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off piste
April 5th, 2007, 07:04 AM
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/04/04/BAGF7P12RN23.DTL


Minivan's rude introduction to Critical Smash

Phillip Matier, Andrew Ross (matierandross@sfchronicle.com)
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/04/04_t/ba_m_r_0001_kr_t.gif (http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/chronicle/archive/2007/04/04/BAGF7P12RN23.DTL&o=0&type=printable)


It was supposed to be a birthday night out for the kids in San Francisco, but instead turned into a Critical Mass horror show -- complete with a pummeled car, a smashed rear window and little children screaming in terror.
The spontaneous Critical Mass bike rides, in which thousands of free-spirited cyclists roam the city, have been a fixture on the last Friday night of the month since the early 1990s. But even bike-weary cops, who have seen their share of traffic disturbances and minor skirmishes, weren't prepared for what happened during the latest exercise of pedal power.
Here's the story:
Susan Ferrando, her husband, their two children and three preteens had come to San Francisco from Redwood City to celebrate the birthday of Ferrando's 11-year-old daughter. They went to Japantown, where they enjoyed shopping and taking in the blooming cherry blossoms.
Things took a turn for the worse at about 9 p.m., when the family was leaving Japantown -- just as the party of about 3,000 bikers was winding down its monthly red-lights-be-damned ride through the city.
Suddenly, Ferrando said, her car was surrounded by hundreds of cyclists.
Not being from San Francisco, Ferrando thought she might have inadvertently crossed paths with a bicycle race and couldn't figure out why the police, who she had just passed, hadn't warned her.
Confusion, however, quickly turned to terror, she said, when the swarming cyclists began wildly circling around and then running into the sides of her Toyota van.
Filled with panic, Ferrando said, she started inching forward until coming to a stop at Post and Gough streets, where she was surrounded by bikers on all sides.
A biker in front blocked her as another biker began pounding on the windshield. Another was pounding on her window. Another pounded the other side.
"It seemed like they were using their bikes as weapons,'' Ferrando said. One of the bikers then threw his bike -- shattering the rear window and terrifying the young girls inside.
All the while, Ferrando was screaming, "There are children in this car! There are children in this car!"
She had the presence of mind to dial 911 on her cell phone -- and within minutes, the squad of motorcycle cops who were assigned to keep an eye on the ride descended on the scene.
The cyclists were loudly demanding that Ferrando be arrested for hit and run.
According to police, Ferrando had allegedly tapped one of the cyclists' tires.
When the alleged bicycle victim was approached, however, he said he wasn't hurt. He also refused to give his name or any other information.
Then, after a few swear words, the alleged victim took off on his bike while the rest of the crowd continued to yell at both the cops and the van.
Sgt. Ed Callejas -- the lead cop on the scene and a veteran of Critical Mass rides since their inception -- said he'd never seen anything like it before.
"I've seen the bikes swarm cars, and scratch them as they go by. I've seen guys get out of their cars and start fighting with the bikers, but if you had seen the faces on those little girls in tears,'' Callejas said. "All I could do was apologize for what they had been through."
The sergeant suggested that Ferrando write a letter to the mayor.
Estimated damage to the car: $5,300.
For Callejas and other cops assigned to the bike ride, Critical Mass has long been a study in contradictions.
For starters, San Francisco is a "green" city, and bike riding is about as green as you can get -- yet residents and commuters complain endlessly about getting trapped in the rides.
The city tries to ignore the unplanned rides, but there are always cops on hand to monitor the gatherings, even though any kind of traffic planning is impossible because no route is announced.
And even though the rides are held every month, Critical Mass has no organized leadership -- so no one can be held accountable for the group's actions.
In 1997, then-Mayor Willie Brown tried to control the rides. The result was anarchy and mass arrests.
Since then, the rides have shrunk in size. The city's generally hands-off attitude leaves cops as little more than bystanders.
"We sit there and they just go right through the red lights,'' Sgt. Callejas said. "What else can we do? Arrest one rider while 500 keep going?
"The only way to control this is through a massive effort by police and the Sheriff's Department,'' he said.
As for reaction from City Hall, Mayor Gavin Newsom said such acts of violence -- if true -- "only serve to undermine the worthwhile message of Critical Mass, which is to raise the awareness of bike transportation issues."
The mayor also said that -- if the charges are grounded -- he expected the attackers to be "punished to the greatest extent of the law."

Superb Man
April 5th, 2007, 09:22 AM
Roadies! Need I say more?

off piste
April 5th, 2007, 09:25 AM
Roadies! Need I say more?

Hmmmmm. Mountain Bike Critical Mass' in ATV infested non-motorized areas......:rolleyes:

Superb Man
April 5th, 2007, 10:23 AM
Roadies.

heckler
April 5th, 2007, 11:08 AM
I would place good money that ove rhalf of those clowns are on mtbs. They just happen to be on pavement.

Scary stuff. They are lucky the Dad didn't jump out of the car wth a gun and just start popping them. What are people thinking?

bdee
April 5th, 2007, 11:25 AM
Hippies.

"Hippies, they say they want to save the earth but all they do is smell bad and smoke pot" - Eric Cartman.

Slider
April 5th, 2007, 11:30 AM
Anarchists, more likely. Mob rule.

Slider

bdee
April 5th, 2007, 11:36 AM
I'm not sure that's the literal definition of anarchy. Maybe the popularized version. I think it was most likely just pissed off hipster college kids who needed a riot.

White riot, I wanna riot, white riot, I wanna riot of my own! Clash

Sucks to be that family regardless of the motivation.

Reminds of one of two CMs I ever rode with. These guys at school decided to hold one in 98 in Greensboro, NC. I felt like an ass for holding up people as they just wanted to get home at 5:00. One kid got his bike run over by a stereotypical joe dirt redneck in a T top Camaro (no kidding).

The best part was when the group was handing out fliers to people stuck in traffic. The flyer read "more trees, less cars". Some motorist with a sense of humor said something to the effect of " I agree with your message, but what do you think this flier is made from?". I rode home shortly thereafter...

xcslowpoke
April 5th, 2007, 11:44 AM
As a person who recently moved from the Bay Area. Critical Mass participants are not just "ROADIES". I have many MTBer friends that have participated. Critical Mass originated to organize bicycle riders (mostly commuters) for safety. If you've ever commuted you have been cut off by someone in a car that didn't see you. Some of us have been the unfortunate victims of hit and runs. I've been hit atleast 3 times and only one person stopped. Once was on a MTB ride connecting two trails when someone purposely tired to hit me then came back around and threw a plastic bottle at me.

Anyway, Critical Mass's intentions were good. "Get recognition for cyclist so that cars drivers don't run us over." The problem is it has gotten too big and become more civil disobedience. Any thing that gets too large will have its bad elements. Unfortunately mob mentality has taken over. People on this ride go out of there way to cause disturbances rather than ride within the law. Its very hard for average people to understand or be compassionate to the plight of a cyclist when we don't follow the laws complaining that others aren't following the laws.

Slappy
April 5th, 2007, 11:56 AM
Mtb's on the street = inefficient roadies.
What a bunch of dinks.


Just say no to asphalt!!!

bdee
April 5th, 2007, 12:56 PM
Commuting, training, running errands, riding street, trials or whatever you're doing it doesn't matter - if you're on the road be careful. I've had everything under the sun thrown at me (notables include a Big Mac, full sodas, beer (empty dammit!), batteries, water balloons etc, etc..) and I've been hit twice. Large groups of "roadies" training can piss off motorists as much as one guy riding to the grocery store. CM has great intentions, but at this point it's a mess. More people simply riding to run errands, or to work, once in a while would do more good than CM can ever hope to accomplish.

MTBME
April 5th, 2007, 01:12 PM
I had a van pull up to me once on a road ride and throw a cooler filled with water at me. I didn't see it coming. All of a sudden I was soaken wet. My first instinct was to think I had ran over my water bottle and it exploded back on me, but I was way to wet for that explanation. And besides the bottle was still in the cage. Then I noticed the van pulling away from me as someone was closing the side door. That one got away with it. Every once in a while somebody does something stupid and drives off only to get stuck at a red light up the road. Boy, that's a lot of motivation to drop the hammer on the cranks.

robdesigns
April 5th, 2007, 02:11 PM
I might be leading this topic off course here, but have any other roadies thought about using one of those lipstick cameras to catch these people in the act? Would those things read a license plate at a resonable distance? I have not had anything thrown at me, but I was intentionaly brushed by a car on Charlton Street near the Hodges Village main entrance. Mostly I get the car loads of supermodels leering at me as they pass. Dear Penthouse forum.....

Rob

Slider
April 5th, 2007, 02:48 PM
Here in rural CT, they move to the oncoming lane to make room. I'm sure I'll meet up with the drunk college student/trailer trash/psycho someday, but in four years of occasional road rides, I've had no bad experiences.

The third of our regular off-road crew does the CM ride in New Haven, but my sense is they're not as rabid as the San Francisco group. Something to do with big cities, I think...

Slider

Plywood
April 5th, 2007, 04:38 PM
Mtb's on the street = inefficient roadies.
What a bunch of dinks.


Just say no to asphalt!!!
So true, but sometime u just have to ride a MTB on the road, like if u missed the bus to school/work. Ive done it but i felt like i was going so slow...

radair
April 5th, 2007, 05:41 PM
I saw a good altercation on Memorial Drive in Cambridge. The driver of the BMW(?) or whatever blew his cork when one of the bikers put his bike on the car's hood. The cops restrained the driver and everyone else went on their way. Classic.

I agree that the CM circus has turned into a harrassment tool.

splat
April 5th, 2007, 08:43 PM
I too have had all sorts of things thrown at me , driven into the ditches and all the fun stuff like that . My favorite was I was going North on 27 In Medfield , where it is actually a pretty wide/fast road, and these Punks pulled along side , slowed down a little then threw 4 or 5 empty plastic soda bottles , not a one of them came close. 500 yards farther up the road just as teh road turned a little were 5 State police cars , they had a Big speed trap set up , the Cop with the radar gun saw the whole thing. Pulled them Right over , and when i came onto it, the officer stopped me and asked if I was Ok , to which i responded they didn't hit me, ( if they had Hit me the could have nailed them with assult ) he took my Name and other info and if they needed me for anything they would be in touch . Told me basiclly there wasn't much they could do. They told me they were going to site the driver for driving to endanger. and the all 3 of the Occupants were going to be sited for littering ( The $500 fine variety , since it is wetlands there ). the car was going to be impounded and Mommy and daddy were going to have to come pick them up at the station.

I was very angry at the time. Looking back now I can laugh about it and I just hope those punks learned something

heckler
April 5th, 2007, 09:31 PM
I too have had all sorts of things thrown at me , driven into the ditches and all the fun stuff like that . ...I was very angry at the time. Looking back now I can laugh about it and I just hope those punks learned something

That is a great story! I love it when there is a touch of justice.

I will admit to being a roadie with mtb leanings. I am old enough that when I did most of my riding mtbs didn't exist. You were a roadie. Raised in NYC and brought up on the mean streets. I have been hit by, or hit just about everythign out there. Buses, trucks armored cars, you name it. No boats or trains though. You learn to have your radar on full, that's for sure.

My only "justice" story was in college, way back when folks used toe straps. As I was ending a training ride (I raced) I came to the one red light in town and did a track stand waiting for the green. When it changed I rolled into the intersection. Of course a jerk in a jeep decided to run the light but slammed on his brakes when he saw me. My front wheel was inches from his fender when I stopped. I balanced as long as I could but with straps tight, I was locked in, and finally fell over. The guy got out of his jeep and started yeliing at ME! We kept it up for a while and after picking myself up off the ground I rode away. As the guy got back in the jeep, a cop who had been sitting there through the whole thing pulled him over! I didn't go back and see what he got the ticket for but I smiled for days!

Coincidentally I saw the very same jeep parked on Frat Row a week later and for some reason when the guy came out the next morning he had no valve cores in any of his tires. I have no idea how that happened!;)

xcslowpoke
April 6th, 2007, 05:01 PM
Looking back now I can laugh about it and I just hope those punks learned something

Sad that there isn't some type of collective learning but we all have to learn how to fall and pick ourselves up.

Every time I have had something thrown at me, someone try to hit me, or any act of aggression towards me while on my bike, it has always been at the hands of a white male between the ages of 16 to 30. This is truely sad considering that I lived in San Jose, Ca, which is one of the most diverse places on the planet.

Now I've been hit by the colors of the rainbow but always by a car that costs $50K or more.

petemtb
April 7th, 2007, 10:18 AM
Don't blame the angry cyclists, they all voted for Kerry Healey.