Update 26/09/2023:
The cyclist involved finally heard a response from Greater Manchester Police who revealed the report would result in no further action. Alex, who had described the force's approach to dealing with camera footage reports of dangerous driving as "opaque", said the outcome was "very depressing".
He told us: "Police responded that the light was not red so no further action. Very depressing response from Greater Manchester Police. Their exact words were: 'No further action was taken in relation to this matter. Unfortunately we could not see what the traffic light colour was for the Audi.' I replied to them that the light was red and showed a screen shot. Not heard anything back."
Original story follows...
A nurse in Manchester was cycling to work this morning when he was almost hit by a motorist who drove through red lights at a pedestrian crossing, and then went on to swear at the cyclist and deny that the light was red. Unfortunately for him, the cyclist had got it on camera.
Alex has been cycling to work ever since he became a nurse 10 years ago — and the route he was on today has been part of his daily Monday to Friday commute for almost a year now.
Coming up to Rochdale Road from Russet Road in Greater Manchester at just past 8AM today, he stopped and waited for the light to turn red at the pedestrian crossing, so he could join the main road safely. But as he was about to do so, an Audi driver jumped the light and came very close to hitting him.
When he let out an exclaim pointing at the state of events to the motorist, he was met with a deluge on abuse and denial.
"I'm unfortunately used to it, but in my opinion this was very good footage of someone doing something very naughty," Alex told road.cc.
Rochdale Road, Greater Manchester (Google Maps)
As visible in the video, the Audi driver is stationary and waiting for the drivers in front of him to pass. When the light turns amber, there's still another vehicle in front of him, which goes straight ahead just as the red light comes on.
"When I turned they decided to run the red light and almost hit me," he said.
He can be heard saying: "It's a red light mate!"
The driver replies with: "Oh f*** off! No, it f****** wasn't!"
Alex said: "The thing I think is a bit different about this is that the offending car is so clearly captured being stationary behind the red light and so they have very intentionally driven through it. It was no simple accident or episode of inattention."
Russet Road, Greater Manchester (Google Maps)
He told road.cc that he has submitted the footage to Greater Manchester police and is awaiting a response, but his experience with them has been "hit and miss" so far.
"If I had to describe their responses in one word it would be opaque," said Alex.
> Near Miss of the Day turns 100 - Why do we do the feature and what have we learnt from it?
Over the years road.cc has reported on literally hundreds of close passes and near misses involving badly driven vehicles from every corner of the country – so many, in fact, that we’ve decided to turn the phenomenon into a regular feature on the site. One day hopefully we will run out of close passes and near misses to report on, but until that happy day arrives, Near Miss of the Day will keep rolling on.
If you’ve caught on camera a close encounter of the uncomfortable kind with another road user that you’d like to share with the wider cycling community please send it to us at info [at] road.cc or send us a message via Twitter or the road.cc Facebook page.
If the video is on YouTube, please send us a link, if not we can add any footage you supply to our YouTube channel as an unlisted video (so it won't show up on searches).
Please also let us know whether you contacted the police and if so what their reaction was, as well as the reaction of the vehicle operator if it was a bus, lorry or van with company markings etc.
> What to do if you capture a near miss or close pass (or worse) on camera while cycling
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86 comments
You only need one motorist to stop and the other motorists behind, who would have driven through the red light without a care in the world, grudgingly have to stop too.
That's the only difference.
You only need one motorist to stop and the other motorists behind, who would have driven through the red light without a care in the world, grudgingly have to stop too.
That's the only difference.
Ever seen a car parked on the pavement and wondered how it got there?
funny that our pavements are full of cars parked on them, but they don't drive on pavements? how did that get there? do that drop from the sky?
Just wanted to say that I cycle to and from work Monday thru Friday. About six or seven miles each way. I've been doing this for about twelve years and I have "jumped" a red light once (in my defence, there was nobody crossing, no traffic joining at the junction, and I'd been distracted worrying about a van approaching from behind me at speed). I have never intentionally crossed a red light.
OT, but it does seem that we've had a lot of one post wonders today...
I thought that too - I'm beginning to wonder if it's graduation time from troll school.
It would be interesting if Road.cc mods can see the IP addresses being posted from and compare. Maybe a certain PBU or maybe should that be SBBAU, (Should Be Banned Again User) might have gotten his new NordVPN deal and switching to a different country every few minutes.
Although this also happens when one of Road.cc's tweets gets pushed into the time lines of certain people, especially if mentioning Vine or Mikey.
If there is a traffic light alone in a forest and there isn't a cyclist to run it, is it a red light?
Lack of awareness or maybe arrogance from the cyclist, but equally bad from the Audi driver who completely over reacted.
The best thing about cycling is being able to jump red lights - best way to make up time.
Bullshit, troll.
Strange, last week spoke to a lycra clad cyclist after running a red light, asked him if he was going to do the same at the next set, reply was, that's only for you lot, then proceeds to cycle slowly in front of me, last night, lycra clad man thinks the rules don't apply to him either, when I,m turning right at a roundabout, he thinks it ok to keep on going and enters on the left, nearly colliding into the side of my car. Unfortunately, it's these idiots who give cyclists a bad image, because the selfish individuals who have no regards for roads safety and pedestrians.
A bad image? Is that like how all the speeding drivers give ALL drivers a bad image?
Isn't it strange that if you specify a group of people to be an out-group, that you can them blame them all for the actions of some of them? I saw an angry, red-headed, jeans clad BMW driver the other day who didn't indicate when turning and then used a rude gesture at me as I was trying to cross the road (as a ped). It's people like that who give all red-heads a bad name.
A squirrel once yelled obscentities at me, and someone told me a very violent one was trapped people in their houses once. Can't trust any of 'em.
It's the jeans-clad squirrels you really need to be careful of.
Or should that be the red-head squirrels?
Great first post?
And hopefully last.
Thanks for shining a light on that, Osram.
Not disputing the existence of eejits on bikes - or even selfish eejits who answer back and think the rules don't apply to them. Or nearly hit you. And in some places (London, people tell me) this is definitely very salient eg. running red lights. (Perhaps a bit more policing would help there?) Luckily they're very low risk to you in your car (or even to pedestrians) - especially because they cycle slowly (relative to cars). Better than them being in a car, which they almost certainly drive (and likely badly). Even those out on a jolly in their lyrca would be otherwise doing something - and probably drive to it - wouldn't they?
That's another reason why I would like more places in the UK to look like this - it makes it safer AND more convenient for everyone - including those driving, honestly! Also it relies less on exhortations to humans to improve their natures, or the hope of "police it better".
Unfortunately the several "bad cyclist" stereotypes are out there already. Given the tiny number of cyclists and the fact that only a few of us come to the committee meetings us other cyclists* lack the resources to fix them. Any more that you'll be sorting all the red-light running / drunk / unlicenced / speeding / pavement drivers.
* But perhaps we all look the same to those not cycling?
Bingo-cards out everyone!
First off – you’ve mentioned Lycra twice. Why? Cycling (at speed) is a physical activity, and some form of active wear is objectively the correct kit for the job. If I did my commute in jeans, I’d need skin grafts by the time I got to work. I bet you don’t give the gym-goers at your local gym shit for wearing active wear, or shout at the kids on your local five-a-side for wearing football kit. Using “Lycra” as a pejorative just makes it sound like you’ve got an axe to grind and undermines any argument you might have.
Secondly – this whole “giving other cyclists a bad name” nonsense. Not only is collective responsibility total rubbish, it apparently only applies to cyclists. The average driver behaves worse and more dangerously than the average cyclist by every metric we have access to – KSI fault, speed compliance, rule breaking, etc. How come they aren’t giving you a bad name, but RLJ-ing cyclists are apparently giving me a bad name? If we held drivers to anything like the same standard that drivers think cyclists should be held to, we’d have banned cars years ago.
Clearly, the two cyclists you mention are dickheads, but that’s not due to their wardrobe choice, and it’s nothing to do with me.
You lost your argument the moment you said "lycra clad cyclist"...
Why did you run a red light to speak to a cyclist?
As you seem to imply you were in a car (cycle slowly in front of me), do you go and chase down other drivers who run red lights as well and ask them whether they will do it again?
Also can you explain the roundabout story better. It seems you were on the right of the island as you are turning right, surely if he was coming from the left (onto the island), there would be plenty of room for both of you? I might also point you to UK Dashcam on youtube. Normally a third of all videos are cars entering a roundabout and either colliding or almost colliding with other vehicles. Unfortunately it is these idiots who give drivers a bad image, because the selfish individuals who have no regards for roads safety and pedestrians (and cyclists).
There's more than enough selfish, narcissistic sociopaths out there who endanger and take the lives of cyclists and pedestrians while driving. There's plenty of us on this forum who have the scars to show as a result of self entitled, aggressive behaviours demonstrated daily by motorists. The numbers affected by shoddy cycle craft pale into insignificance when compared to those affected by shoddy road craft.
The fact he is wearing lycra is neither her or there. What fat people in cars do not understand is that I do you are cycling more than 5 miles then wearing lycra makes a big difference in the effort you need when you pedal.
A bit like this charmer yesterday who called me a c**t, oh but wait it was a cyclist... and he then proceeded through the next red which was a pedestrian crossing, but then it wasn't busy with people, it's not like it was somewhere like.... Trafalgar Square. First snap shows him literally staring at the cab in the lane next to me.
Edited for a spelling mistake, hope that is OK.
Been a while since I had the brompton out to cycle from Charing Cross to Chiswick. I had forgotten how appalling the behaviour of a large number of cyclists is in London is.
File under "man with questionable shoe and trouser pairing turns out to be an arrogant bully"?
Interesting though - I've not noticed the shirt cycling demographic so much. (Probably a bad idea to start trying to group demographics based on clothing, but...) I'm the wrong side of the (tram) tracks most of the time though!
Don't know London but do you think that policing would improve behaviour (and how much would be needed), or that the infra design contributes, or it's just because this is a relatively new thing (provision for cycling), or "bloody Londoners", or some other reason?
Why does what the guy is wearing come into it? That is no different to someone bemoaning "lycra clad" cyclists. Was it equally questionable that I was wearing jeans?
Policing would likely have limited impact in the same way as roads policing in general. Though if it were carried out more it would likely have a positive effect on pedestrian safety if regular cyclists (assuming this guy commutes here a lot) know they may get stopped/fined.
Other than that I would say it is a general arrogance. The infra is much improved, from Charing Cross to Chiswick probably 80% of the 6.8 miles is on cycle ways and it is now even possible to bypass Hammersmith roundabout, which is a godsend. I would say arrogance becuase probably 50% or more of cyclists using this route blatantly ignore traffic signals, including those specific to the cycle ways. Like it or not, this does reflect on the opinion people have as cyclists in general, much the same as many on road.cc seem inclined to with motorists.
(The reason for the clothes mention is "why would what he's riding / using to travel with come into it"? On which questions below.)
Thanks! Again, I don't know London but the stories suggest that the new cycling provision has (somewhat...) increased cycling - so people who maybe didn't before are now doing so.
So would you say this arrogance is just that Londoners are more arrogant in general (more of them on bikes, more arrogant cyclists), or that the arrogant preferentially take up cycling, or that getting on a bike makes you more arrogant?
As to ignoring red lights - would this be something that they might do as pedestrians also? Maybe they still feel it's the same kind of activity PLUS they now have a chance of getting across bigger junctions which would not have felt safe when on foot?
Serious question - I think that getting in a car will change how you feel with respect to others so I imagine it's possible getting on a bike could. Perhaps a perceived lack of feedback from the law as you mention? That of course also applies to motorists (illegal driving is under-policed) but there will likely be less policing of cyclists (albeit there are fewer rules).
EDIT - I bet that "human laziness, carelessness, selfishness and arrogance" applies most places. I agree that due to our street / road environment the demographics of those cycling will be skewed - but that should be becoming less so in London I'd have thought?
Also I think conflict is likely to be heightened in places "in transition" e.g. London. Where there really are tons of cyclists somehow this doesn't seem to be a major public issue though.
Maybe that's because where cycling is normal we don't specially notice bad behaviour by "cyclists" - they're just more normal "people being selfish" occurrences? Perhaps cyclists in NL are less likely to be stressed / have their "war face" on (as they might be in the UK)? Of course in NL it could be simply that cyclists have also become the bullies (like motorists here) but I've read NL is rated as a very good place to walk in.
Swap cyclist for driver and that is a maneuver I have seen many times that not only doesn't elicit a "warning" from the other driver, but in fact is encouraged with a lights-flash.
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