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California Bicycle Laws & Safety
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ARE YOU A SAFE
BICYCLIST?
Safe Bicycling involves
more than wearing the proper safety equipment and keeping your bike in good
mechanical order- you must also learn the rules of the road.
The following are
important excerpts from the California Vehicle Code (VC) relating to the
operation and equipping of bicycles.
Bicycle Defined. VC
231
Defines bicycle as a
device upon which any person may ride, propelled exclusively by human power
through a belt, chain, or gears and having one or more wheels. Specifically
provides that persons riding bicycles are subject to Vehicle Code provisions
specified in Sections 21200 and 21200.5 (see below).
Bicycle Use. VC
21200
Every person riding a
bicycle upon a street or highway has all the rights and is subject to all the
duties applicable to the driver of a vehicle, including the provisions of law
dealing with driving under the influence of alcoholic beverages or drugs,
except those provisions which by their very nature can have no
application.
Bicycling Under
Influence of Alcohol or Drugs. VC 21200.5
Provides that it is
unlawful to ride a bicycle upon a street or highway while under the influence
of an alcoholic beverage or drug or the combination of alcohol and a drug,
punishable by a fine of up to $250. A person arrested may request a chemical
test. If the person is under 21 but over 13 years of age, his or her driving
privilege will be suspended for one year or delayed for one year once the
person is eligible to drive.
Equipment
Requirements. VC 21201
a) No person shall
operate a bicycle on a roadway unless it is equipped with a brake which will
enable the operator to make one braked wheel skid on dry, level, clean
pavement.
b) No person shall
operate on the highway any bicycle equipped with handlebars so raised that the
operator must elevate their hands above the level of their shoulders in order
to grasp the normal steering grip area.
c) No person shall
operate upon any highway a bicycle which is of such a size as to prevent the
operator from safely stopping the bicycle, supporting it in an upright position
with at least one foot on the ground, and restarting it in a safe
manner.
d) Every bicycle
operated upon any highway during darkness shall be equipped with the
following:
- A lamp emitting a
white light which illuminates the highway and is visible from a distance of 300
feet to the front and the sides of the bicycle.
- A red reflector
mounted on the rear of the bicycle and visible from 500 feet to the rear of the
bicycle.
- A white or yellow
reflector mounted on each pedal visible 200 feet to the front and rear of the
bicycle and a white or red reflector on each side to the rear of the center of
the bicycle, except bicycles which are equipped with reflectorized tires on the
front and the rear need not be equipped with side reflectors. All reflectorized
tires must meet DMV requirements.
e) A lamp or lamp
combination, emitting a white light, attached to the operator and visible from
a distance of 300 feet in front and from the sides of the bicycle, may be used
in place of a lamp attached to the bike.
Duty of Bicycle
Operator: Operation On Roadway. VC 21202
a) Any person
operating a bicycle upon a roadway at a speed less than the normal speed of
traffic moving in the same direction at such time shall ride as close as
practicable to the right-hand curb or edge of the roadway except under any of
the following situations:
- When overtaking and
passing another bicycle or motor vehicle proceeding in the same
direction.
- When preparing for a
left turn at an intersection or into a private road or driveway.
- When reasonably
necessary to avoid conditions (including, but not limited to, fixed or moving
objects, vehicles, bicycles, pedestrians, animals, surface hazards, or
substandard width lanes) that make it unsafe to continue along the right-hand
curb or edge. For purposes of this section, a "substandard width lane" is a
lane that is too narrow for a bicycle and a vehicle to travel safely side by
side within the lane.
b) Any person
operating a bicycle on a one-way street or highway with two or more marked
traffic lanes, may ride as near the left-hand curb or edge of such roadway as
practicable.
Hitching Rides. VC
21203
No person riding upon any
motorcycle, motorized bicycle, bicycle, coaster, roller skates, sled, or toy
vehicle shall attach the same or themselves to any streetcar or vehicle on the
roadway.
Riding On Bicycle. VC
21204
a) No person
operating a bicycle on a highway shall ride other than on a permanent and
regular attached seat.
b) No person
operating a bicycle on a highway shall allow anyone to ride as a passenger
other than on a separate attached seat. If the passenger is four years old or
younger or weighs 40 pounds or less, the seat shall adequately retain the
passenger in place and protect him/her from the bicycle's moving
parts.
Carrying Articles. VC
21205
No person operating a
bicycle shall carry any package, bundle, or article which prevents the operator
from keeping at least one hand upon the handlebars.
Permitted Movements
from Bicycle Lanes. VC 21208
a) Whenever a
bicycle lane has been established on a roadway, any person operating a bicycle
upon the roadway at a speed less than the normal speed of traffic moving in the
same direction shall ride in the bicycle lane, except under the following
situations.
- When overtaking or
passing another bicycle, vehicle, or pedestrian within the lane or about to
enter the lane if such overtaking and passing cannot be done safely within the
lane.
- When preparing for a
left turn at an intersection or into a private road or driveway.
- When necessary to
leave the lane to avoid debris or other hazardous conditions.
b) No operator of
a bicycle shall leave a bicycle lane until it can be done safely and then only
after giving an appropriate hand signal in the event that any vehicle might be
affected by the movement.
Parking. VC
21210
No person shall leave a
bicycle lying on its side on any sidewalk, or shall park a bicycle on a
sidewalk in any other position, so that there is not an adequate path for
pedestrian traffic. Local authorities may prohibit bicycle parking in
designated areas of the public highway, provided appropriate signs are
erected.
Obstruction of
Bikeways. VC 21211
No person shall place or
park a bicycle or vehicle so as to impede or block the normal and reasonable
movement of any bicyclist on a bikeway or bicycle path or trail unless the
placement or parking is necessary for safe operation or otherwise in compliance
with the law.
Youth Helmets. VC
21212
Prohibits persons under
18 from riding or being a passenger on a bicycle without wearing helmets
meeting specified standards (ANSI or SNELL). Violations are punishable by a
fine of not more than $25.
Bicycles on Roadways
VC 21650.1
A bicycle operated on a
roadway or highway shoulder shall be operated in the same direction as vehicles
are required to drive upon the roadway.
Bicycling on Freeways
VC 21960
a) The Department
of Transportation and local authorities may prohibit or restrict the use of
freeways or any portion thereof by bicycles.
b) Such
prohibitory regulations shall be effective when appropriate signs giving notice
thereof are erected upon the freeway and the approaches thereto.
Hand Signals. VC
22111
All required signals
given by hand and arm shall be given in the following manner:
- Left turn-hand and arm
extended horizontally beyond the side of the bicycle.
- Right turn- left hand
and arm extended upward beyond the side of the bicycle or right hand and arm
extended horizontally to the right side of the bicycle.
- Stop or sudden
decrease of speed signal- left hand and arm extended downward beyond the side
of the bicycle.
Toll Crossing. VC
23330
Except where a special
permit has been obtained from the Department of Transportation, bicycles shall
not be permitted on any vehicular crossing, unless the Department by signs
indicates that bicycles are permitted upon all or any portion of the vehicular
crossing.
Headsets and Earplugs.
VC 27400
No person operating any
vehicle, including a bicycle shall wear any headset covering, or any earplugs
in, both ears. There are exceptions for persons operating authorized emergency
vehicles, special construction or maintenance equipment and refuse collection
equipment, and for any person wearing personal hearing protectors designed to
attenuate injurious noise levels and which do not inhibit the wearers' ability
to hear a siren or horn from an emergency vehicle or horn form another motor
vehicle, and for any person using a prosthetic device which aids the hard of
hearing.
License Requirement.
VC 39002
a) A city or
county may adopt a bicycle licensing ordinance or resolution providing that no
resident shall operate any bicycle on any street, road, highway, or other
public property within the city of county, unless such bicycle is licensed in
accordance with this division.
b) Any bicycle not
licensed under this division may be additionally regulated or licensed pursuant
to local ordinance or may be licensed upon request of the owner.
c) It is illegal
for any person to to tamper with, destroy, mutilate or alter any license
indicia (marking) or registration form or to remove, alter, or mutilate the
serial number, or the identifying marks of a licensing agency's identifying
symbol on any bicycle frame licensed under the provision of this
division.
Throwing
Substances On Highways Or Adjoining Areas. VC 23111 7 23112
No person in any vehicle
shall throw or discharge from or upon any road, highway or adjoining area,
pubic or private, any lighted or non-lighted cigarette, cigar, match or any
flaming or glowing substance.
No person shall throw or
deposit upon a highway any bottle, can garbage, glass, wire, nails, paper or
any substance likely to injure or cause damage to traffic using the
highway.
Note: Some of the
sections of the laws listed above have been reworded slightly and/or
abbreviated. For exact language, refer to the referenced sections in the
California Vehicle Code.
In addition to these
state laws, many communities have local ordinances. Check with your local
police department regarding bicycle registration, licensing, and regulations
(sidewalk riding, etc.) in your area.
Final
Thoughts Each year in California,
over one hundred people are killed and thousands more are injured in bicycle
collisions. We can make bicycling safer for all by observing the following
safety tips:
- Always wear a
helmet.
- Obey all traffic
controls.
- Ride your bicycle near
the right-hand edge of the road.
- Never carry another
person on your bicycle.
- Always use hand
signals when turning or stopping.
- Look out for cars at
cross street, driveways, and parking places.
- Be careful when
checking traffic and don't swerve when looking over your shoulder.
- Give pedestrians the
right-of-way.
- Keep your bicycle in
good condition.
- Always ride
carefully.
Remember a bicycle is a
vehicle. Bicyclists share a complex traffic environment with other larger forms
of transportation. Youngsters under age nine lack the physical and mental
development to interact safely in that environment.
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