News of the Arroyo


Title:

Rose Bowl cyclists on rough road with officials

Subtitle:

Date:

2007-09-18

Summary:

September 18, 2007 - "For 60 years, riders have trained in packs around the Rose Bowl. Now the city is addressing rising concerns about safety."

Author:

Bob Pool, Staff Writer

Publication:

Los Angeles Times

Content:

With a whoosh, the pack of bicyclists bears down on an automobile
starting to pull away from the curb in front of the Brookside Golf
Club in Pasadena.

\"Car!\" shouts one of the riders in the front. \"Car!\" repeats someone
deep within the pack.

As one, the 150 cyclists veer slightly to the left and careen past
the startled driver. In a flash, they\'re gone.

Rattled, the motorist peers into his rearview mirror searching for
more bicyclists. But there are none.

\"A lot of time, people are not used to seeing a bicycle travel at
this speed. They misjudge how fast these bicycles will be on you,\"
said racer Fernando Burgos, who has stopped next to Rosemont Avenue
to watch his friends zoom past. \"They probably think the bikes are
going 12 miles an hour, when in fact they\'re going 25 miles an hour.\"

Or 35 or 40 miles an hour. That\'s how fast they ride twice a week
around the Rose Bowl in Pasadena.

For 60 years bike racers riding handlebar-to-handlebar in packs --
known to bicyclists as a \"peloton\" -- have trained and conditioned
themselves by pedaling laps around the famed football stadium. The
tighter the racers group themselves together, the less wind
resistance they experience. And the faster they go.

There are occasional mishaps. They can run into cars, sideswipe
pedestrians or joggers, and veer into each other. Lately, though, the
bicyclists have been on a collision course with Pasadena city leaders.

Officials have set a deadline for peloton riders to help figure out
how to coexist with others when they circle the outside of the
football stadium.

As many as 150 pack riders turn out each Tuesday and Thursday for
Rose Bowl rides. Beginning promptly at 5:55 p.m., bicyclists take 10
laps around a three-mile loop, ending at about 7:05 p.m. The rides
are held during summertime months when daylight saving time is in
effect.

But the early evening hours are also prime exercise time for
thousands of joggers, walkers, skaters and baby-stroller pushers who
also enjoy circling the stadium while the sun is setting beyond the
arroyo\'s steep wall.

Bike racers sometimes crash into pedestrians. And clash with
motorists, golfers and soccer players.

Complaints involving the encounters prompted an investigation by the
Pasadena Police Department, which led to a proposed crackdown on
peloton riders at the Rose Bowl and elsewhere in the city.

Pasadena Police Chief Bernard Melekian told City Council members that
pack racing had grown dangerous. He played a video of peloton riders
speeding around the Rose Bowl, forcing automobiles off the roadway,
swerving around recreational bicyclists and joggers, and spilling
over the streets\' yellow lines into oncoming traffic lanes.

Melekian said the pack riders are seemingly unorganized, with no
group in charge or in a position of authority to set rules or
procedures.

His officers cannot enforce traffic laws during the twice-weekly
rides because the cyclists are in a tight pack and are dressed in
similar uniforms and helmets, Melekian said.

\"Identifying individual riders gets to be problematic,\" he said. \"The
reality is there are some concerns that once the peloton gets going
there could be chain-reaction crashes\" if police tried to pull a
rider over.

Councilman Sidney Tyler said the pack riders were spectacular -- but dangerous.

\"I do find the pelotons interesting to watch, but intimidating,
particularly when they come up behind me or groups of pedestrians
trying to enjoy the experience of the Rose Bowl,\" Tyler said at a
council meeting. \"There are enormous numbers of people trying to
enjoy the experience down there too.\"

The city criticism roiled the local biking community -- and prompted
peloton fans to go on the offensive.

\"The Rose Bowl ride is famous across the country,\" said Katie
Safford, a national cycling champion who lives in Pasadena. She told
the council that despite the pack\'s unorganized look, tradition
dictates that newer riders are educated by veterans on how to
maneuver.

\"We can\'t go fast enough riding two abreast to get the training we
need,\" Safford said.

The city talked about a ban on bicyclists riding more than two
abreast without a permit. Bike riders across Los Angeles responded by
demanding that they be allowed to self-police the Rose Bowl rides and
work with city leaders on ways to control traffic during the Tuesday
and Thursday evening pelotons.

Private meetings followed with bicyclists, police and Rose Bowl
operators. Everyone agreed to cool the rhetoric and work for the next
six months on a compromise.

Among the changes now being considered: Turning the roadway loop
around the Rose Bowl into a one-way street, limiting automobile
traffic during the Tuesday-Thursday rides, and requiring joggers and
walkers to move counterclockwise toward oncoming bicyclists.

Back at the Rose Bowl, it appeared the bike riders were being extra
cautious. They stayed on their side of the roadway. They shouted out
warnings to each other when motorists pulled in front of them. They
refrained from yelling at joggers and walkers who absent-mindedly
stepped in their path.

\"We\'re working together to try and make a workable arrangement so all
user groups are treated equally and we\'re not singled out as the mean
guys here,\" said rider Pat Nay, a Pasadena sports massage therapist.
\"Because we\'re not.\"

Burgos, a Redondo Beach psychotherapist, described fellow pack riders
as \"law-abiding citizens\" who care about Pasadenawhether they live
there or not.

\"Pasadena provides us with a safe opportunity, and we want to respect
the city and what they\'ve given us. We want to pass this on to the
next generation,\" he said.

It seemed to be working.

Exercise walker Bob Kirby, a semi-retired investment consultant from
La Canada Flintridge, said he believes all Rose Bowl users can
peacefully coexist.

\"I stay out of their way and they\'ve been courteous to me,\" he said
of the cyclists. \"I think a lot of people don\'t pay attention. I\'ve
seen some of the riders go down because they\'ve been sideswiped and
what have you. And that\'s sad because people are so irresponsible.\"

On the other side of the Rose Bowl, Kristin Rozsa of La Crescenta was
pushing 1-year-old daughter Isabelle in a baby stroller as the
colorful peloton whizzed by.

\"Isabelle loves looking at them. They seem to stay out of our lane,\"
Rozsa said. \"The city shouldn\'t ban them.\"

bob.pool@latimes.com

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