Bikernet News

Bikernet Law Chart
organized by state...

Bikers' Rights

We have two choices. We can be involved in the Motorcyclists Rights Movement or we can sit and wait for our enemies to come and take our scooters. They are coming. 

Bikernet chooses to fight.

In the pages and articles that follow we will try and keep you updated with the important stuff going on around the country. Our goals are the abolition of helmet laws, discrimination and bigotry. We will also endeavor to point those who need help in the right direction. 


THE BISH REPORT, MC SALES UP, BIKE CLUB ATTACK ON NEW YORK, FUNERALS ATTACKED IN AUSTRALIA AND SENSORS ADDED TO BIKES IN EUROPE

billbish
Author Bill Bish.

THE AIM/NCOM MOTORCYCLE E-NEWS SERVICE is brought to you by Aid to Injured Motorcyclists (A.I.M.) and the National Coalition of Motorcyclists (NCOM), and is sponsored by the Law Offices of Richard M. Lester. For more information, call us at 1-(800) ON-A-BIKE or visit us on our website at http://www.ON-A-BIKE.com.

NCOM COAST TO COAST BIKER NEWS
Compiled & Edited by Bill Bish,
National Coalition of Motorcyclists (NCOM)

chilly ad

INTEREST IN MOTORCYCLES SOARS WITH FUEL PRICES Motorcycle and scooter sales across the nation are booming as drivers look for ways to trim the cost of soaring gas prices, but the rush of inexperienced riders hitting the road has had deadly consequences.

NADA Guides, which publishes a well known book of used vehicle prices, reported that the number of people researching motorcycle purchases has increased nearly 50% over last year.

Scooter sales jumped 24 percent nationwide in the year's first quarter, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council. While new motorcycle sales were lagging on the whole, those with smaller engines that get better gas mileage saw an upturn, according to MIC spokesman Mike Mount, adding that used motorcycle sales also are climbing.

The small fuel-efficient vehicles are easy on the mileage and the pocketbook, which has made them wildly popular with gasoline prices surpassing $4 a gallon. Depending on engine size, motorcycles can get between 40 and 60 miles per gallon of gas. Scooters, which tend to be smaller and easier to drive, can reach 100 miles per gallon or more. That's attracting newbies, dealers say, with many new buyers citing the price at the pump as their primary motivation for turning to two-wheel transportation.

According to a recent report by the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA), motorcycle sales have tripled from 1997 to 2006, from 356,000 to almost 1.1 million, while motorcycle fatalities more than doubled from 2,110 in 1997 to 4,810 in 2006.

Last year, the GHSA asked state highway safety agencies to complete a survey on motorcycle safety activities designed to curb the annual increase in motorcycle crashes.

The surveys revealed "a patchwork of helmet laws,” with only nine states and Puerto Rico indicating special efforts to help law enforcement identify helmets that don’t meet federal safety standards. Rider training courses have been overly strained due to the influx of new=2 0motorcyclists and, as a result, 29 states "indicated they have capacity problems with delays ranging from one day to 12 weeks for training classes. Only three states, Florida, Maine, and Rhode Island require rider education for all riders, regardless of age," according to the association. The report also says many motorcyclists drive without valid licenses: In 2006, 25 percent of operators in fatal motorcycle crashes did not have a valid motorcycle license, compared to 13 percent of drivers of passenger vehicles.

BrouVertbanner

GEORGIA TURNS SPEEDERS INTO FUEL PUMPS It’s a ridiculous concept, reports the National Motorists Association (NMA), but somehow it seemed inevitable. Check out this st ory from USA Today: The surging price of gasoline has come to this: a "fuel surcharge" on your next speeding ticket.

Drivers caught speeding in the north Atlanta suburb of Holly Springs soon will have to pay an extra $12 -- to cover $4-a-gallon gas costs for the police officers who stop them.

Is your police cruiser running low on fuel? No problem, just pull over someone driving home from work, ticket them, and you’ll have a full tank of gas in no time.

Need to balance your budget? Maybe you should look to Pizza Hut for inspiration: Police Chief Ken Ball says he was seeking ways to maintain patrols despite record high gas prices. "I was hearing that Delta (Air Lines), pizza deliverers, florists were adding fuel charges to their services, and I thought, why not police departments?" he says.

Unfortunately it looks like this isn’t going to be an isolated case. As with any situation where money is available to be taken from citizens, local government is on the case immediately: Ball says he’s being "inundated" by calls from police chiefs and city managers. "I’ve heard from at least a dozen police chiefs and half a dozen city managers," he says of their municipality’s recently-passed measure. "They want to know how we did it, and could=2 0we send them a copy of the ordinance."

Las Vegas Bike Fest Banner

MARYLAND RIDERS LIGHT IT UP Motorcycle riders in Maryland hope to get more attention from car drivers with a new state law that allows the use of specified auxiliary lighting, which can only be used after dark, thus increasing their visibility to other road users at night.

Senate Bill 713, the "Night-time Awareness - Auxiliary Lighting" bill, passed unanimously through the House and Senate, and was signed into law April 8th by Governor Martin O'Malley.

The new law, which went into effect June 1st, addresses the use of LED lights that illuminate the sides of the motorcycle, thus allowing other drivers to see motorcyclists from the side as well as front and rear. The lights cannot be blue or red and cannot blink, flash or oscillate. They can only be directed toward the engine and drive train and are specifically prohibited from being on wheels.

Pat Corcoran, spokesman for ABATE of Maryland, said "Most motorcycle accidents involving another vehicle, are almost always the fault of the other vehicle, and usually the comment of the other driver is, we just didn't see him."

The law also allows the use of blue-dot tail lights, which also increases conspicuity in traffic.

Lepera Banner

STATES GREEN-LIGHT NEW RED-LIGHT LAWS FOR MOTORCYCLES Motorcyclists in a growing number of states are being allowed to go through red lights when sensors aren't able to detect they are there.

In May, South Carolina became the seventh state to give motorcyclists license to proceed with caution after stopping when the device that causes the light to change from red to green doesn't activate, according to a recent article in USA Today.

North Carolina passed a similar law in 2007. Wisconsin (2006), Idaho (2006) Arkansas (2005), Tennessee (2003) and Minnesota (2002), all have passed laws the past six years, while similar legislation has been introduced in Georgia, Missouri and Oklahoma.

The traffic lights in question are controlled by devices buried under the road that operate similar to metal detectors, according to Doug Hecox, a spokesman for the Federal Highway Administration. Their sensitivity can be set to detect motorcycles, but the proper balance is difficult to adjust, he said.

California has chosen a technological solution. A law adopted last year requires that when new traffic-activated signals are installed, they be capable of detecting motorcycles and bicycles.

“In Texas, we took a different approach,” said Sputnik, President of the Texas Motorcycle Rights Association (TMRA-II) and Chairman of the National Coalition of Motorcyclists’ Legislative Task Force (NCOM-LTF). He told a gathering at the recent NCOM Convention in Houston about a law passed there last year: “When a traffic light doesn’t detect motorcycles, they have to fix them so they do.”

LEGENDAIRBANNER

EU MOTORCYCLES TO GET ONBOARD WARNING SYSTEMS Motorcycles will get new onboard warning systems to tell the rider when he's going too fast under proposals unveiled recently at a motorcycle safety conference in Brussels, Belgium. The technology will tell the rider when he's going into a bend too fast or exceeding the speed limit. A “frontal collision warning” system will detect when the bike is too close to an obstacle.

On-road trials of the In-Vehicle Information System technology will begin by 2010 under the European Commission's plans, which are backed by the Federation of European Motorcyclists Associations (FEMA).

The project, called SAFERIDER, “aims to develop devices to improve the comfort and safety of riders through technology such as warning devices to alert the rider of a potential crash or provide information about black (blind) spots or traffic design,” according to a FEMA press release, adding that “The decision by FEMA to participate in the SAFERIDER project is because we need to find out if technology can assist a rider to make decisions to avoid collisions or crashes. We need to ensure that the technology being developed can benefit riders - but if doesn't, then we need to be in a position to make our point of view clear.”

More information on the SAFERIDER project can be found at www.saferider-eu.org.

cops

BIKER FUNERALS ILLEGAL DOWN UNDER Gypsy Jokers from across Australia gathered in Adelaide for a funeral which would be illegal under new “anti-bikie” laws enacted by the South Australia State Government.

The bikers were farewelling club president Wayne "Chiller" McGrath, 42, a father of four and part-owner of four tattoo parlors, who suffered a fatal heart attack while exercising on a treadmill at his Virginia home. More than 300 people - including more than 100 Gypsy Jokers motorcycle club members nationally and abroad from Germany, Norway and the US attended his funeral. The mourners - who included wives, girlfriends and children - then went to the Gypsy Jokers clubhouse for a wake to honor their fallen brother.

Legal sources said under the new anti-biker laws passed by the government and now taking effect, the funeral and wake would have been declared prohibited events as “bikies” will be prohibited from associating with each other once their so-called “gangs” have been declared illegal organizations by the Attorney-General.

The new laws - the first of their kind in Australia apart from the federal anti-terror legislation - have been attacked by lawyers and civil libertarians as "draconian" and an erosion of individual rights, particularly freedom of association.

The laws contain provisions that members of outlaw motorcycle clubs can only associate with direct family members such as their parents, brothers and sisters, grandparents and children. They are not permitted to gather together or have contact with their uncles, aunts or cousins - or neighbors and other friends or acquaintances.

Anyone who breaches the laws - whether they are bikers or individuals having contact with bikers at least six times a year - can be jailed for up to five years.

Control orders restraining the movements of individual bikers can also be issued by magistrates and judges on the application of SA Police. Criminal intelligence or any other information used by police to obtain the control orders must remain secret and anyone issued with an order cannot seek to have it independently reviewed by a judge.

saxon banner

WEIRD NEWS: DIRTY20DEEDS More than 600 emergency workers participated in a mock disaster drill simulating an attack on Long Island by a fake biker gang detonating a “dirty bomb'' at a federal courthouse, testing the abilities of authorities to handle such a radioactive attack.

Police, firefighters, medical workers and other personnel from 60 agencies converged on the fire academy in Yaphank, NY, which also involved 10 area hospitals.

The exercise was dubbed “S.C.R.U.B,'' or “Suffolk=2 County Response to an Unknown Bomb,'' and the scenario involved a local biker gang called “El Diablo,'' which would attack the courthouse with a deadly dirty bomb after federal officials arrested their leaders.

More than 100 people were injured or killed in the fake attack, and the injured had to be cleansed and decontaminated before they were actually sent to local hospitals for treatment. Police had to determine the cause of the blast. Other participants practiced decontamination, detecting radiation exposure and coordinating responses with multiple agencies.

Authorities called it the largest emergency drill in Suffolk County's history. It was funded by the Suffolk County Department of Fire, Rescue and Emergency services with a $175,000 grant from the Department of Homeland Security.

Enviyengine
Check the alternator on this puppy. We will feature this bike shortly. One of the Chopper Challenge bikes from Power Plant in Los Angeles.

QUOTABLE QUOTE: "These are days when many are discouraged. In the 93 years of my life, depressions have come and gone. Prosperity has always returned and will again.”

John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937), American industrialist

Streetwalker banner



More From The Bikernet Rights News Archives........

Week of April 18, 2001
Week of September 11, 2001
Week of September 14, 2001
Week of September 16, 2001
Week of September 21, 2001
Week of September 27, 2001
Week of October 6, 2001
Week of October 13, 2001
Week of October 18, 2001
Week of October 29, 2001
Week of November 9, 2001
Week of November 11,2001
Week of November 15, 2001
Week of December 15, 2001
Week of January 4, 2002
Week of January 20, 2002
Week of Febuary 10, 2002
Week of March 24, 2002
Week of April 18, 2002
Week of May 8, 2002
Week of May 19, 2002
Week of June 15, 2002
Week of June 24, 2002
Week of July 18, 2002
Week of August 18, 2002
Week of August 25, 2002
Week of September 17, 2002
Week of September 24, 2002
Week of October 18, 2002
Week of November 1, 2002
Week of November 14, 2002
Week of November 20, 2002
Week of December 15, 2002
Week of December 19, 2002
Week of January 16, 2003
Week of January 26, 2003
Week of February 16, 2003
Week of February 23, 2003
Week of March, 16, 2003
Week of March 20, 2003
Week of April 17, 2003
Week of April 24, 2003
Week of May 17, 2003
Week of June 17, 2003
Week of June 22, 2003
Week of July 16, 2003
Week of July 20, 2003
Week of August 17, 2003
Week of August 21, 2003
Week of August 31, 2003
Week of September 5, 2003
Week of September 17, 2003
Week of October 17, 2003
Week of October 21, 2003
Week of November 17, 2003
Week of November 20, 2003
Week of December 17, 2003
Week of December 21, 2003
Week of January 17, 2004
Week of January 12, 2004
Week of February 10, 2004
Week of February 16, 2004
Week of February 18, 2004
Week of March 5, 2004
Week of March 23, 2004
Week of April 17, 2004
Week of May 17, 2004
Week of June 18, 2004
Week of July 18, 2004
Week of August 21, 2004
Week of September 19, 2004
Week of October 17, 2004
Week of November 23, 2004
Week of December 15, 2004
Week of January 23, 2005
Week of March, 4, 2005
Week of April 27, 2005
Week of May 24, 2005
Week of June 19, 2005
Week of July 26, 2005
Week of August 14, 2000
Week of August 22, 2005
Week of September 6, 2005
Week of SEptember 18, 2005
Week of October 3, 2005
Week of October 28, 2005
Week of November 18, 2005
Week of 21 December, 2005
Week of January 17, 2006
Week of February 21, 2006
Week of March 21, 2006
Week of April 20, 2006
Week of June 5, 2006
Week of September 25, 2006
Week of November 19, 2006
Week of December 28, 2006
Week of February 18, 2007
Week of May 14, 2007
Week of June 5, 2007
Week of June 25, 2007
Week of August 14, 2007
Week of November 23, 2007
Week of December 22, 2007
Week of January 21, 2008
Week of February 18, 2008
Week of May 20, 2008
Week of July 20, 2008

Send Bikernet your local news, and we'll get it up for the world to see. 

Bikernet Law Chart organized by state...

Bikernet Homepage...


Search Bikernet.com using

Google




Bikernet.com - Est. January, 1996

FREE DEPARTMENTS

  • Home
  • Site Directory
  • Bike Features
  • Bandit's Cantina
  • Bars And Hangouts
  • Bikernet Biz
  • Bikernet Studios
  • Bikernet Thursday News
  • Bikers Rights News
  • Bonneville 2006 Effort
  • Bonneville 2007 Effort
  • Buell Report
  • Events Calendar
  • Event Coverage
  • Freedom Film
  • Free Contest
  • King Report
  • Knucklebusters
  • Memorials - Fallen Bretheren
  • Motorcycle Web Links
  • Movies & Music Reviews
  • Nick the Dick
  • Reader's Showcase
  • Road Tests
  • Shop Listings
  • Special Reports
  • The Sportster Reports
  • Techs & Bike Builds
  • Two Wheeled Tales
  • Virtual Classifieds
  • Your Shot Forum
  • SPONSORS

  • Accurate-Engineering
  • Accident?
  • AVON Tyres
  • Baker Drivetrain
  • Belt Drives LTD.
  • Big Dog Motorcycles
  • Big Twin West
  • Brass Balls Bobbers
  • Broken Spoke Campground
  • Compu-Fire
  • Custom Chrome
  • Custom Powder Coating
  • D&D Exhaust
  • DiOro Jeans
  • Easyriders Events
  • Glencoe Camp Resort
  • Independent Cycle
  • Jims USA
  • Las Vegas Bikefest
  • Legend Air Suspension
  • Le Pera Seats
  • Lucky Devil Metal Works
  • Lil Joes Leather
  • Metric Thunder
  • Rivera-Primo
  • S&S Cycle
  • Saxon Motorcycles
  • Spectro Oils
  • Streetwalker Exhaust
  • Sucker Punch Sally's
  • Thunder Road
  • Wolfgang Publications
  • Zipper's Performance / Thundermax
  • CONTACT INFORMATION
    Bikernet.com
    200 Broad Ave, Wilmington, CA 90744
    Phone (310) 830-0630
    E-Mail Bandit       E-Mail Sin Wu
    Send this page to (e-mail address):
    Your Name:
    Click for Bikernet Homepage Bandit's Bikernetis a registered trademark of 5 Ball, Inc.
    © 5 Ball, Inc.1996 - 2000. All Rights Reserved.