bigeman312
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- Jul 19, 2012
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It was a mistake to give so much of our land to automobiles. Just because Maseratis is school zones is normalized doesn’t mean society is better for it.Yeah I was a little more diplomatic about it when I was questioning them during the presentation but trying to enforce shared used path usage by hardware via "micro ID" rather than on user behavior is nonsense, and their response being that it at least allows accountability after the fact of a crash shows they know it's nonsense too. As Galen put it, we don't ban a Maserati from school zones just because of how fast it CAN go. When a colleague asked what about bikes that are sold as one class but are able to be modified to make them go speeds that would register them as class III, the response was these would be considered class III regardless of whether the those modifications were made. I kind of understand why they would have to go this way, because it really is as easy as dragging a slider in an app for many bikes, but it sure seems to me like the better approach would be prohibiting companies (and these are mainstream companies, not janky jailbroken bikes) from allowing that feature in MA.
EDIT: and to be clear, there is a lot of GREAT recommendations in this report that I hope the state leg moves on with expediency. I just think they're missing the mark here on this, and I know many commission members feel the same. Perhaps it's something that's efficacy can be assessed in a few years and revisited if it's working as we expect.
It would be a mistake to allow the same to happen on multi-use trails, with vehicles that can travel over 40 mph.