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Bicycle ticket could cost Santa Ana student $400
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Bob Shanteau
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Nov 05, 2009 14:14 PST
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Bicycle ticket could cost Santa Ana student $400
November 4th, 2009, 5:00 am · posted by Teri Sforza, Orange County
Register staff writer
<http://taxdollars.freedomblogging.com/2009/11/04/bicycle-ticket-could-cost-santa-ana-student-400/41971>
The new semester had just begun. Oswald Muniz Sanchez was riding his
bike to biology class at Santa Ana College, earphones in both ears,
listening to the dulcet tones of National Public Radio.
Sanchez saw no cars at the intersection of Washington and Freeman
streets, so he buzzed through the stop sign, as cyclists so often do.
That’s when he saw the Santa Ana policeman, half-way up the side street.
Moments later, sirens blaring and lights flashing, Sanchez was pulled
over. Santa Ana police Officer Berg told him to sit on the curb. How are
you going to hear someone honking at you with earphones on? the officer
asked. I heard you, Sanchez said. What music were you listening to? the
officer asked. It was just the news, Sanchez said. If you were in your
car, would you have stopped? Yes, Sanchez said. Are you going to give me
a warning? No, the offficer said. I’m going to cite you for running a
stop sign.
The ticket was yellow, just like you’d get while driving a car.
“Schwinn,” it says in the spot for “Year of Vehicle” and “Make.” And
Sanchez was cited for violating two parts of the California Vehicle Code:
* Section 22450(a): Failure to stop at stop sign;
* and Section 27400: Wearing head set or earplugs.
Infraction, the ticket said. So when the courtesy notice landed in his
mailbox from the Orange County Superior Court, Sanchez nearly choked:
“Bail amount: $397.”
For riding his bike?! This offended the 26-year-old’s sense of fair
play. (Sanchez had, after all, once registered to vote as a Libertarian.)
Now, Sanchez is not quite a traffic choir boy. He’s had several
violations over the past decade - including a DUI in 2002 and a property
damage hit-and-run in 2004, for which he paid restitution and did
community service. But he was much younger then. His most recent traffic
faux pas was for pulling a U-turn across a double-yellow line: “I was on
my way from school to work and wanted to get some food,” he said
somewhat sheepishly. “That wound up being a $200 Jamba Juice.”
That a bicycle infraction could cost more than a
moving-violation-in-a-car ticket seems, well, odd. We’re waiting to hear
from the Orange County Superior Court on how it arrives at fines for
such ticket; the court’s 2009 Bail Schedule doesn’t shed much light on
how the figure could get close to $400.
Bulletin, kids: Bicycles riders on public streets have the same rights
and responsibilities as automobile drivers and are subject to the same
rules and regulations as any other vehicle on the road, the good
California Department of Motor Vehicles reminds us. Each year in
California, more than 100 people are killed, and hundreds of thousands
more are injured in bicycle collisions.
“I suppose going through a stop sign on a bike is something that a lot
of people do, and they’re not aware of the violation,” said SAPD
Commander Doug McGeachy.“But stop signs apply to cyclists as well as
motorists. Same thing with the earphones. You can have one, but you
can’t have two.
“We do on occasion have serious and fatal traffic collisions involving
bicycles. Officers have a lot of discretion in what they choose to
enforce and not enforce - if they see something that’s particularly
unsafe, they’re more likely to enforce. I don’t know if this is common,
but it’s a violation.”
Sanchez was to appear in court today, but got an extension until Dec. 21
so he can research his situation and figure out how to proceed.
He’s a returning student at Santa Ana College, studying environmental
science. He pays his way by working as a teaching assistant when those
spots are available, and by installing office furniture. “I ride my bike
to school whenever I don’t have a big load of books,” Sanchez said. “I’m
trying to be environmentally friendly.”
We’ll keep you posted. In the meantime, bicyclists, stop for those stop
signs - and don’t cross any double yellow lines.
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