Times Colonist

Montreal cyclists fume at soaring fines

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL — Springtime in Montreal is synonymous with terrasses, flowers and cyclists, but this year bike lovers will be in for a nasty surprise when the updated Highway Safety Code comes into law.

Cyclist groups and the city’s new bike-friendly administra­tion are criticizin­g a provincial bill that increases fines by more than 400 per cent for seemingly mild violations such as not having enough reflectors on pedals.

“We are pretty disappoint­ed in this bill,” said city councillor Marianne Giguere, who is heavily involved in Montreal’s cycling projects.

Cycling politics are big in Montreal and the city prides itself on its 850 kilometres of bike lanes, half of which are maintained in the winter.

While Montreal is upset about the new road rules, the changes aren’t all bad, the city says.

Quebec agreed with Montreal’s suggestion to allow cyclists to cross a road when the pedestrian light signal is on. Moreover, the province accepted to end the practice of removing points on someone’s driver’s licence when they are caught burning red lights on a bike.

But Quebec refused to allow bikers to turn right on a red light, or to use the so-called “Idaho stop,” meaning a cyclist can treat a stop sign as a yield, and slow down before crossing rather than making a full stop and putting a foot on the ground.

There is no logic to treating cyclists the same way as car drivers, Giguere said.

“I think it scares the authoritie­s in [Quebec City] to give the impression they are favouring cyclists over drivers,” she said.

Cyclists who break the road law currently face fines between $15 and $30. With the adoption of the new rules, they will be liable for fines from $80 to $100 — a 433 per cent increase.

“It’s a staggering increase,” Giguere said.

Magali Bebronne, a spokeswoma­n for Velo Quebec, a large cyclist advocacy group in the province, said increasing fines by more than 400 per cent and refusing to relax the laws for cyclists is “illogical and exaggerate­d.”

 ??  ?? A cyclist rides down a bike path along the St. Lawrence River in Montreal.
A cyclist rides down a bike path along the St. Lawrence River in Montreal.

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