Call Now: 800-956-2905
O'Sullivan Logo Home Page
Home
Areas of Practice
FAQ/Videos
About Us
Contact
Blog
Testimonials
Personal Injury Law Firm Home Page
Law Journal

Archive for June, 2010

The Heat Is On Denver Bicyclists!

Monday, June 28th, 2010

If you ride your bike in Denver, you need to be alert.  The Denver Police have been giving tickets to bicyclists who are breaking traffic laws.  I’ve noticed that over the past few weeks they have been ticketing riders who are hit by cars, even when the cyclists were not at fault for the accidents.  Obviously, it is important for all riders to follow local traffic laws.  But, it seems like Denver police have decided to issue tickets to bicycle riders for the most minor infractions.  According to a Denver Post article , a police officer was ticketing cyclists on East 14th Avenue between Broadway and Lincoln Street for riding on the sidewalk, even though there is no bike lane on this busy, one-way street.

For the record, it’s OK to ride your bike on a sidewalk in Denver if you are within a block of parking your bike and are traveling 6 mph or less.

Like many of you, I have multiple bikes – one for mountain biking, one for road rides, and a fun cruiser for commuting to work and riding around the park with my kids.  I try to ride my bike to work whenever I can, and I can feel tension rising between bike riders and cars.  As more and more people take to the streets on their bikes, it is clear that we need more biking lanes.  Call your local city council person and ask that he or she make more bike lanes a priority.

RTD Strikes Again

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

On Sunday June 6, 2010 a 76 year old bicycle rider was run down by an RTD bus on the 16th Street Mall.  Bicycles are normally not allowed on the mall except on Sundays and only in the bus lanes.  According to recent reports the bus driver was cited for careless driving resulting in serious bodily injury because he failed to use his brakes to avoid the cyclist.  Our thoughts are with gentleman who was hit by the bus and we hope for his speedy recovery.

This is now at least the fourth serious RTD accident in the past few months and there are almost no consequences for RTD because it is protected by the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act.  This law protects RTD from the real damages that they cause when they hurt someone.  For example, if you are hit by a bus the most that RTD has to pay is $150,000.00.  If two or more people are hurt in an accident with an RTD bus the most RTD has to pay is $600,000.oo.  That total is not per person, it is per accident.  This means that if a bus driver rolls a bus full of passengers all of the injured passengers must some how divide the $60o,000.00.

This law essentially allows RTD to hire and retain employees who are not qualified or who are reckless because the consequences are capped.  Enough is enough.  The Colorado legislature must act now to make the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act more equitable.  Visit the Colorado Legislature’s website to find and contact your local representative ask that they change the law now.