Archive for the ‘life’ Category

November 19th, 2010 was a bad night on the 358 bus

UPDATE: I just learned the Seattle Times wrote a story and posted a video on this.

Here’s a letter I wrote to the King County Metro transit department regarding a nasty experience on the 358. Man, this was totally insane. So here’s the letter I sent them:
—-
Metro,

I would like to tell you about a miserable experience I had on the Metro bus this evening. But more importantly, I’d like to tell you how one of your employees seemed to lose control of a particular situation.

Just before 7:00PM, the Northbound 358 pulled up to 3rd and Virginia. The bus was absolutely packed, so I paused and checked my phone. There was another right behind it. Excited to be on an almost-empty bus, I held back and decided to wait. As the packed 358 was closing the doors and pulling away, I caught view the middle of a violent fist fight in the very back of the bus. It was between about 4 or 5 teenage girls, all unarmed, arguing and punching each other, screaming loudly. I watched one girl land a very hard punch and cut the other girl’s eye. She was bleeding pretty badly. Just before the bus pulled away, a man jumped out the door in a hurry. He told me he was exiting the bus because those girls were fighting and it bothered him. He said the driver didn’t seem to know it was happening and the fight had been going on for a few stops.

We spoke about the soon-to-arrive bus just behind this one and both agreed it was the right choice to try and get on that coach. Not more than 4 minutes later, the bus pulls up and we board. The bus is almost empty and everything seems normal. Except the driver seemed to be a new hire because another more experienced metro driver in uniform was sitting in the seat close to the driver instructing the new driver how to do his job. I looked up at the 4-digit coach number. I was on coach #2355, route 358 Northbound now. It was approximately 7:00PM.

We pulled away from 3rd and Virginia and when we stopped at 3rd and bell, the 358 bus in front of us was emptying completely and all the frustrated riders were trying to escape these mad girls. The large group of riders flooded the bus I was on, filling it completely. This was not ideal for me, but it got worse very quickly. A large subset of the fighting girls were the last to board! They all sat in the front of the bus near me, the driver, and the trainer driver. A few passengers immediately started yelling at the girls to leave.

The bus pulled in to the stop at Denny avenue and one of the girls decided to try and exit the bus. Then she turned around and argued with the girls on the bus and promptly turned around and boarded again. She repeated this quickly a few times, blocking the doorway and all the riders attempting to board. Frustrated by this, the trainer (not the driver, his trainer/mentor) stood up and told her to make up her mind and quit blocking the door. She scoffed at him and he grabbed her by the shoulders, shaking her violently and forcing her out onto the sidewalk. He quarreled with her for a few seconds and boarded the bus. She followed him, yelling and screaming. He turned around and used his foot to push her chest and get her out the door. By this time, all the other riders were starting to become very uneasy and were trying to get off the bus to escape the mayhem. She somehow managed to get back in the door before it closed! The bus pulled away, leaving the trainer eye-to-eye with this insanely irate teenage girl and all her screaming friends. They teamed up, lashing out on the trainer with typical disgusting language and insults. The trainer just shook his head and tried to ignore them. This was EXTREMELY annoying to myself and most of the other passengers. It was disturbing to know he had lowered himself to the level of these bickering, inconsiderate teenagers and used violence to try and get the point across.

The bus continued until 85th street, where the (still yelling) girls left the bus. They were screaming about charging the trainer with assault. Everyone on the bus let out a collective sigh of relief.

Here’s what I would like to let you know. The way that trainer conducted himself was by no means what I would have expected from a Metro employee, let alone a responsible adult. He snapped and resorted to a violent conflict that could have been avoided by keeping those girls off the bus as soon as possible. I hope the new driver whom he was mentoring can learn the right lesson from that situation. I hope he can understand that it is completely unacceptable to escalate a situation like that.

Opening weekend at Baker ’09

Good times!

Opening weekend at Mt. Baker from Bill Booth on Vimeo.

We live in a world of checkers players

Today we were walking down the street after lunch. It was me, Brian, Saul, and Kris. Someone lamented the people in cars who don’t think a step or two ahead and just fly out across intersections as you walk into the far crosswalk. It’s annoying. The car goes out and stops in the middle of the intersection, waiting. You stroll across the crosswalk and they gas it past you giving you a bad look.

These people don’t think two steps ahead. it doesn’t matter. Waiting 5 seconds doesn’t matter. Why don’t they understand that?

“We live in a world of checkers players”, I said.

Today I got hit by a car. LAME.

As I flew through the air, I could only think of two things: the oncoming pain after slamming down on the sidewalk and the fact that my bike would be damaged. My Left foot detached from my pedal as I struck the passenger side fender and my right detached as I launched into space over the hood. Leaving my bike somewhat behind, I felt the hood of the car below my left side as I scratched along the top. My carcass flopped down on the sidewalk, my left hip taking most of the impact, well clear of the car and my bike which was flung forward and to the right of me. I laid there like a pancake, flesh-pretzeled in my own body, with no pain and only slight annoyance dashed with anger over my failure to be defensive enough and her inability to look for me.

It was 8:38 AM on 5/27/09 and I was going about 20 mph Southbound down Meridian Avenue about 2 blocks North of Northgate Way. I was riding defensively as usual, but I let my mind slip and assumed I was dealing with predictable and watchful drivers ahead of me. Wrong.

I was riding down Meridian at a pretty good pace with cars passing me on the left. As usual, I ride on the right side of the road just next to the curb. Cars pass alongside me and I pass them on the right from time to time. There was a line of cars back to the driveway on the right here. There was one car though, some stupid family 4-door sedan, stopped as all the other cars emptied the intersection on a green light. My depth perception was a bit off, as it appeared she was just zoning out and was going to eventually continue straight with the rest of traffic.

Here was my position and view.

View Larger Map

There was no blinker and the car was positioned straight in the middle of the road. This made me assume she wasn’t going to turn right into the driveway. I had two choices. I could get right behind the car like any other vehicle would (relatively safe), or I could stay on the right and just cruise by (slightly more dangerous). I chose the latter and paid the price.

Like she just made up her mind spontaneously, she began turning right while flipping her blinker on. The second it illuminated, I knew I was done-for and commenced evasive maneuvers.

If you look at the following street view for reference, she turned a bit late into the outbound (looker’s left) lane of the driveway.


View Larger Map

I steered sharply to the sidewalk to avoid the collision, we collided, and I was thrown over the hood and cleared (in the picture below) the shadow of that small tree. It was a glorious Superman impression. I probably spent about 2 meters of flying time enjoying my last moments as a happy biker today.

She stopped in traffic and I had her pull into the parking space where she was headed. I did a MOFA-style self-assessment from head to toe right in front of her. Here’s what I assessed.

- road rash on left forearm

- road rash/bruise on left hip
- no head or neck injuries, did not hit my head
- I was in mild shock. It’s hard to say, but I was definitely out of my mind a bit.
- new $100 bike jacket ripped up
- both brake hoods scratched and bent inward from rolling the bike on the pavement
- rear wheel out-of-true slightly, but my right turn mitigated a front wheel taco
- front derailleur won’t shift down now, cable ripped out from impact on lever

She ran out and asked me if I was all right. I said I was checking things out and I’d get back to her. After quickly looking at myself, I determined that my problems were minimal. Although I do regret not demanding about $100 in cash to pay for my ruined 2-day-old bike jacket. Annoying.

She made some remark, like she had some appointment to get to. I cocked my head sideways slightly, the way a dog would look at someone calling its name, and reminded her that she just hit a cyclist and the situation takes precedence. The nerve…

I took one look at her car and estimated a couple thousand dollars in damage to the fender I hit and the hood. She didn’t see it and I did. I didn’t even want to get cops or insurance involved because she had *WAY* more damage to her car than I had to my body and my bike. My eggbeater pedals put a huge dent and scratch along the passenger side fender and I left some scratches and DNA on her hood.

The sidewalk was unscathed, unless you count the bloody streak of flesh where I landed.

There was one additional witness, a woman driving the car behind the collision. She asked if I was OK and if she should call cops and I sternly suggested she didn’t, that I could handle it. She left the scene.

Looking back, I didn’t want to get anyone else involved and I’m sticking to it. This would have been a very large pain in my ass to deal with if the cops were involved. Forget it. She can think about watching out on the right for cyclists and pedestrians when she’s forking over the cash to get that body damage repaired. I can think about riding like I’m invisible whenever in this situation, or any other situation where I’m even close to a car. I don’t care who was at fault or what is legal. All I know is that I’m OK and her car is not. I got off pretty clean this time around and I learned a thing or two.

I bashed my handlebars and brake levers back straight and rode the 9 miles to work. This won’t stop me from doing that for the rest of the Summer, either.

Map of the whole schebang

My arm afterward - meh
jacket damage