June 1, 2025 The Best Source of News, Culture, Lifestyle for Culver City, Mar Vista, Del Rey, Palms and West Los Angeles

Ending the Cycling Culture War: Can a New Ordinance do it?

Everyone likes bicyclists, even where I reside in upper Mandeville Canyon, considered by many as ground zero in the so-called culture war between those who choose to peddle and those who opt to drive through the congested byways of Los Angeles. In 2008, the canyon was the site of a near-fatal road-rage collision between a rogue motorist and a group of cyclists.

This summer, partly in response to that incident and partly in response to the more general hazards cyclists face in their commutes and recreational pursuits, the City Council unanimously passed a far-reaching ordinance designed to safeguard bikers. But in its quest to do something positive, the Council may well have gone too far, enacting a regulation so broad and vague that it runs afoul of constitutional strictures.

By its terms, the ordinance adds a new article (5.10) to Chapter IV the Municipal Code, establishing a new basis for bringing civil lawsuits against anyone who intentionally attempts to or in fact assaults, injures or forces a cyclist off a street. To give the ordinance teeth, anyone found in a court of law to have violated the article is liable for treble the complaining cyclist’s actual damages, or $1,000, whichever is greater, plus punitive damages if warranted. In addition, a losing motorist will be held be liable for reasonable attorneys’ fees and the costs of litigation.

Although the ordinance fails to offer similar awards of costs and fees to motorists who prevail in legal actions—an asymmetry that raises issues of fundamental fairness and equal protection—the principal defect in the ordinance is that it also sweeps within the net of liability anyone who intentionally “distracts†or attempts to “distract†a bicyclist in whole or in part, because of the bicyclist’s status as a bicyclist.

Nowhere in the ordinance is the term “distract†defined. And therein lies the rub, both practically and legally. It is a settled constitutional principle that a law is facially invalid if persons of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application.

As a young lawyer in the early 1980s, I was a member of a legal team that brought a successful vagueness challenge before the United States Supreme Court (Kolender v. Lawson) aimed at invalidating a provision of the California Penal Code—since repealed—that permitted police to demand that “loiterers†and “wanderers†provide credible and reliable identification–terms the statute failed to define. The law had been used against an otherwise law-abiding African-American man who wore his hair in long dreadlocks and who had been arrested under the statute 15 times over an 18-month span. Writing for the high court’s majority, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor struck down the provision because it contained no standard for determining what a suspect must do to comply with the law.

Unless the City Council acts to amend the new bicycling ordinance to remove the “distraction†provision, a similar fate surely awaits. In the absence of a specific and workable definition of the term “distract,†courts will—again by well-settled legal principle—look for guidance to the dictionary, where the term is defined as “diverting†one’s attention.

Plainly, what might distract one cyclist may go completely unnoticed or excused by another. Would wagging one’s index finger (not the obscene “table for one†gesture) at a cyclist who runs a stop sign qualify? Would honking the horn to catch the attention of a cyclist dangerously weaving in and out of traffic meet the test? Or how about just shouting to slow down? Just as in the Kolender case, an otherwise law-abiding motorist will be left to guess at the ordinance’s reach and application, subject to the whims of offended cyclists and enterprising lawyers looking to take advantage of the ordinance’s generous damage provisions.

A far better approach than crafting an overly broad protection that will encourage meritless litigation and ultimately be overturned would be to redeploy the LAPD’s traffic details to problem areas such as Mandeville Canyon with instructions to ticket everyone, on two wheels or four, who violates the existing rules of the road. Doing so in an even-handed manner will do far more to promote mutual respect and end the cycling culture war than any feel-good but defective ordinance could ever hope to achieve.

Bill Blum is a Brentwood resident, a lawyer and a former state administrative law judge. He is a contributing writer to California Lawyer magazine and Truthdig.com. He is the author of three legal thrillers published by Penguin/Putnam as well as scores of non-fiction op-eds, features and reviews. Locally, his work has appeared in the Daily News, the LA Times, Los Angeles Magazine, the Daily Journal and the LA Weekly.

in News
Related Posts

Defensible Space, Defined: How A Plus Tree Protects Communities from Wildfire

May 30, 2025

May 30, 2025

In the wildfire-prone landscapes of the Western United States, safeguarding homes and communities requires proactive measures. A Plus Tree, a...

WeHo Pride Weekend Begins and 2025 Icons Announced: Parades, Concerts, and Community Celebration Kicks Off

May 30, 2025

May 30, 2025

Three-Day LGBTQ+ Festival Features Performances by Lizzo, Maren Morris, and Kim Petras West Hollywood is preparing to kick off its...

Palisades Village to Reopen in 2026 with Revamped Retail, Dining, and Community Spaces

May 29, 2025

May 29, 2025

Elysewalker Set to Return With Park Reconstruction, Holiday Events, and Streetscape Upgrades Palisades Village, the open-air shopping and lifestyle destination...

Bel Air Seventh Grader Reaches Finals of Scripps National Spelling Bee

May 29, 2025

May 29, 2025

Oliver Halkett of Mirman School Competed on Thursday for a $50,000 prize Thirteen-year-old Oliver Halkett, a seventh grader from Mirman...

(Video) Signs That Your Aging Loved Ones Are in Need of Caregiving

May 29, 2025

May 29, 2025

To Find Out More, Go To Safelyhomeagain.com To Find Out More, Go To https://t.co/ZCPyKHj5aq pic.twitter.com/cDTEPjfA6s — Westside Today (@WestsideLAToday) May...

Two Men Charged in Culver City Kidnapping and Robbery After Victim Forced to Withdraw Cash

May 29, 2025

May 29, 2025

Suspects Allegedly Abducted Man at Gunpoint, Drove Him to Multiple Banks  Two men have been arrested and formally charged in...

Salt & Straw Unveils Summer Pie Series with Five Seasonal Ice Cream Flavors

May 29, 2025

May 29, 2025

Five New Flavors Inspired by Classic Summer Pies Will Be Introduced Salt & Straw is giving summer a scoopable twist...

(Video) Interviews with Rick Caruso and Elyse Walker, with a Dennis Quaid cameo

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

We spoke at the Press Conference to announce plans to reopen Palisades Village Shopping Mall. Actor Dennis Quaid arrives to...

Levain Bakery Debuts ‘Levain à la Mode’ with Local Ice Cream Partners for Summer

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Seasonal Offering With Wanderlust Creamery is a First in Cookie Shop’s History For the first time in its three-decade history,...

Beverly Glen Sixth Grader Advances to Finals of National Student Cook-Off

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Twelve-Year-Old Heads to Virginia to Compete in K12 Culinary Competition Abijah Levy Minor, a 12-year-old student from Beverly Glen, has...

Sarah Paulson to Host Charity Bingo Night for Pasadena Humane Society on June 5

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Evening of Food, Wine, and Live Music to Raise Funds for Animal Rescue Efforts Emmy-winning actress Sarah Paulson will host...

Bay Cities Italian Deli Responds to Health Code Closure, Commits to Corrective Action

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Santa Monica Landmark Disputes Rodent Claims but Acknowledges Violations Bay Cities Italian Deli, a Santa Monica staple renowned for its...

Film Review: Bring Her Back

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

By Dolores Quintana Grief is the price of love.  Danny Philippou and Michael Philippou’s second feature film, Bring Her Back,...

County Assessor Stresses Need For Fire-Affected Households to Update Addresses to Receive Relief Checks

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Assessor’s Office Offers Automatic Tax Relief for Fire-Affected Homeowners Following the destruction caused by wildfires earlier this year, the Los...

Caltrans Schedules Public Meeting for $143.7 Million I-405 Rehabilitation Project

May 28, 2025

May 28, 2025

Virtual Forum Set to Brief Residents on Upcoming Construction The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) will hold a virtual public...