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This problem with this thread is that (some of) the people are commenting are airing their grievances on bike safety, others are fighting for car/bike friendly policies.
Some of us are neighbors. Brookland is close knit and small. Almost all new Moms have a cohort in a new Mom group that meets at places like Sidamo (past), MSM, in the grass at TT, in the kids section at Barnes and Noble and more. We also know the streets. We know that people FLY through the neighborhood, especially on Monroe, Newton, Franklin, 14th, Michigan and Otis. Everyone has a story of a close call. We've advocated for Safe Street, speed bumps. We know that there's bad blind Hill by Bunker Hill Park. And across from MMBDA at Irving. We know this might have been an "accident" and might have been a "tragedy" but that doesn't matter to this family And we are heartbroken that if we didn't know this family, we know their faces and their child. So again, take your armchair commentary to fairfaxunderground and let the family grieve. If you can't give grace to adults, give it to kindergartners who have been with her, some since they were born, some since they entered a new school in PK3. |
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I found the mother's Facebook page. No mention of the incident but pages of smiling photos. Those parents loved that little girl. It is heartbreaking. I can't fathom it.
Sometimes horrible, horrible stuff happens. I've been both the driver and the parent in this situation. I could have easily accelerated from a stop-sign and hit a kid. How many times have I been driving along in my neighborhood and suddenly a kid comes out on a bike, following a ball, walking across the street? Countless times. Sometimes I've completely alert, sometimes it was by the grace of God that I put the breaks on in time and didn't hit the kid. And how many times have I trailed behind one of my kids when they rode their scooter or bike a block ahead? Hundreds and hundreds. I absolutely, positively could have been me in this situation. What a tragic freak accident. |
Then maybe ordinary consumer use of vans and other vehicles that put drivers high above the street should probably be illegal. |
Once again, no one was “barreling through.” Read the police report. It’s not hard. |
Exactly. Let’s see you survive 10 mph if your vital organs or head (yes, even in a plastic helmet) are run over by a car tire. |
Nope. |
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“ Pedestrians and bikers need to stop worrying about their rights and worry about staying alive. Yes, a car is absolutely supposed to stop for a pedestrian in a crosswalk, but sometimes they don't. You shouldn't just start walking through a crosswalk (even though it's your right) without making sure the car sees you and is going slowly enough to stop. Would you rather be right or alive?”
This is what I tell my kids all the time. That it is THEIR job to watch out for the cars, not the cars’ job to look for them because my kids cannot control if the driver actually does that. I teach them to yield to the cars unless it is clear the driver sees them and is waving them along. Yes, that is not the rules of the road. But I do not want my kids assuming cars will stop when they may not. |
This. We're so desperate to find fault here because it's so awful to imagine that this could happen to our family. |
Yes we do that. We come to an almost complete yield stop, look both ways, then go through the intersection. Especially during rush hour, you just can’t assume drivers are following the rules of the road. |
+1 |
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Sad story.
This is why I strongly oppose encouragement of walkers, particularly adults, to walk right out in front of moving cars in a crosswalk "because they have the right of way." Right of way doesn't matter if you die. So, please, do not walk into a crosswalk in front of moving traffic. Stop, look both ways, and when cars are gone or stop moving and its safe, walk across the street. Thank you. For protecting your own life. |
| This thread is disgusting. If you knew this family you wouldn’t be making all these assumptions. This is a local family, many of us know them and their little girl. They lost their only child and you are here blaming them so you can feel Better with yourself. I hope that the family never see this thread. Have some empathy. |
When I lived in LA many years ago the law was you stop for a pedestrian with a foot in the road anywhere, it sure if this is still the case, to my knowledge not sure that is the case here, still as a walker anywhere before I venture out into the road I make sure the driver sees me, has time to stop etc... why because I weigh 145 not over a ton. I like my body and not about to risk life long disability or worse just be use the driver is supposed to do the right thing. I tell my kids to do the same thing the driver doesn’t have to be a bad person to hit you and kill you they might just be stupid, either way the onus is on you to keep yourself safe. The law isn’t what is important, right or wrong after the fact doesn’t keep you safe. |
Seriously. So none of you have allowed your child to bike 2 feet ahead of you at ANY TIME in childhood? How does that even work? You jog ahead and the kid bikes behind you? As they get older you start sprinting faster and faster to keep ahead up with them? Because if you're walking and the kid is 2 feet ahead this could have easily happened to you as well. I would bet one million dollars every single one of us has allowed our child to bike ahead hundreds and hundreds of times. It is by shear luck that our kids have not been hit. This was a freak accident. Bad stuff happens. Freak accidents happen. Could have happened to any of us. |
But also have some empathy for the driver —who police think did nothing wrong and will probably be haunted the rest of his life. We had a family friend who committed suicide a year after hitting a toddler who farted into the street. He was cleared legally, but couldn’t forget the sights and sounds. |