Bicycle Accidents and Road Hazards

Earlier this year our Atlanta attorneys settled a wrongful death case involving a bicycle accident which occurred inside the city limits. In that particular case, the bicycle rider, who lost his life, became entangled with loose utility wires hanging from a utility pole near a busy intersection on Peachtree Street. The evidence established that the utility wires had been in a state of disarray for several months but had not been repaired. Unfortunately, this wrongful death case is not an isolated incident. Just this past week, we were retained to represent an individual who may be paralyzed for life due to a road hazard apparently caused by the negligence of the general contractor, subcontractors and/or the Georgia Department of Transportation .
When roadways and bridges are designed by public authorities, obviously, where it is foreseeable that one riding a bicycle may use the roadway, it is necessary that precautions be taken to protect bicycle riders from serious injuries. As an example, a storm drain that runs parallel to the road is a hazard. If a bicyclist’s tires should fall into the storm drain and the drain runs parallel with the road, not perpendicular to it, obviously the cyclist could be thrown from his or her bike if the wheels of the bicycle fall into the drain. Similarly, if there are expansion joints in the road over bridges where there is a 1-3″ gap in the road, the tire of a bicycle can fall into the gap again causing the bicyclist to fall and sustain serious injury. Thus, it is imperative that when roadways are designed that the safety of all users of the road be protected, particularly those who are the most vulnerable to serious injury which many times includes those riding bicycles and motorcycles.
Those riding bicycles know that when they go out on the road that they need to be extremely careful of other motorists. Drunk drivers abound and there are multiple hazards along the side of roadways. To find a hazard in the roadway or immediately adjacent to it, however, is not normally anticipated by the average rider. When a loose utility wire, an improperly installed storm grade or unguarded expansion joint is allowed to exist, serious injury and even death is foreseeable. Such conditions should not exist but sadly they do. Regrettably, it may very well be that litigation is the best tool available to address these safety failures. If significant money damages are awarded in such cases, those responsible for the safety hazards will be “hit in the pocketbook” and hopefully will be deterred from similar acts of negligence. Even if deterred from future acts this is little comfort for the present day victim of a preventable injury. Nonetheless, if it takes litigation to encourage safety reforms and prevent future injuries, so be it.

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