PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Make Cycling Safer
Cycling Advocates' Network (CAN) are petitioning the Ministers of Transport, Police and Road Safety to urgently
implement proposed plans to make cycling
safer. Its petition includes a 9-point plan for improving cycle safety.
The petition is prompted by the recent deaths in Wellington of Des Eyre and Steve Fitzgerald.
Spokesperson Stephen McKernon says, 'cyclists in the Wellington area have advocated for decades to improve the roads on
which these cyclists died. Their deaths highlight the urgency of improving road safety for cyclists'.
McKernon says, 'the Government and many local authorities have cycling strategies and programmes, but actual changes are
taking far too long to put in place. These require much greater resources and the will to act on existing commitments.
'If New Zealand is serious about making the most of all the benefits of cycling, then we need immediate action to make
our roads safer and more attractive for people to cycle on.
CAN is calling for urgent action to promote the safety of cyclists and has launched a petition to give New Zealanders
the chance to show their support in person. The petition can be found on
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/NZCycleSafety/ or at http://www.can.org.nz/. The petition includes a 9-point plan
covering
cycling safety improvements through better planning, funding, roading project criteria, promotion, education and
training, speed limits and driver licensing.
CAN is meeting with Government Ministers and officials to ask them to adopt the 9-point plan. CAN will also press for a
coroner's review of the two recent cycle fatalities to look for systemic causes behind cycle crashes and to recommend
remedies.
The Ministry of Transport's Household Travel Survey 2003 - 2006 shows there are about 1.3 million cyclists in New
Zealand (about 30% of the population) making it one of the country's most popular sporting and leisure pursuits.
ENDS