Quantcast

Ghost Bikes Targeted by Sanitation Department

Ghost bikes, those white bike memorials dedicated to killed cyclists, have become a sadly familiar sight around NYC and cities nationwide. But they could soon become a distant memory if a new proposal [pdf] from the Department of Sanitation is approved. As part of an initiative to clear the sidewalks of unused and junked bikes, the department wants to get rid of Ghost Bikes as well.

If approved, the Sanitation Department would begin removing bikes with missing parts, severely damaged bikes, and those with flat or missing tires. Workers would wrap warning stickers around the "derelict" bikes, and owners would have five days to remove them before the locks are clipped and the bikes carted to landfills. The Ghost Bikes would have 30 days to be taken down voluntarily; there are between 45-50 currently locked around town.

Leah Todd, who heads up the Street Memorial Project here in NYC, tells us, "It would be devastating for many people who use them to mourn or remember or advocate better conditions for safer streets." When asked if the memorial movement had faced opposition in other cities, Todd said, "We've seen a lot of interesting things happen in different cities. In DC when a ghost bike was removed, 21 ghost bikes returned on that corner to replace it on the next day."

"This is shocking. I can't believe it," Lizi Rahman, whose son Asif died on Queens Boulevard, tells the Daily News. "I go there because that's where he breathed last. When I go there, people see me cleaning the ghost bike. They stop and talk to me. They feel close to the family. I come here quite often. I want to continue coming here."

And Noah Budnick at Transportation Alternatives says, "These memorials are part of the grieving process for so many who’ve lost family and friends. Removing them is like the Department of Sanitation managing people’s grief." But Budnick does concede that "the DSNY is moving in the right direction with codifying a policy to tag and remove abandoned bikes. There’s ever growing demand for bike parking in NYC, and... cleaning up abandoned bikes is an important way to keep the bike parking ecosystem healthy." The public will be able to comment on the proposed rules during a July 20th public hearing, from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at 125 Worth Street, room 819.

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • WonderWmn212
  • anothervoter

    I agree with Jacque.

    For some reason motorcycles / scooters get a free pass.

    Pisses me off that I can't park my car on the sidewalk.

  • JacqueMehoff

    you know what I find that's impeding pedestrian traffic?

    Scooters and motorcycles parked on sidewalks and crosswalks. not bicycles.

  • drewo

    If most of the rest of city streets and sidewalks were not disgusting messes, I could understand wanting to remove some ghost bikes (that might impede pedestrians or other cyclists).

    But the DOS need to get their priorities in order. I sat for a few hours in Sara Roosevelt Park along Forsythe Street yesterday and the garbage and discarded food strewn along the park grounds was so pervasive, I might as well have been in a third-world country.

  • wobbleSmith

    here here. this city is literally a friggin' mess and this is what they come up with?

  • First off-- wouldn't clearing out derelict bikes be...LITERALLY making the streets safer? I'm just saying. Anyhow, if the ghost bike movement wants legitimacy...then get legitimacy. Seriously, are there laws for street memorials? Like, roadside grave markers & stuff?

  • youngpro

    tough, if the only argument is a memorial then they have a lot to go. these impede pedestrian traffic (you know, the kinda traffic they tout as being 'pro'). or perhaps they should fight for allowing a number of days instaed of removal.

  • thefacts

    For the past 400 years, thousands of people have died in NYC as a result of all sorts of accidents. Accidental deaths tragically occur on a daily basis.

    The Great Fire claimed thousands of lives. Should we have a memorial in front of every building Downtown?

    What do these morbid people want to live in: a city or a cemetery? Move on. When the flowers wilt, remove the bike.

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com