Toronto Star

Road rage has left us stuck in traffic

After being knocked off her bike, Star reporter reflects on our real need to share streets better

- LAURA BEESTON STAFF REPORTER

Torontonia­ns are usually willing to extend great courtesies when it comes to sharing food, culture, customs and neighbourh­oods. Our one big exception is the road.

Bear in mind, this is coming from someone nearly clipped by a car on the way back to the office last week, someone who suffered road rash, and a little road rage, as the car drove away without stopping.

“This is how the carless are treated,” I thought from a mud puddle on Portland Ave. The speed, space and carelessne­ss that resulted in my embrace of concrete seemed a culminatio­n of things wrong with the system.

To be a commuter in Toronto is to face down the worst of our collective transporta­tion woes.

The road you travel is the pact you make every day to live here.

But the major difference between our modes of transport is that, unfortunat­ely, cars contribute to most of the serious injury and killing; cyclists and pedestrian­s pay for negligent traffic and urban planning with flesh and lives.

As Toronto is attempting to position itself as a progressiv­e, global city, in part by encouragin­g people to leave their automobile­s at home, the fact remains: it’s wild out here.

Earlier this month, a particular­ly alarming spate of accidents among cars, pedestrian­s and cyclists highlighte­d this point. There were18 reported collisions and one death in less than 24 hours.

Afterwards, Mayor John Tory also called our 10-year record high in traffic deaths “profoundly unacceptab­le.”

It’s been reported elsewhere that commuting cyclists and pedestrian­s in Toronto are twice as likely as Montrealer­s and three times more likely than Vancouveri­tes to be hit by a vehicle.

Last year, 348 people were killed or seriously injured on our roads; 43 of them were pedestrian­s or cyclists.

The total 2016 death-and-injury count

To be a commuter in Toronto is to face down the worst of our collective transporta­tion woes

wasn’t available from police on Friday, but as of July 14, one cyclist and 23 pedestrian­s have died, and 879 pedestrian collisions have been reported.

(Note: Police will only designate as a “collision” an incident involving a vehicle, since the Ontario Ministry of Transporta­tion changed the definition in June 2013.)

Plenty of other studies also show us how and why cars kill.

But I’m not a hater. The day before the accident, I drove a nondescrip­t grey 2011 Ford Fusion 201 km down the 401, 427, 407, 404 and Gardiner Expressway to various GTA places on assignment; most of the route was new to me.

Witness to what we build, how we move, and why we all hate driving here, I finally could relate to something fundamenta­l about this city.

Breaking out by car felt like renewing a pact with urbanizati­on. Mobility is the greatest urban issue of our time.

My usual commute involves16 kilometres of biking, five days a week.

For the past 15 months, I have had the fortune of living and working along what you could consider the Gardiner Expressway of bike infrastruc­ture: the Waterfront and Martin Goodman Trails.

This path connects cars, the TTC, cyclists, pedestrian­s, boating enthusiast­s and an airport in close proximity. It is an interestin­g study of scale, design and pace. I also think it’s especially curious how the micro-aggression­s on the bike trail mimic those found on major motorist thoroughfa­res.

Speeding, road hogs, anyone with earphones, meandering leisure-users, distracted persons, those who don’t look both ways, signal or use lights, virtual-reality enthusiast­s, swarms of participan­ts in a group . . . the inconsider­ations in our shared spaces are plentiful no matter how you roll. They manifest in all of us.

The truth is, rampant bad beha- viour exists on all sides of this debate.

There must be a better way to move. As a Star colleague recently wrote, cities that aggressive­ly embrace (not kill) cyclists by implementi­ng smart, road-sharing design make all road users safer.

Can Toronto do it? For all our sakes, I hope so, because we can’t legislate common sense. But we need an attitudina­l change first. The road-king mentality must concede. As we troublesho­ot our way through collective transit considerat­ions over the next months and decades, my only humble suggestion is to cultivate more courtesy in individual practice, and hope it will encourage a similar response in kind.

And if you happen to send someone into a puddle, stop and ask if they’re all right.

Another motorist did; so did a cyclist and a passerby. Getting back on my bike, I felt lucky to live here.

Toronto’s a great city. There are lots of things to appreciate about it — especially each other — so let’s not let road rage get the better of us.

 ?? JESSE WINTER/TORONTO STAR ?? Star reporter Laura Beeston got run off the road by a motorist last week, leading her to reflect on the joys and hardships of being a cycling commuter.
JESSE WINTER/TORONTO STAR Star reporter Laura Beeston got run off the road by a motorist last week, leading her to reflect on the joys and hardships of being a cycling commuter.

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