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Motorcycle Lane Splitting Study in California

  • Motorcycle lane-splitting study finds: the more speed, the more danger



    A motorcyclist splits lanes during the afternoon commute on southbound Highway 99 in Sacramento last year. A study has found motorcyclists who adhere to the speed limit and the speed of surrounding traffic are not in greater danger while lane-splitting.  RANDALL BENTON/SACRAMENTO BEE FILE

    A yearlong California study of motorcycle lane-splitting has concluded the practice is no more dangerous than motorcycling in general, if the rider is traveling at speeds similar to or only slightly faster than the surrounding traffic.

    The maneuver becomes more dangerous, however, when a motorcyclist is speeding or riding more than 10 mph faster than the traffic the cyclist is passing.

    Lane-splitting occurs when a motorcyclist passes other vehicles by riding between them along the lane line. California is the only state that does not ban the controversial practice, frowned on by many car drivers who consider it a safety hazard and applauded by some motorcyclists who say they consider lane-splitting a safety tool that allows them to get out of risky situations.

    Lane-splitting in California appears to be on the rise. The state Office of Traffic Safety study found 62 percent of motorcyclists say they lane-split on both freeways and other roads, a 7.5-percentage-point increase over 2013. Seventy-five percent of riders between the ages of 18 and 24 report they lane-split on all roads, including freeways. Notably, the survey found that motorcyclists were splitting lanes at slightly slower speeds and in slightly slower traffic than the year before.

    The lane-splitting crash study, conducted by UC Berkeley and commissioned by the California Highway Patrol and the Office of Traffic Safety, also found that lane-splitters are less likely to be rear-ended by car drivers but are more likely to rear-end other vehicles.

    Lane-splitters had a greater chance of being involved in a crash during the morning and afternoon commute hours than motorcyclists who were not lane-splitting. The study also found that lane-splitting cyclists who were involved in crashes typically wore safer helmets than motorcyclists as a whole.

    “What we learned is, if you lane-split in a safe or prudent manner, it is no more dangerous than motorcycling in any other circumstance,” Office of Traffic Safety spokesman Chris Cochran said. “If you are speeding or have a wide speed differential (with other traffic), that is where the fatalities came about.”

    The study was conducted statewide by 80 law enforcement agencies who filled out a supplemental information sheet involving 8,262 motorcycle riders in collisions.

    The study’s authors said the report, the first of its kind about lane-splitting, is limited in scope and will be followed up by more detailed analysis, including looking at rider age, rider gender, motorcycle characteristics and collision and roadway characteristics.

    The CHP last year published written guidelines on when motorcyclists should or should not lane-split, suggesting riders should not travel more than 10 mph faster than surrounding traffic and should not lane-split at all if other vehicles are traveling faster than 30 mph. The CHP took those guidelines down, however, after a disagreement over whether publishing them constituted illegal regulations.
     
    reprinted from the Sacramento Bee

Comments

6 comments
  • blurplebuzz Lane splitting is a necessary evil in my book,hate doing it,yet in the traffic we have here it is great!!! The advice given above is sound,if traffic is stopped I am usually keep her under 20, and I wont lane split when speeds get above 40 except in...  more
  • Edgewalker54 I lived/visited Cal during the 70's. Split lanes regularly and must say... it can be scary as hell! Agree with the report, it is for under 20 mph and due caution is called for. Have some friends in Scotland and Britain, where they 'filter' all the time....  more
  • Jonesy1340 Lane splitting has just become legal here in NSW (Australia) its designed to allow motorcyclists to split between cages in heavy traffic..the maximum speed you can lane split at is 30 kph..which is about 19 mph..most do it as they approach traffic...  more
  • Snakechrmr It's a pretty common practice here in Portugal. I'd never split lanes before and it took a while to get used to. These guys do it at 60-70 mph and in the large cities the crotch rockets fly up the lanes. If there's an accident it's the bike's fault...  more