evidence of reasonably good safety conditions for cyclists. The purpose of these discussions is to draw awareness to the importance of studying cyclists as they travel or exist on roadways before conclusions are drawn about what permanent and costly changes are made to the roadway infrastructure to better accommodate cyclists. A thorough understanding of the details surrounding cyclist characteristics, the reasons for their journeys and the actions they undertake are crucial to developing an infrastructure that is sensitive to the unique needs at specific roadway sites.

City of London Has Difficulty Accepting Citizen Advice

While we do not expect, nor need, a citizen uprising, some level of non-apathetic interest in the goings on of government keeps our society healthy.

To put it in astrological terms the City of London often operates like a black hole. A very large amount of data, analysis and general information is created in its operations but very little escapes into the public domain. A recent controversy surrounding the City’s Mobility Master Plan (MMP) is an example of this black hole functioning.

On the surface the City appeared to be open toward informing the public about its plans for transporting citizens within its jurisdiction through to the year 2050. Billboards were erected through the city announcing that four public information sessions were prepared where Londoners could examine the City’s future plans. In the midst of these arrangements news became reported that one of the City’s advisory committees expressed criticisms about the MMP and how its decisions were generated. The critical report came from the Integrated Transportation Community Advisory Committee (ITCAC). Previous politicians had dissolved several such citizen committees in the past such that the ITCAC was only one of the few left standing. And politicians determined that the ITCAC would also be dissolved in 2025 leaving no official citizen participation.

Why Is Citizen Participation Important?

There are numerous examples where the City of London operates in unaccountable ways that are unhelpful and sometimes dangerous to its citizens. An example is shown in the photos below, taken recently at the road construction taking place along Wellington Road in London.

In recent years the City of London has failed to ensure that road construction projects within its jurisdiction comply with safe practices. While “guidelines” have existed for decades in manuals from various transportation groups the City has recently chosen to ignore them. With respect to roadway markings there are explicit details in existence that explain how these markings need to be created, along with proper signage, to guide vehicles through construction zones. Those procedures are not being followed in London. A number of these problem areas have recently been reported on the Gorski Consulting website. The following photos provide another example for traffic operating westbound on Bradley Ave and travelling through the intersection at Wellington Road.

In this recent photo taken on January 17, 2025, we see the view looking westward on Bradley Ave and approaching the busy intersection with Wellington Road where road construction has been in existence for a number of months related to the Bus Rapid Transit project. The driver of the white vehicle is attempting to travel within a westbound lane that has a yellow, centre-line painted within the lane. The lane itself is extra-wide so that it is almost twice as wide as a typical lane.
Unknown to the westbound driver on the right the lane ahead terminates on the other side of the intersection. Quick thinking is required to decide whether to pass the vehicle on the left or to steer behind it.
In this instance the westbound driver on the right chose to drive ahead of the driver on the left because the right lane was not longer in existence. Such forced quick decisions are not always successful. Other confusing markings shown here are the existence of two westbound stop bars.

In scenarios like those shown above collisions occur that are of a sideswiping nature and the threat of major injury is low. But significant costs can be incurred by both drivers from damage to their vehicles. Current mandatory collision reporting thresholds have risen to over $5,000 in total cost so that such an event would be unlikely to be attended by an “independent” police officer who could officially document fault. In reality London City Police are paid by the City of London and their independent assessment of City fault is questionable. Instead fault is determined by insurance companies based on predetermined “Fault Determination Rules” that are based on the geometry at which vehicles collide and not based on the reality of who was actually at fault. The result may be that both drivers could be viewed at fault, their insurance rates will rise but no fault will be placed on the City of London for causing the collision.

The City of London operates a well-equipped Risk Management Department with lawyers whose purpose is to protect the City from liability. Many such Risk Management departments advise city politicians and its staff to hide road safety problems that could bring a claim against the City. In this manner the City comes to prey on innocent citizens of London who are not in a position of financial strength to negotiate with a large Risk Management team. Without independent public scrutiny such operations get out of hand as there is no independent authority to watch over the development of unethical actions. This is just one example as to why citizen participation is extremely important in keeping an eye of City operations. Citizen committees cannot be just puppet structures that rubber stamp every action of the City. These independent committees must be given sufficient information about how City operations take place in order to ensure the proper functioning of municipal government.

Resignation Letter of Vincent Lubrano III

Before the ITCAC could be officially dissolved one of its members, Vincent Lubrano III, decided to write a formal resignation letter effective December 31, 2025 (although this date may have been a typo and possibly was meant to be December 31, 2024). Mr. Lubrano wrote that his resignation was “…in direct protest of the City Council’s decision to dissolve the ITCAC”. He further indicated that he was “…deeply troubled by the process used to eliminate an Advisory Committee, whose primary Term of Reference is to provide advice and guidance on the Mobility issues in this city…”.

It was clear that Lubrano was upset with the process as his comments in his letter continued: “The manner in which it was handled reflects a stunning lack of respect for the significant personal time and effort that ITCAC members invest…” and “…It became clear that Council views this Advisory Committee as a road block to be removed as opposed to a valued resource…” and lastly: “This protest is the only means we have to highlight the inconsistency between the Council’s stated commitment to public input and its actual practices.

These were harsh words. Without context or a detailed understanding of the goings on between the ITCAC and the City it would be difficult to judge where the truth lies. But from the experience of Gorski Consulting much of what Mr. Lubrano stated is accurate. In 2019 Zygmunt Gorski became a member of two City of London Advisory Committees. It only took a matter of a few meetings to reveal that the City was not interested in independent advice. The City Clerk controlled what agenda items were included in any meeting and if the Clerk did not like a proposed item it was simply excluded. So committee members could not even discuss issues of importance amongst themselves. Gorski resigned within a few months for reasons similar to that expressed by Lubrano.

ITCAC Report of December 16, 2024

One can look at the report of the ITCAC from December 16, 2024 to examine if its complaints were valid. It would appear that the City of London created a team that was responsible for generating the MMP and the ITCAC was interacting with this team by providing independent comments and advice. The ITCAC report demonstrated repeated instances where the MMP team provided minimal for no details about how it developed its plans. This was essentially a black hole not allowing information to escape about how the City was operating.

A consulting firm called Arcadis was mentioned as being part of the MMP team. Arcadis advertises itself as a global firm, operating in over 30 countries with over 36,000 employees. It reports to hold an office in London on Oxford Street near Beaverbrook Ave. The role of Arcadis in the MMP team was not made clear, not even by Mr. Lubrano or the ITCAC. And it is possible that they actually know very little about the involvement of Arcadis. The City of London appears not to have provided any public information about Arcadis and if any studies or data have been generated by the firm.

In part the ITCAC complaints about the MMP team process can be encapsulated by the following segment of the ITCAC report:

On reviewing the reports and presentations from the MMP team, various factual errors, contradictions, and gaps have been noted. This casts doubt on the thoroughness and competence of any analysis that has not been shared with ITCAC or the public. If we cannot trust the analysis without expert review, how can we trust the resulting recommendations? Council is dependent on competent, well-reasoned, evidence-based recommendations from expert and experienced staff and consultants. A very strong case must be made to counter any tendency towards decision-making based on misinformation, emotion, partisan ideology, beliefs based only on personal anecdotal experience, populist politics, etc.

Again, much like Mr. Lubrano’s resignation letter, these words of the ITCAC represent strong criticisms. There is particular mention of “… decision-making based on misinformation, emotion, partisan ideology, beliefs based only on personal anecdotal experience, populist politics” which seems unusual. It is not clear, and it may not be possible to know what circumstances generated these comments.

Mobility Master Plan Drop-In Public Meetings

Some understanding of the City’s operations can be gained from examining what was reported to the public during its information meetings about the MMP. Gorski Consulting attended one of those meeting and the following was observed.

The attended meeting took place in a large room surrounded by numerous billboards positioned around the room’s perimeter and visitors were encouraged to walk around and view each board. The boards appeared to be grouped into areas reflecting the segments of the MMP. So boards located closest to the entrance door displayed general information about transportation systems in London. Other boards contained more specific information about mass transit, cycling networks and pedestrian issues. Members of City staff stood at various points associated with their areas of expertise.

One of the first boards showed the general philosophy of expected changes in the modes of transportation in the City. The content of this board is shown below.

The displayed data showed that the City was expecting to shift the modes of transportation from personal use vehicles to greater involvement of “walking cycling and transit”. With respect to these categories the billboard showed that in 2019 “walking cycling and transit” represented 23% of the City’s transportation and this was expected to increase to 32.5% by the year 2050, or slightly less than a 10% increase.

It was obvious from viewing the billboard that the categories of “walking cycling and transit” were all grouped together so that there was no information about the current levels of each individually. It would seem reasonable that the City was able to calculate these individual items otherwise they could not report the total of 23%. But it is not clear why they did not itemize these important modes separately. Again, it reflects the general process of the City’s providing only minimal information to the public.

While discussing the mode change with one of the City’s staff it was revealed that there was no specific plan that has been developed as to how the City intended to create the mode shift that they reported. Specifically with mass transit the City official stated that they operated on the basis of “if you build it they will come”. Meaning that, if the quality and quantity of mass transit is increased then ridership will naturally increase. These are very general beliefs without any specifics.

Another billboard was entitled Road Safety, as shown below. This was focused on London City Police data from the year 2023. The data contained in this billboard is misleading.

In general police data is known to be incomplete. While collisions where fatalities occur are likely to be fully reported, other categories such as injury-producing collisions and property damage collisions are less complete. This has been known throughout the history of collision reporting but in recent years the thresholds at which collisions are required to be reported have risen.

The above data is of greater concern with respect to cyclist collisions. Here the City has reported that only 70 persons were injured in 2023 when riding a bicycle. The City ought to have known that this information is greatly in error. This information is taken from police reported data which is greatly incomplete – something the City would be well aware of. Recent research reported several times on this Gorski Consulting website taken from hospital emergency department data shows that only about 8% of incidents of cyclist visits to emergency departments are reported in police data. So the police know nothing about the 92% of cyclist injury incidents that actually occur. By reporting the police data in the manner that they have the City of London has greatly misinformed its citizens about an important safety issue.

While the MMP is reported to be in its infancy there are additional concerns about its proposed actions at selected safety problems such as the area of Hamilton Road between Maitland Street and Highbury Ave. A billboard shown at the public meeting indicated that changes were being proposed in the near future along this roadway. What those changes are is not clear. When asked about those changes a City staff member could only hypothesize that they might include a reduction in the four lanes of traffic to just two lanes and then new cycling lanes would be installed. Although there is public information that 3 fatal cyclist collisions occurred along this stretch of Hamilton Road in the past 5 years no further information about cyclist collisions was available. When asked if the City was conducting any additional investigations with respect to cyclists on Hamilton Road it was reported that no such activity was taking place. The City staff member confirmed that cameras located at important intersections in the City are able to gather information about traffic volumes, characteristics and patterns. But it was unknown if any such studies were being conducted along Hamilton Road. The data from these permanent locations is likely analysed but it is unknown who does that analysis. It is unlikely that the ITCAC is informed of the results of such analysis.

The City staff member was also asked about their portable “Scout” camera installations which could be deployed to study certain safety-problem locations in the City. The City staff member confirmed the existence of these portable units and that the collected data is taken off-site to a private firm where it is analysed. But the staff member was unaware of any such installations being placed on Hamilton Road.

Summary

As expressed in the City of London ITCAC and in the resignation letter of Vincent Lubrano III the City of London is involved in a secretive, black hole proceeding where little information is being released to the citizens of London about the details of the Mobility Master Plan (MMP). It appears that the City is hiring private firms that conduct a variety of analyses that are not being shared in the public domain. When the City’s advisory committees complain about this process they are being shut down as is the case with the ITCAC.

Over the years a member of the City’s council who has been particularly vocal about shutting down advisory committees has been the Deputy Mayor, Shawn Lewis. In 2019 he was instrumental in attacking a report from the Cycling Advisory Committee, a group of unpaid, citizen volunteers. That committee presented information and ideas that were counter to Lewis’ vision. Instead of accepting that an opposing view is essential to the proper functioning of municipal government he instead went on to attack the committee. As reported by London’s CTV News in a article of February 22, 2019: “The City’s Deputy Mayor, Shawn Lewis appears to have led the charge in removing citizen advisory committees altogether.”

And again in an October 24, 2019 CTV News article: “At Tuesday evening’s meeting, Lewis stated that the advisory committees are there to “advise” and not to direct council. The comment prompted mixed reaction on Twitter…” and further: “The role of advisory committees is to advise us on the stuff we’re working on. It’s not to reinvent the wheel; it’s not to call to question the decisions we’ve made.”

And finally in an October 27, 2919 CTV News article: “Lewis said he wants to see advisory committees reviewed for overlap and effectiveness, saying the cycling group has gone “rogue.”

Through Lewis’ efforts the Cycling Advisory Committee was disbanded by the City. And the various volunteers from several committees transferred into a newly-formed Integrated Transportation Community Advisory Committee (ITCAC) which is now also being disbanded.

Lewis has previously complained that interaction with citizen advisory committees costs a considerable amount of time of City staff and this is wasted time. This is a strange viewpoint. In a society labelled as “democratic” the information about important issues is released to the public which becomes informed, leading to informed opinions expressed by a wide spectrum of the populace. When politicians view this transfer of information as a waste of time, and a needless expense, it is a disturbing development. Dictatorships are highly effective in directing how matters will be dealt with but the problem with such a system is that it only reflects the needs of the dictator, not those of the people as a whole.

School Bus Fatality Needs Transparency To Avoid Future Tragedies

Transportation of children is safest on a school bus, yet safety concerns remain.

Much like the universe the internet has no bounds. That appears most obvious in areas surrounding rumours, misinformation and gossip. When official information is not released about a collision this does not prevent public speculation about what took place – it merely emphasizes the gossip that is generated. Such may be the case in a recent school-bus-involved fatal collision just west of London, Ontario on December 16, 2024.

From an official standpoint London City Police are the entity that should have the most knowledge about how a 7-year-old boy, Dante Caranci, was struck and killed after exiting a school bus on Longwoods Road near Murray Road just before 1600 hours on December 16th. The problem originates with the lack of information about what transpired. In their post on the London City police website police indicated: “Members of the LPS Traffic Management Unit continue to investigate the serious collision involving a pedestrian that occurred earlier this week. The young boy transported to hospital by paramedic services, has succumbed to his injuries.” The fact that the collision involved a school bus was not even mentioned in the police notification.

Official news media have also not reported any useful information although they are at a disadvantage if police refuse to release that information. Yet in the past when professional, investigative journalism was in existence, news persons were able to snoop around the official circles and exteract the details that were not officially released. That is no longer the case.

Objective, unbiased information about what happened is not just for the purpose of satisfying the curiosity of the public. Such information plays a crucial role in determining if mistakes were made, if policies and procedures need to be changed and in educating the public about preventing future tragedies.

Traffic collisions are complex events. They are advertised as being caused by one or two major factors while the reality is that many others have an influence that could have prevented a collision from occurring. This reality never reaches the public psyche. Information that is spread through unofficial sources provides some benefits but it is often unreliable. The source of unofficial information may be a “witness”, or someone who claims to be so. But it may also be someone who has no knowledge about the incident and is simply spreading rumours for many reasons. Information that is actual misinformation is not just a nuisance but it can be detrimental to public safety when the unsuspecting public comes to believe something that did not occur or could not occur.

Without any knowledge about what happened in the actual event it is the duty of Gorski Consulting to refrain from spreading gossip and provide some broad comments, without suggesting that they apply to this actual case.

Some School Bus Safety Facts

School buses operating in the Province of Ontario are required to be of a minimal safety level that is beyond the norm for typical, privately operated vehicles. Unlike drivers of private vehicles school bus drivers must complete a “circle check” of their vehicle every morning before taking it onto the road. Import issues views such as the status of what exists in the engine compartment, the condition of the steering system, suspension system and the bus wheels/tires.

The lighting of most modern school buses can be checked by simply pressing a lamp-check button on the instrument panel. This button activates all the lights on the bus in succeeding/alternating fashion. So the school bus driver needs to step outside the bus and walk around it as the lighting comes on and off. Every light that functions on the bus is turned on and off when it is functioning properly during this test. When a driver sees that a particular light is not coming on he/she must report it is a log book and to the bus operator/mainenance so that the problem can be repaired. Some malfunctions can be minor and some major. If a major malfunction exists, such as the failure of the red, flashing, overhead lights, the bus cannot be driven until the malfunction is repaired.

The button shown in the orange circle is the “Light Test” button on a new Thomas built school bus which is activated when a driver wants to examine that all the lighting is functioning on a school bus.

School buses are generally large vehicles. They are as wide as a typical tractor-trailer truck combination and they are about 2 1/2 times longer than a typical passenger car, or about 12.5 metres in length. Even the smaller, 20-seater, van-based school buses are of the size and weight of the heaviest, full-size passenger van.

The floor of a full-size school bus is just over 1 metre above the ground and thus the seats of the bus are well above the height of a typical passenger car. This means that when an impact occurs with most cars and light trucks there is minimal likelihood that the side of the bus will be crushed into where the students are seated.

The front axle of a full-size school bus is located up to a metre behind the front bumper and its engine also exists in front of the driver’s seating position. The bus driver generally sits about 2.4 meters behind the front bumper. These features protect the school bus driver in many serious, frontal impacts that may involve substantial crush.

The height of a typical school bus may be a little more than 3 metres. The overhead lights on a typical, full-size school bus are generally about 2.8 metres above the ground. While this is higher than almost all light-duty vehicles it is not as high as some heavy trucks. Many tractor, semi-trailer combinations are operated with a typical, box, semi-trailer whose height is taller than the height of the overhead lights of a school bus and this can be a problem.

When coming to a stop a bus driver must activate certain lights that warn other drivers of that imminent action. Typically amber warning lights are activated usually more that 5 seconds before the actual stop but how early that occurs is dependent on the preferences of the individual driver.

Once the bus has come to a stop the driver presses an “Open” door button or toggle switch. Older buses still exist where the doors are opened by the driver pulling on a manual handle that is attached to the doors. Regardless, once the doors begin to be opened the stop sign located on the left side of the bus rotates outward and flashing lights on the perimeter of the stop sign begin to flash. Also there are alternating, overhead, red lights that come on. The actual arrangement of actions and responses varies slightly from one bus to another.

This is a view of the left side panel of instruments on a new Thomas-built school bus. The two red buttons near the top are activated when the driver needs to start the flashing lights and to open/close the bus doors.
The two red buttons on the right in this view are used by the bus driver to start the flashing lights and to open the bus doors. The red “Amber Warn” button is pressed to activate the overhead amber lights as the driver approaches a bus stop. Once the bus is stopped the driver presses the toggle switch on the “open/close” button and this opens the bus doors. When the bus doors are opening the stop sign on the outside of the bus also swings out indicating to other drivers that they must stop.

Some Details About The Longwoods Crash Site

While no information has been released about how the 7-year-old boy was killed at the Longwoods Road crash site, some comments can be made based on the known features of the site.

Longwoods Road is the new name for the old Provincial Highway #2. This road was the primary artery for carrying vehicles east/west in South-Western Ontario for many years until the Highway 401 expressway was built in the early 1960s. To this day Longwoods Road still carries a substantial amount of traffic including heavy trucks. City of London traffic volume data indicates that approximately 6 to 8 thousand vehicles pass along Longwoods Road near Murray Road every day. While the setting is generally rural it has progressively been changing to suburban elements as the edges of the City of London have grown progressively closer to the site. A Googlemaps view of the site’s location with respect to the City of London is shown below.

The orange circle shows the location of the accident site with respect to London, Ontario. The white shades indicate built up areas of the city and this shows that the collision site is close to these areas particularly the area of Lambeth.

A closer view of the site is shown in the next Googlemaps view.

View of the area of Longwoods Road and Murray Road. The exact location of the accident site was never revealed. Longwoods Road contains a long sweeping curve in this area.

The Googlemaps view below is a street view looking eastward along Longwoods Road towards Murray Road. It shows that the roadway contains a gentle curve in the vicinity of Murray Road.

This Googlemaps view is looking eastward along Longwoods Road toward the intersection with Murray Road.

A traffic volume of 6 to 8 thousand vehicles per day in an 80 km/h speed zone represents a challenging scenario for picking up and delivering students by school bus. When the roadway contains a curve additional complications develop whereby visibility becomes an added problem. In such circumstances attention must be paid to the selection of a proper stop location.

In the London region Southwestern Ontario Student Transportation Services is an organization that is responsible for organizing school bus services to the public and Catholic school boards. Their website provides the following description of their responsibilities:

“STS is responsible for planning and coordinating school bus service for close to 50,000 who live in Elgin, Middlesex, and Oxford counties and in the city of London. STS contacts school bus companies who are responsible for the daily service and the bus drivers are their employees.”

While several school bus companies operate in the London area it is actually the personnel at STS who design the routes and stop locations for every school bus. Each year the school bus routes are changed and prior to the start of the school year school bus drivers make preliminary “drive through” runs of the new routes to ensure that they can be completed in the times estimated by STS. Routes may involve as little as one stop or as many as 15 or more depending on what STS deems reasonable.

Often a school bus will complete a morning route to deliver children to high schools and then they will complete a second route for delivery of younger children to elementary schools.

In the afternoon school buses arrive at local high schools generally between 1400 and 1440 hours. After these routes are completed the buses then travel to the elementary schools around 1525 to 1535 hours where they pick-up the younger children. School buses generally leave the property of elementary schools around 1535 to 1550 hours.

It is not known for sure however the child who was killed may have attended Lambeth Public School which is just over 2 kilometres from the area where the reported collision occurred. The direction in which the school bus was travelling just prior to the collision would depend on the actual route assigned by STS.

Potential Collision Causal Factors

There are many factors that could potentially affect what occurred. One is driver distraction. It is generally agreed in bus driving circles that routes driven for elementary schools are more distracting. Not all situations are the same however high school students have been socialized over the years so that they generally stay in their seats while riding a bus. Elementary school children are often more difficult to keep in their seats and bus drivers must often keep an eye in their mirrors and tell children to sit down. Elementary school children are also more noisy, especially during the afternoon ride home. These distractions are more common when there are more children on a bus and they are more common in the early portion of a route when children have not yet been let off. As the route progresses and more children depart the level of noise and distraction generally dies down. Given the rural nature of the Longwoods Road collision site, the number of children exiting at any particular stop would be smaller than in the condensed areas of an urban stop. So it would generally be easier for a school bus driver to pay attention to any students exiting the bus because there would be fewer children to monitor.

STS goes to great lengths to create bus stops where a child exits “door side” rather than having to cross the road. That becomes more important on rural highways. News media reports and the content of the police news release suggest that there could have been other vehicles involved in the collision other than the school bus. But that has not been officially stated. Why such basic information is kept secret does not appear to make sense. If the boy was struck by another vehicle, and not by the school bus, then it is most likely that the child had to cross the road after exiting the bus. This is of particular concern because such a stop is highly avoided by STS, for good reasons. This why information about how and why the bus stop was selected needs to be publicly revealed.

A common procedure has been established that, where a child crosses in front of a school bus, the child is told to wait and get a signal from the bus driver before proceeding out onto the roadway. This is because the bus driver can see traffic behind and in front from an elevated position and the bus driver’s experience can help a child make a safe crossing. Again, nothing is known if the bus driver was ever aware of such a procedure or if it was taught to the school children at the school where the boy attended.

The photo below was taken several years ago at another site on the outskirts of London. It shows a typical example of a rural school bus stop. We can see an example of a child being escorted across the road by a parent. Behind the bus is a large tractor-trailer which has stopped a considerable distance away from the stopped school bus. This action by the truck driver, of stopping a long distance away from the bus, is an important action because the height of the truck could block the visibility of the school bus lights from the drivers of vehicles behind.

In this school bus stop in a rural setting a child is escorted across the road by a parent. A large truck that has stopped behind the school has left a long distance from the bus thus making it easier for drivers to see the bus lights.

When school bus drivers see that a large truck has stopped behind the bus then a greater focus must be applied to be certain that the bus lights are not blocked by the truck. While uncommon, drivers can see a stopped truck in front of them and, without understanding why, they may try to pass the truck because they do not see the school bus. Again complications like these need to be considered and corrected if they apply.

Weather conditions might also need to be considered. On the afternoon of the collision date the temperatures were unusually high in the area of London: 7 to 9 degrees Celsius. While there were concerns that fog may have been one of the causal factors that does not appear to be obvious. The photo below, although out-of-focus, was taken on the collision date shortly after 1600 hours at a location on the west side of London. It shows that rain was falling and the presence of fog is not obvious. It is known that fog can exist, and can be more intense, in rural areas like Longwoods Road even though it is not obvious in the city itself.

This out-of-focus view, taken on the collision data on the west side of London, shortly after 1600 hours shows that it was raining at the time but the presence of fog is not obvious

Summary

The safety of children riding in school buses is understood by all involved. School personnel understand it, parents understand it, bus drivers and operators understand it, police understand it and so should all drivers on the road. Children are vulnerable to dangers that they cannot comprehend, often due to their lack of experience in the world. It is up to all persons and organizations to create the environment that is safe for children.

When a tragedy occurs it is often the regrettable response that persons are afraid that focus will be placed on them, their actions and their organizations for something that they may have done incorrectly. This is commonly seen in transportation collisions. The common response is that all those in control of information about what happened attempt to hide the information. The regrettable result is that, when a problem needs to be corrected, and a safety hazard needs to nullified, it becomes a tedious process, even the basic information is hidden. Such is likely to be the case with the current tragedy as it has been repeated numerous times before. It seems that even the safety of innocent school children is not important enough to change this cloak of secrecy.

2024 Cyclist Observations Now Available For London Ontario

New data is now available showing cyclist characteristics riding on, or adjacent to roads in London Ontario. Not everyone has been riding with proper lighting, clothing and a proper helmet like this rider.

New data is now available from observations of cyclists in London, Ontario carried out by Gorski Consulting in the year 2024. This data is obtained from a dashcam mounted at the windshield of a car. It shows the status of cyclists riding on the roadway or adjacent to it, on a sidewalk for example. This data can be compared to previous years, since the year 2021.

Below is the data from 2024.

The summary shown at the bottom of this table shows that 1204 cyclists were observed in 2024, 1032 of those were male and only 151 were female. In 21 instances the gender of the cyclist could not be identified.

Sidewalk usage was defined as all those cyclists who were observed either riding, walking on standing on a sidewalk accompanied by their cycle. This also included cyclists who were observed riding or walking through a pedestrian crossing because any such cyclists almost exclusively entered the pedestrian crossing from a sidewalk. It can be seen in the summary that 62.8% of males and 70.9% of females were observed on a sidewalk.

In 2024 only 12.54% of observed cyclists were females. This is fairly consistent with results from previous years as shown in the tables below.

Data From Previous Years

The following table shows cyclist observations from the year 2023.

The next table shows data from the year 2022.

And the final table below shows the data from the year 2021.

Discussion

As shown in the above tables, a total of 3884 cyclists were documented in the 4-year period of 2021 to 2024. These observations can be broken down to the following categories:

Male = 3221

Female = 501

Gender unk = 162

Thus, in the 3722 observations where gender was known, the 4-year average for female cyclist observations was 13.46%. While minor variances exist from year to year the general conclusion is that the female percentage of cyclists has remained relatively stable. Or there is no indication that the percentage of females has been increasing over the past 4 years. This conclusion is stubbornly concerning. If the cycling mode of transportation is to be increased the greatest opportunity to do so is through an increase in the low values of female participation. Yet the observations documented by Gorski Consulting indicate that female cyclist participation is not improving.

Yet the observations shown here are not a full indicator of what is happening with respect to cycling in the City of London. Gorski Consulting has also been involved in targeted traffic studies at specific locations these provide different results. For example, several studies have been performed along London’s Thames Valley Parkway (TVP), and sites such as Blackfriars Bridge in downtown London, and at the site of a new cycling lane on Colborne Street at St James Street. These targeted studies show that female participation is higher than the City average. Further articles need to be posted on the Gorski Consulting website to provide more detail about these findings.

Cyclist usage of sidewalks is often an indicator of the lack of safety perceived by cyclists who are required, by law, to ride within a lane designated for motor vehicle traffic. As seen in the above tables the percentage of cyclists observed on sidewalks is substantially above 50%. On some roads that percentage of sidewalk usage is much higher. Various public officials and police do not officially recognize this discrepancy. This reality needs to reach the general public and a discussion needs to be had about what safety improvements need to be made to keep cyclists safe.

Not all cycling dangers come from interactions with motor vehicles but that reality is not discussed. Recent data from hospital emergency departments shows that a much higher number of cyclist injuries are occurring from other, unknown, sources but those details have not been made available. Potential impacts of non-yielding objects such as poles and sign posts are examples of injury sources that could exist are not revealed.

Cycling Abandonment? So Now What?

This view from December 3, 2024 shows the cycling lane on Brydges/Wavell Street in East London Ontario just after almost a half metre of snow fell in the previous 24 hours. The motor vehicle traffic lane has been completely cleared of snow but the cycling lane has been left untouched and impassable.

The City of London Ontario made a declaration of a climate emergency a few years ago. This was supposed to be a wake up call. Our habits needed to change and this included the way we travel. This was good political posturing that stumbled in its application. A need to increase the cycling mode of transportation from 1% to 25% was advised by one of the City’s advisory committees. This was later downgraded to about 5% by City politicians. Never-the-less a 500% increase in the cycling population was an ambitious goal. Some increases in cycling were noted over the last several years but nothing compared to the City’s goal.

Where the City’s ambitions “failed” can be seen in the example of the cycling lane recently created on Brydges/Wavell Streets in east London. In the following we present a history of the site’s collisions, how the cycling lane became created and what special safety problems still exist for cyclists and drivers of motor vehicles. Cyclists need to know that some portions of protected cycling lanes are not protective and this is demonstrated in this review.

Historical Review of Brydges/Wavell Site

The Googlemaps graphic below shows the site of the Brydges/Wavell roadway with respect to the boundaries of the City of London. As a collector road it runs parallel to the main arterial roadway of Dundas Street which is located about 800 metres to the north. A parallel, arterial road, Trafalgar Road, is also a similar distance to the south. We cannot read the minds of the City staff or politicians who recommended this cycling installation, as much of these decisions are cloaked in secrecy. However it may have been reasoned that this new installation would take cyclists away from these busy roads where no cycling infrastructure exists.

The orange circle shows the location of the Brydges/Wavell site with respect to the boundaries of the City of London, Ontario.

An aerial, Googlemaps view of the western portion of the Brydges/Wavell site is shown below.

Googlemaps view of Brygdes and Wavell Streets in East London, Ontario. Hale Street is located at the bottom left. Note the two curves that exist through the road segment, along with elementary schools, Kiwanis Park and Pottersburg Creek.

Collisions had a history of occurring at the two curves of the site. To the west there was a curve at Cornish Street and to the east there was a second curve at Spruce Street. This should not have been surprising since someone with collision reconstruction experience would know that there is a greater likelihood of a single-vehicle exit from a roadway wherever there is such a curve.

Many collisions occurred when eastbound vehicles on Brydges Street approached the curve at Cornish and failed to pass through the curve, crashing into roadside obstacles on the south side of the curve. An example of this is shown in the following photos below.

In this example, an eastbound SUV went out of control at the curve of Brydges St at Cornish Street in December, 2020. A couple of trees was toppled along with a fence. Also a major Bell Canada telephone exchange box was completely destroyed requiring many days of repair.
View of the telephone junction box that was destroyed and one of the trees that was uprooted by the collision on December 17, 2020.
View on the following day, December 18, 2020, showing tire marks on the grass roadside where the vehicle exited Brydges Street. Numerous Bell Canada vehicles were observed at the site for many weeks as their large junction box had to be replaced.
View looking back westward showing the tire marks and the curve of Brydges Street at Cornish Street.

The existence of the curve at Cornish is not the only issue. The City of London has demonstrated that its lack of attention to maintenance has exacerbated the problem. For example, when a utility pole was struck down on approach to the curve by an eastbound vehicle the City failed to detect that a “curve warning” sign, which was originally attached to the pole, was not reattached. While such signs are not monumental in collision prevention they are helpful to drivers who pay attention that they are approaching a curve. This is another example of the lack of accountability by the City of safety hazards that they create.

A precarious situation also existed for many years at the curve of Brydges/Wavell and Spruce Street. Road surface repairs were partially completed at the curve in 2013 leaving a patch of bumpy pavement. This was more important because, as vehicles passed through the curve they required a pavement with consistent traction so that it would not contribute to a loss of control of the vehicle. Furthermore signage, required to warn drivers of the surface condition, was not installed for many months.

View, looking west along Brydges/Wavell at the curve at Spruce Street on January 31,2014. A crossing guard is positioned on the edge of the curve where students are escorted across the road. When a westbound vehicle loses control it will drift off the road surface and into where the crossing guard is standing.
View, looking west at the curve at Spruce Street. A road repair was performed in 2013 but the surface work was not completed leaving a bumpy surface precisely at the location where westbound vehicles needed consistent traction in order to pass through the curve safely. No “Bump” warning sign was posted for many months while the condition existed.

Oblivious to the potential danger, school crossing guards often positioned themselves at the outside of the curve, sometimes sitting in a lawn chair, as shown in the example below.

This view from November 25, 2013 shows a school crossing guard sitting on a lawn chair on the outside edge of the curve at Spruce Street. If a vehicle happened to go out of control it would likely exit toward where the crossing guard is sitting and the crossing guard would have a limited opportunity to react to escape being struck.

Subsequent to the photo shown above, two days later, on November 27, 2013, a vehicle went out of control on the curve. It struck a sand box only a few feet from where the school crossing guard was positioned. A sign post was also struck and damaged as shown in the two photos below.

This photo, taken on November 27, 2013, shows the damaged sandbox that was struck by an out-of-control vehicle at the curve of Brydges/Wavell at Spruce Street. It was fortunate that a school crossing guard was not struck, nor any students.
This view taken on November 27, 2013 shows a sign post that was knocked over just west of the curve of Brydges at Spruce Street.

It is unknown whether city officials were paying attention to these collisions. However Speed Display Boards (SDBs) were installed on the road segment in the spring of 2011 and also in the spring of 2020. The photo below shows the SDB installed in April of 2020.

This is a view looking east along Brydges Street toward the bridge at Pottersburg Creek on April 18, 2020. The City of London installed a Speed Display Board that can be seen in the upper right of this view. This condition existed before major construction of the cycling lane was commenced in the fall of 2021,

It is not clear whether City officials gained any guidance from the SDB data. However, in September of 2021 Brydges/Wavell began to see construction taking place as a new cycling lane was being installed.

A disaster was averted early in the construction process when work crews removed the centre-line marking of Brydges east of Hale Street, as shown in the photo below from September 12, 2021. While the new centre-line was painted the old centre-line was not completely removed so many drivers attempted to follow the guidance of the original centre-line, thus placing their vehicles on the wrong side of the road.

View, looking west along Brydges Street toward Hale Street in the background. Road construction crews painted a new centre-line while not fully removing the visibility of the old one. Many drivers became confused and continued to drive next to the old centre-line and thus put themselves travelling on the wrong side of the road.
In this example we see one of many westbound vehicles whose drivers believed they were travelling on the correct side of the road because the old centre-line on Brydges Street was not completely removed from their view. Fortunately Gorski Consulting observed what was happening and contacted police so corrections could be made before a collision occurred.

The construction of the new cycling lane was done piecemeal. Some segments were completed while other portions of Brydges/Wavell remained untouched. The progress of the construction can be seen from the several photos shown below, taken April 3, 2022.

This view of Wavell Street was taken on April 3, 2022. It is looking westward from just west of the intersection with Clarke Road. As can be seen, no evidence of any cycling lane is visible. Portions of the new cycling lane are located well to the west of this location.
This view , from April 3, 2022, is along Wavell Street near the intersection of Merlin Crescent. As can be seen many of the previously-existing road markings have been removed yet their shadows are still visible. Since there are no other markings on the road drivers had to think wisely as to how and where they should travel. The beginning of the new cycling lane can be seen in the background.
This view of Wavell Street is looking westward on April 3, 2022. It is just east of Winnipeg Boulevard. As can be seen the new cycling lane exists on both sides of Wavell however there is a termination of the curb blocks which define it as a protected lane. In the background the white painted lines suggest that the curb blocks will likely continue sometime in the future. The curve at Spruce Street is in the distant background but not yet visible.
This is a westward view, on April 3, 2022, along Brydges/Wavell Street at its intersection with Spruce Street. Note there is no evidence of a new cycling lane but the roadway markings have been removed. A driver would have to pay close attention to their lateral position within the curve because of this lack of markings. Yet the shadows of those markings still exist. Not all drivers would interpret these markings in the same way leading to potential dangers.
This is a westward view along Brydges Street looking toward the curve at Cornish Street. This photo was taken on April 3, 2022. Again, there is no evidence of the new cycling lane yet the roadway markings have been removed.
This view, taken on April 3, 2022, is looking westward along Brydges Street from the curve at the intersection of Cornish Street. The intersection with Hale Street is in the background. There is no evidence of the new cycling lane however the north curb and sidewalk have been moved to the north thus providing the additional width to the road for the future cycling lane.

Protected Cycling Lane Corrections At Cornish Curve

By August of 2022 the cycling lane along Brydges/Wavell Streets was substantially developed. At the Cornish Street curve curb blocks were installed on both sides of the curve. However there was evidence that the curb blocks were being struck, as shown in the following photo.

In this photo taken on August 5, 2022 the new curb blocks have been installed along the north side of the westbound lane of Brydges. However one of the blocks is out of alignment and this indicates that it was struck by a westbound vehicle. This is not surprising as the lane was narrowed to create the cycling lane and drivers were having difficulty adjusting to the narrowed lane at the precise location where the lane contained a curve.

The next photo, taken on August 11, 2022 shows a view looking eastward at the Cornish curve and the newly installed curb blocks are seen on both sides of Brydges Street.

This view, taken on August 11, 2022, shows an eastward view at the Cornish Street curve where the curb blocks have been newly installed. Note how the blocks are well into the curve. Later these curb blocks were removed by the City of London.

Evidence that the curb blocks were being struck by passing vehicles can be seen in the next photo where several of the curb blocks at the curve were removed and placed along the north curb. It is believed that this was because the blocks were being struck in the narrowed lane where drivers were having difficulty staying within the lane at the curve.

In this view taken on August 22, 2022, the curb blocks on the north side of the westbound lane have been removed from their original position along the edge of the cycling lane and are now positioned along the north curb.

Removal of the curb blocks also occurred on the south side of Brydges Street, as shown in the photos below.

In this photo taken on August 29, 2022 it can be seen that the curb blocks that were originally placed on the south side of Brydges close to intersection with Cornish Street have now been removed.
In this view taken on August 29, 2022 it can be seen that the curb blocks that were originally placed closer to the intersection with Cornish Street have now been removed.

Subsequently, by March, 2024 the curb blocks on the south side of Brydges were reduced further as shown in the photo below.

This photo taken on March 8, 2024 shows that the curb blocks on the south side of Brydges Street were removed even further away from the Cornish Street intersection. Thus eastbound vehicles travelling around the curve at Cornish Street could wander into the eastbound cycling lane without any protection to cyclists.

The removal of the curb blocks at the Cornish Street curve are a demonstration of the difficulties that drivers experienced in keeping their vehicles within the confines of the lane while travelling around the curve. While removal of the curb blocks prevented them being struck it did not solve the problem, and danger, that continued to exist at the curve. Cyclists believed they were safe while travelling in this “protected” lane but it was not explained to them that motor vehicles travelling around the curve were in jeopardy of travelling outside of their lane and possibly into the cycling lane at the precise location where the curb blocks were removed. Thus the cycling lane became unprotected precisely where that protection was needed the most. This is not a situation that is unique to this roadway and curve but it exists, in differing ways, wherever there is a horizontal curve along with a cycling lane. However this issue has not been publicly discussed.

Not all protected cycling lanes are the same nor do they provide an equal level of protection for cyclists. While the curb blocks existing along the cycling lane of Brydges/Wavell Streets provide some protection it is only limited. A motor vehicle travelling around a curve like the one at Cornish Street will not be redirected by the curb block in any large degree because those blocks are too low and of minimal mass. There are different protections provided in other jurisdictions such as the example shown in the next photo taken on Lakeshore Boulevard near the western edge of Toronto, Ontario.

This view, taken in August of 2019, is of a bi-directional cycling lane along the south side of Lakeshore Boulevard near the western edge of Toronto, Ontario. The much larger and taller concrete barrier shown here is capable of redirecting many smaller motor vehicles and even larger trucks and buses especially when those vehicles are travelling along a straight roadway where the angle of contact is small.
This view from December 23, 2023 shows that, when gaps are left between the curb blocks in a cycling lane delivery vehicles will use them for parking, This location of Wavell Street is just West of Edmonton Street.

Cycle Counts – City of London Data

The City of London has installed a number of cycle counters primarily within cycling lanes. An example of such a counter is shown below.

An example of a bicycle counter imbedded in the pavement of the cycling lane of Cheapside Street just east of Highbury Ave in London

Data from some of these counters is displayed on the City of London website. Data for the year 2024 for the Brydges-Wavell site is shown below with a comparison to six other counter sites.

As shown above the “Wavell” site has counted the lowest number of cyclists. The word “combined” is not explained on the City’s website although it has been observed that two cycle counters have previously existed on the Brydges-Wavell site while the graphic on the website only shows a single counter. Never-the-less the general consensus is that the Brydges-Wavell site contains relatively low usage by cyclists. City data indicates that motor vehicle traffic volume along Brydges-Wavell Streets in approximately 10,000 vehicles per day, or 3.65 million vehicles per year. If the Brydges-Wavell site contains 27,732 cycle observations per year then the percentage of cyclists versus motor vehicles would be about 0.76%. This percentage is below the officially reported numbers for the cyclist mode of transportation in London which is about 1.0%. While this difference would not appear to be significant it is. Typically cyclist volumes are higher on roadways containing a cycling lane than roadways where no cycling lanes exist. So we should expect a cycling usage which is higher than average at the Brydges-Wavell site, not lower.

Summary

In the latest Mobility Master Plan the City of London claims that the current transportation modes of walking, cycling and mass transit are about 23%. It boasts that it will increase these modes of transportation to about 32% in about 25 years, as shown in the graphic taken from the Plan.

The City has not provided any breakdown for the “current time” with respect to walking, cycling and mass transit. Nor has it provided any explanation for how any of the reported summaries were determined. While the City has created a number of cycling facilities it has not explained how it will increase the cycling mode along cycling lanes such as Brydges-Wavell. Presumably the Hollywood belief of “if you built it they will come” is closest to any scientific approach that exists.

Meanwhile Ontario’s Ford government has taken a hatchet to the cycling mode by forcing the removal of certain cycling lanes along major arterial roadways in Toronto. Ford claims that these cycling lanes are responsible for the traffic congestion in Toronto. Ford has also introduced legislation that will take decision-making away from municipalities as to when/where cycling lanes will be built to replace lanes used by motor vehicle traffic. He demonstrates that removal of cycling lanes will cause potential risks to cyclist safety and therefore he has also introduced legislation to prevent cyclists and their families from suing the Provincial government where the courts might determine that the Province was negligent in removing those cycling lanes.

These threats are particularly important to sites such as Hamilton Road in London where city staff and local politicians have shared the belief that motor vehicle traffic lanes should be removed from this arterial roadway to install cycling lanes. If the Province vetoes the local decision to install cycling lanes the plans for improving cyclist safety on Hamilton Road will become stagnant as no other options have been publicly aired.

The abandonment of cycling as a realistic alternative was exemplified in London, Ontario on December 3, 2024 when a large snowfall caused various plowing implements to hit the roadways to clear them. In the midst of this clearing a sidewalk plow was observed on Brydges-Wavell Street, as shown in the photo below. The sidewalk plow had been busy plowing the sidewalks of various side streets. As shown in the photo the sidewalk plow was then observed travelling westbound in the “cleared” westbound traffic lane of Wavell Street. Yet the cycling lane next to it was fully loaded with snow – not a single passage was made by a plow along the cycling lane to clear it for cyclist use.

This photo, taken on December 3, 2024, shows a sidewalk snowplow travelling west in the cleared travel lane of Wavell Street while the cycling lane to the right is filled with snow. There is official propaganda about what is being done to promote cycling and then there is the observable reality seen in this photo.

The “chicken versus egg” argument is reiterated: “Well we don’t plow the cycling lane because no one uses it” and the cyclist alternative: “We will never use the cycling lane because you never plow it”.

The observable reality is demonstrated at the Brydges-Wavell site. This article has demonstrated that, over the years, many safety problems on this roadway have been misunderstood or simply ignored. Insufficient or poor maintenance has been at the top of the list and unaccountability for certain dangerous road construction practices has endangered the public. Yet certain design dangers have also never been revealed to the public. No individual or organization with any official standing has ever explained the special dangers that exist whenever a cycling lane exists next to a lane for motor vehicle travel and that roadway contains a curve. As seen at the Brydges-Wavell site the “protected” cycling lane has been altered at its curves so that the protection has been removed. And this removal exists precisely where cyclists need the protection the most. While the dangers at the Brydges-Wavell site are not monumental they represent what exists, realistically, along many roadways in London and the Province of Ontario. Not all protected cycling lanes are the same, and they do not provide protection along all lengths of a road segment. Cyclists are not informed of this. Cyclists continue to believe there is no difference in their protection because there is no information to inform them otherwise. And official agencies that ought to be informing cyclists about matters important to their safety simply do not do so because they have no obligation to do so.

Cycling Dangers on Hamilton Road in London Ontario

This view is looking eastward on Hamilton Road in London Ontario on November 28, 2024. A garbage recycling truck has stopped to pick-up materials on the sidewalk, an eastbound pick-up truck is equipped with wide mirrors, and a tractor-trailer in westbound. How could a cyclist ride safely in this environment? It is a question that needs discussion.

Background

The Premier of Ontario, Doug Ford, has caused legislation to be introduced that will prevent cycling lanes from being created on urban arterial roads in the province. He also has threatened to remove cycling lanes that have already been installed. And he has introduced legislation that will prevent cyclists and their families from suing his government for any negligence that the courts might apply to his actions. In this milieu laws exist that prevent cyclists from riding on sidewalks and nothing is said about the dangers that might exist to cyclists on certain roads where there is no room on a roadway designed from motor vehicle traffic to accommodate a cyclist. Furthermore, whatever collisions occur, that cause cyclist injuries and deaths, are only reported in general terms, with no information about what factors caused them and what could be done to avoid them. This is the realm within which cycling is promoted as a means of reducing our use of fossil fuels and preventing global warming.

Hamilton Road Characteristics

Hamilton Road in London, Ontario is an example of many similar roadways in the Province of Ontario where cycling represents a danger and where no solution is forthcoming. Being an urban, arterial roadway Hamilton Road is a target for the Ford government’s attacks on urban cycling lanes. Yet, if cycling is expected to increase in the near future, a solution is needed to deal with the safety problems for cyclists on this roadway.

This Googlemaps view of Hamilton Road in London, Ontario show the relevant distance of about 4.5 kilometres from Maitland Street near downtown, to Gore Road in the south-east of the City.

While the numbers of tragedies are not large, three fatal cyclist collisions have occurred on Hamilton Road in London, Ontario since the year 2019. How and why these collisions occurred has never been revealed. The result is that cyclists continue to ride on this roadway without critical information that could save them from death.

Recent Studies on Hamilton Road

After the most recent fatality on June 19, 2024 two articles were posted on the Gorski Consulting website. In an article posted on June 21,2024 entitled “Hamilton Road Fatal Cyclist Collision – Characteristics of Cyclist Road Users” a number of photos were presented showing the characteristics cyclists riding on Hamilton Road.

A male cyclist is shown in October, 2024, riding westbound on Hamilton Road is not wearing a helmet while looking backwards to evaluate motor vehicle traffic behind him. With no room for a cycle in the curb lane this represents a constant danger.

On June 19, 204 an article was posted on the site entitled “Cyclist Collision on Hamilton Road in London Ontario – Safety Concerns Continue”. This article posted a table of the most recent observations of cyclists riding through Hamilton Road between 2021 and up to February 2023. Only 65 observations were available and that table is reproduced below.

The number of observations in the above table is very small yet some concerns were made obvious in the Summary. Only about 8.5% of observed cyclists were females. Often small percentages of female riders are an indication of a dangerous roadway. Just over 86% of observed cyclist were not wearing a helmet. This is lack of helmet use is greater than in other parts of the city. And 80% of the cyclists were not riding within the travel lanes of the road. If this study contained more observations there would be reason for concern, however one needs to be cautious when reporting on such low numbers of results.

Subsequent to the above Gorski Consulting has continued to make observations of cyclists on Hamilton Road and this has led to an updated table with a larger number of observations, as shown below. This data contains observations up to the end of November, 2024.

The number of observations in the above table is still small yet some concerns are visible in the Summary. Only about 12.8% of observed cyclists were females. This is similar to the percentages of female cyclists observed in other parts of the city. Just over 75% of observed cyclists were not wearing a helmet. This lack of helmet use is greater than in other parts of the city. And just over 72% of the cyclists were not riding within the travel lanes of the road, this is just slightly higher than what has been observed in other parts of the city. With the addition of these new observations the results have regressed toward the mean, as expected. Yet concerns are evident. Although more than 72% of cyclists were not riding on the roadway, there is information to suggest that the three fatally injured cyclists were stuck while within the travel lanes of Hamilton Road. Put another way, there were no fatalities of cyclists who were riding on the sidewalk even though almost three quarters of cyclists were observed on the sidewalk.

A cyclist is seen riding on the sidewalk of Hamilton Road as construction causes dangers for travelling in a lane designed for motor vehicle traffic. Yet, at this intersection, the cyclist must deal with dangers where motor vehicle drivers may see, or expect to see, a cyclist travelling “the wrong way”.

Discussion

Cycling groups have erected white “ghost bikes” at each of the three fatal cyclist collision sites on Hamilton Road. But beyond this cyclists have not publicly expressed their recognition that information about how and why these collisions occurred ought to be gathered and shared with the public, and especially cyclists.

This “ghost bike”, shown in a photo from September, 2022, still remains at the site of a fatal cyclist collision that occurred in June of 2019. While this reminder is admirable a better action would be to also commence actions to document the causes of such collisions and to make those causes known to the public and especially to cyclists.

Although the numbers of cyclist observations discussed in this article is small there is no other source of public information that provides objective data on the status of the cyclist safety problem on Hamilton Road. Up to now the articles posted on the Gorski Consulting website have had few reviews. Recent discussions in London suggest that the City of London has opted to conduct another construction project whereby lanes for motor vehicle traffic will be replaced by cycling lanes. This becomes problematic as, just recently, the Province of Ontario will require their permission to remove such motor vehicle lanes on arterial roads and that permission may not be granted by the Province. So how can improvements be made to protect cyclists?

Gorski Consulting is of the opinion that these developments need discussion. What is needed is a gathering of minds. Up to now there has been no gathering of individuals into an effective group who have cyclist safety as their top, and only, commitment.

Continued Lack Of Information About Cyclist Injuries And Deaths Continues to Confuse The Public

How important are cycling lanes for the safety of cyclists and what other factors may also pose dangers to them? Opinions about such matters are often publicly expressed but, in reality, few are able to analyse any objective data to support those opinions.

The Premier of the Province of Ontario, Doug Ford, caused a controversy recently when he announced that he would stop installations of cycling lanes on roads he deemed inappropriate and, even more, he would remove certain existing cycling lanes that were causing traffic congestion. These announcements raised the ire of many cyclists who conducted demonstrations and asked that petitions be signed to oppose Ford’s intensions.

Ford’s announcements are contrary to educated understanding that climate change is a threat to human existence. With the burning of fossil fuels humans are creating an atmosphere that will cause great hardship toward our existence. That understanding is the core reason why our society must change our habits from driving individual, gasoline-powered vehicles to using electric vehicles, mass transit, walking and riding bicycles. Ford demonstrates a cave-man mentality that does not appreciate this basic reality. In fact it is likely that Ford saw an opportunity to gain votes by recognizing that many drivers felt inconvenienced by the reality that they must change. By expanding the wedge between cyclists and motor vehicle drivers he could gain the political support of an important segment of Ontario’s population.

It has been announced that Ford’s government has now introduced legislation that would prevent cyclists or their families from suing the province for the injuries and deaths caused by the removal of bike lanes. This is essentially removing the courts’ ability to conduct an impartial assessment whether the government’s negligence has led to those injuries and deaths.

While Ford’s actions are raising alarms there is a continued lack of information about cyclist injuries and deaths that remains, unexplainably, beneath the public’s radar. No one, not even cyclists or cyclist groups, has raised a concern that no public information is being provided about how and why cyclist injuries and fatalities are occurring.

A webinar authored by Dr. Alison Macpherson in March of 2024 showed a disturbing reality about cyclist injuries in the Toronto area. Her data was gathered from emergency departments (ED) in Toronto between 2016 and 2021. As shown in the graphic below, copied from her presentation, there were 30,101 visits by cyclists to EDs and only 13% of these were related to incidents with motor vehicles. The remainder of 26,083, or 87% were related to “something else”, but no public information exists about what that “something else” is. Hospital personnel and other closed agencies, including the Ontario provincial government could easily obtain those details, and they likely have. But none of that has reached the public.

Recent research from Toronto hospital emergency departments reveals that 87% of cyclist visits are not related to motor vehicle incidents, but no information exists to explain how and why these cyclist injuries occurred.

A further concern shown in the above graphic is that, although there were 30,101 ED visits police reported only 2,362 of those. So less than 8% of those cyclist incidents were captured in police data. Even when police are involved it is simple to see from looking at official new media articles that essentially nothing of informative or educational value is passed on to the public about those incidents.

As case in point is a recent article posted on the CTV Kitchener website entitled “Waterloo reviews most collision-prove areas to improve safety”. Data was presented from a report developed by the City of Waterloo on various areas road safety within their jurisdiction. With respect to cyclist collisions the CTV article quoted Waterloo’s data that, in the past five years, there was a total of 53 cyclist collisions in their jurisdiction. From this data they developed the 10 most collision-prone roadways involving cyclists as noted below.

Top 10 Cyclist Collision Locations

  1.  Phillip Street between University Avenue West and Columbia Street – 2-Lane Road
  2.  Allen Street West at Park Street – All-way Stop Control
  3.  Albert Street at Hazel Street – 4-Legged Signalized
  4.  Bathurst Drive at McMurray Road – 4 Legged Signalized
  5.  Columbia Street at Hazel Street – 4-Legged Signalized
  6.  Albert Street between Columbia Street West and Cardill Crescent – 2-lane Road with On-street cycling lanes
  7.  Columbia Street West at Phillip Street – 4-leg Signalized
  8.  Laurelwood Drive at Old Oak Place – Two-Way Stop Control
  9.  Keats Way at Amos Avenue – Two-Way Stop Control
  10.  Columbia Street West at Beechlawn Drive – Two-Way Stop Control

Since there were only 53 reported cyclist collisions it would be difficult to imagine that reporting them in such fine detail would be useful, or even valid. Given the small number of total observations it is very likely that the Phillip Street location contained a small number of collisions, but the actual number was never revealed in the CTV news article. However, given the Hospital Emergency Department research by Dr. Macpherson (reported above) the Waterloo data likely does not include over 92% of cyclist injury incidents that may have actually occurred. So how useful is such reported data?

Despite this critical lack of data the CTV news article reported that the City of Waterloo had developed conclusions and recommendations from their study:

This illustrates how many officials are not addressing the fact that they are developing policy based on insufficient data. They are also confusing the public, and cyclists, about what is important in their transportation safety.

For an unexplainable reason the public, and cyclists specifically, are not recognizing that they do not have the critical data to understand how cyclists are being injured and killed. And they are not making any effort to demand that the data be collected and made publicly available. The impact of the removal of cycling lanes by Ontario’s Ford government cannot be properly assessed while basic and essential data remains a secret revealed only to the Ford administration.

The Passing of Dr. Robert Nelson Green

Regrettably I have no photos available showing Dr. Green during his many years of association with the UWO Accident Research Team. This photo, taken in 1989, shows the team composition including from left to right: Dr. Alan German, Dr. Robert Nowak, Maridon Duncanson, Paul Tiessen and myself.

It is with some sadness that I learned of the passing of Dr. Robert Nelson Green. Dr. Green was the medical consultant for the University of Western Ontario Multi-Disciplinary Accident Research Team during the 10 years that I was involved with that team between 1980 and 1990. I recall him fondly as a man of great energy. While team members would be dully working on their filings, analysis of photos, computer entry, etc. every so often Dr. Green would pop into the office and things would light up. While he mostly seemed to be in hurry he was also willing to stop and enter into deeper discussions about philosophical issues of injury causation, seat-belt effectiveness, roadway barrier matters and so many other related things. He was the one who introduced me to forensic work outside of the research carried out by the team. Some official data about him is attached below.

We all have a life to live and for some that is more acknowledged than for others. Regardless, we need to appreciate that the greatest attribute of our lives is that others look upon our memory with fondness, regardless of what official titles and important positions we may have held. While Dr. Green was officially successful, more importantly to me is that I remember him with fondness.

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