| Seven
weeks ago Bo Hebenstreit's life veered off course when
the cyclist was assaulted on Campbell Avenue. The day
before he had won the CA/NV State Hill Climbing
Championship; now he was lying on the side of the road
bloody and bruised, with a broken rib and a sprained
ankle.
"I was so messed up," Hebenstreit says. "I can't
remember a whole lot of what happened. I was on the
ground with two guys kicking and stomping me like you
see in a gangster movie. They kicked me in the head.
They broke my helmet."
Hebenstreit does, however, remember how the nightmare
began.
It was Sept. 27 during the evening commute hours.
Hebenstreit was riding his bicycle on Campbell Avenue
toward the busy San Tomas Expressway intersection when a
car with two young men in their late teens to early 20s
drove by yelling at him. As the traffic came to a stop,
Hebenstreit pedaled up next to the green Chevrolet four
door and asked the men if they knew him.
"That's all I said. There was no cussing or other
words exchanged," he says. But that brief exchange
exploded minutes later into an incident of road rage
between car and cyclist.
At the next red light the men opened the passenger
door right into Hebenstreit's path as he pedaled by. The
Campbell resident had to swerve to get out of the way,
but then made a U-turn, got in front of the car and
confronted the men, saying, "What the hell are you
doing?" The two men jumped out of the car and tackled
Hebenstreit to the ground.
"They threw my bike off the road so it wasn't in the
way and started beating me," Hebenstreit says. "I wasn't
confrontational after they got out of the car. I was
just trying to protect my head and face."
His riding partner, who witnessed the incident,
called 911, but the men drove off before the police
arrived. They are still at large.
Although there is continuous coverage of cyclists'
deaths, riders say it's the rash of daily incidents
between motorists and bicyclists that needs to be
brought to the forefront.
"I think the atmosphere has gotten worse," says
Campbell resident Dennis Hopp, the Men's Elite Team
captain for the Los Gatos Bicycle Racing Club. "I've
been competitively riding and racing for 14 years, and
the first couple of years there weren't a whole lot of
us out here. So we were more of a novelty. Someone would
see you on a bike and actually wave. Now that doesn't
happen."
Hurried motorists see Hopp as an impediment on the
road, someone who belongs on the shoulder and off the
streets, he says—or even worse, as "sport" for motorists
and passengers, who intentionally open their doors into
the path of oncoming cyclists, who are often traveling
at up to 30 miles per hour. And there are those jutting
hands, as individuals try to push the rider down or
smack the cyclist on the back for "fun," Hopp says.
This is what almost happened to Marc Franklin as he
was leaving Willow Glen on his bicycle to see his
parents.
"I was passed too closely by an old compact sedan,
with three guys in their mid-20s. One of them yelled at
me," Franklin says. "I said nothing, did nothing. But I
caught them at the light and heard them laughing and
joking around. I thought they had moved on to another
subject. But then we got the green and for just a second
I thought they would do something."
That's when his veering to the right and having to
clip his foot back into the pedal may have saved him
from injury, Franklin says.
"As the car passed, I could see the rear passenger
sitting on the window. He was either going to push me or
slap me. I'm pretty sure he wanted to do something
because he was halfway out of the window when he passed
me."
He says this mentality appears to be pervasive among
teens and adults who have forgotten that there are legal
ramifications to their actions—being charged with
assault.
"Push a cyclist down and you may be subjecting him to
a few cuts and bruises or broken bones or even worse,"
Franklin says. "I think it's starting to get to a place
where assaulting cyclists is becoming a 'fun' hate
crime."
And there have been other incidents.
Cyclist Rupert Brauch says he is often honked at and
yelled at by motorists because they don't think he
belongs on the road. Several times, the Campbell
resident says, cars have pulled up alongside him and
forced him to the curb.
"I try not to react to motorists when they play games
like that because I don't want the situation to
escalate, as it did in Bo's case," he says, "But it's
not easy to remain calm when people endanger you like
that."
Earlier this summer Brauch was even shot at with a
pellet gun from John D. Morgan Park as he was riding on
San Tomas Expressway.
Scott Starling is also part of the league of
cyclists, who might be considered the Bravehearts of the
road, experiencing countless incidents during his 11
years of riding and racing in the Bay Area. One notable
encounter was with a woman who had pulled over onto the
San Tomas Expressway bike lane to complete her
paperwork.
"I rode past her in the lane of traffic because I had
no choice and motioned to her with a raised palm, sort
of a 'What are you doing taking up the bike lane?' I
made no vulgar gesture. She was so enraged by this
harmless motion that she started her car and pulled in
front of me perpendicular to the bike lane at the next
merge lane. She got out of her car, shook her fist and
screamed at me, yelling, 'Bikes have no right to be on
the road with cars.'"
Hopp says over the years he has learned to tune it
out even though he, too, has had his share of
vehicle-versus-cyclist run-ins, including being hit
three times—the last in 1998 when someone turned in
front of him.
"I was scraped up pretty good," he says. "The guy saw
me but decided to turn anyway."
Hopp says the driver mentality has gotten so bad that
"I'm almost to the point now where if someone doesn't
honk at me or cut me off, I haven't completed my day."
A riding partner of Hopp's, Campbell resident Richard
Todd, says, "I've really learned you can't be out there
flying the flag for all cyclists. You just have to
ignore it. You can't take it personally. You can say
something to these people, shrug it off and 10 minutes
later they can come back and run you off the road. We
simply get no respect. They are really willing to murder
us just because we are kind of in their way."
Finding Balance
Todd and Hopp say they don't have a roadmap for
changing the confrontational situation between motorists
and cyclists but that educating motorists on the rights
of bicyclists is critical to ameliorating the problem.
Many drivers think the cyclists should ride on the
shoulder. They remember being taught as children to ride
their bicycles against the traffic and follow a
different set of rules than someone driving a car. But
that's not correct, says Campbell resident Henry Wadler,
a member of the Campbell Bike Advisory Committee that
was established in 1994 to provide guidance to the city
in the development of bike policies and programs.
"Motorists look at the cyclist on the road and feel
he's taking up space that belongs to them. They haven't
heard of the 'share the road' method," Wadler says.
"There is a lack of education, and some motorists simply
become irritated because the cyclist is slowing them
down."
Wadler says cyclists have the same rights as
motorists. They are governed by the same laws—required
to stop at red lights and stop signs and indicate when
they are turning.
In fact, Wadler says, last year cyclists tried to get
a new law passed that would give riders a little more
road room, but the California Highway Patrol opposed it.
"We wanted to clarify some issues," Wadler says, "and
get bikes out of the bike lane and give them a little
more room. Bike lanes can be dangerous because motorists
think that's the only place they should be."
A bicyclist having to keep all the way to the right
is also a common misconception among motorists and can
be dangerous for a rider, Brauch adds. It's not uncommon
for someone in a parked car to unknowingly open a door
into a cyclist's path while he pedals by in the bike
lane.
Another problem with staying to the far right, Brauch
says, are motorists pulling out of driveways or side
streets into bike lanes without checking for riders.
It's better for the cyclists to stay more visible by
riding slightly to the left of the bike lane, which
makes them more discernible to turning motorists.
And Hopp adds, a cyclist can be in any lane as long
as the lane is clear and the rider is going the same
speed as the traffic.
"If we want to go into the turn lane, we have the
full right to do that, but cars don't understand," he
says.
But the riders acknowledge that it's a two-way
street. Cyclists also have to do their part and act
responsibly on the roads.
Part of the problem is that regular cyclists—those
who commute daily—and know the rules of the road are
lumped in with the ones who don't, the men say.
These are individuals who run the stop signs and get
"crazy" in traffic. They give us a bad reputation
because of their poor judgment and behavior, says Todd,
who's been riding and racing for 20 years. These riders
don't wear the proper gear—no helmets or lights when
riding in the dark—and they aren't courteous to
motorists on the road. It adds up to motorists
stereotyping all cyclists as being inconsiderate.
Mark Rodamaker, former president of the Alto Velo
Bicycling Racing Club, the same club Bob Hebenstreit
belongs to, agrees with Hopp.
"Poor behavior on a bicycle seldom endangers those
not on bikes," he says. "It does create a poor opinion
of cyclists, so drivers may take it out on the next
cycling group they encounter."
Hopp says, "If you make nice to cars, if you give
them a wave, hand signal that says, 'Hey I'm here,' you
get a great reaction. People smile."
But it takes more than a wave, Wadler says. Law
enforcement needs to be more sympathetic toward the
rider.
Limited Support
To Wadler, the CHP's opposition to giving the
bicyclists more road space is another part of the
education problem. "They don't feel we belong on the
road," he says.
This lack of support from police agencies is common
sentiment among bicyclists no matter where they ride on
the peninsula. Hopp says he was in a group ride when a
car "buzzed" the bicyclists. Several of the riders made
some hand gestures and the driver became angry and
started to run the group off the road. The riders called
the police and when they arrived, the authorities didn't
take the side of the cyclists, Hopp says.
"We are not out there to cause trouble," Todd adds.
"The one thing we really need on our side are these
police agencies to back up the cyclists. A lot of the
time they think the cyclists instigated something. I
tell you sometimes that happens, but a lot of times
nothing happens like that. It's a general animosity
toward cyclists that is causing the problem."
Bryan Buck is quite familiar with limited support.
While he was on a ride in South San Jose, a 70-year-old
woman made a left turn right in front of Buck as he
entered the intersection at about 30 miles per hour. She
didn't have her turn signal on and stopped the car in
the intersection, completely blocking it.
"A lot happened in the half-second I had to respond,"
Buck says, "but I ended up hitting the car, flying over
the trunk about 2025 feet in the air in a tuck. I
hit the asphalt, rolled and came up on my feet."
The woman's husband screamed at Buck that he was "a
crazy bicycle rider, out of control" and threatened to
call the police, which Buck insisted he do. When the CHP
arrived, no one asked Buck if he was OK or offered any
assistance. He eventually settled the case with the
driver's insurance company.
In Campbell, the authorities have an active bike
patrol, and Campbell Police Capt. David Dehaan says many
of the officers are bicyclists and understand the risks
and difficulties of sharing the roadway with motorists.
"We do educate motorists that it is their
responsibility to give way to bicyclists who are
lawfully riding on the roadway. We encourage motorists
and bicyclists to extend courtesy to each other."
That right of way still is a long way in the making,
Todd says. And he wonders when those who are commuting
in vehicles that don't pollute the air or clog the
freeways will get the respect he believes they deserve.
"I wonder how many times Lance will have to win the
Tour de France to get more respect out there?" Todd
says.
But hope might be on the horizon. At least that's
what Brad Harris discovered during a solo ride when a
small car darted in front of him and cut a right turn
just inches from his front wheel.
He says he never swore at the driver, but let out a
loud, "Hey!"
A few minutes later the car returned, causing Harris'
heart to beat a little faster.
"You can understand my surprise and instantaneous
anxiety when the same car drives up next to me, matching
my speed, with the windows rolled down," he says. "My
panic quickly abated, however, when I realized the poor
woman was sincerely trying to apologize to me. I was
completely taken back. In all the years I've ridden and
commuted, the hundreds of times I've had cars cut in
front of me, even been hit on a couple of occasions, no
one has ever apologized until this moment."
"It was in that instant that I realized that was all
I really wanted," he says, "some minor acknowledgement
that I exist and that you are not actually intending to
kill me."
The Campbell police are offering a reward for any
information leading to the arrest of the two men who
assaulted Bo Hebenstreit. Contact Campbell police
detective Joe Cefalu at 408.866.2179. |