Warning you could be fined $110!

When this issue was raised in our Council meeting on May 5, 2008, the mayor asked: if this is true (obviously questioning the veracity of the report), then I’d like to know about it. Well, I’d like to know more about it also.

I have asked our City Staff to answer this question and I will follow up as I get answers.

Here is my email to Council and City Staff:

As I said in our Council meeting, whatever the City’s position is with respect to ticketing, it should be a policy that is clearly communicated to our citizens.

Whatever the real intent of what would seem to be a very different position on when and why to ticket, this communicates to the citizenry, that the City is trying to fleece the citizens of every penny possible. It diminishes respect for our police who work hard to protect us.

I would like to know how our policy changed and who discussed this change.

Also, will we now be ticketing pedestrians who cross against a red light or avoid crosswalks and jaywalk? Again, I am not indicating a particular position what should be ticketed, but I am very concerned about what creates the appearance of tricking our citizens, so we can take their money.

- Ron Suarez

On Tue, May 6, 2008 at 7:00 PM, anna schnitzer wrote:

To the Mayor and City Council Members:

I first heard from a student/lifeguard at the Y that she was ticketed by two
patrolmen on bicycles recently for having run a red light while bicycling,
even though she stopped and made sure that there was no oncoming traffic in
sight. The ticket was for $110. A few days ago, at the corner of First
and West Liberty, my husband and I saw the two bicycle policemen stop and
ticket a cyclist who obviously was traveling home from work. He did not
appear to have interfered with traffic, either, and he seemed flabbergasted
at receiving the ticket.

It would seem that the majority of bicycle riders in the City of Ann Arbor
do not realize that they can be ticketed and made to pay this high fine for
riding a bicycle through a red light. Perhaps the problem is that bicycles
can at times ride on the sidewalk in Ann Arbor; in fact, some of the
bicycles routes are designated to be ON the sidewalk. Furthermore,
pedestrians are not ticketed for jaywalking through a red light, so there is
a mixed message here, it would seem. Sometimes cyclists are treated like
motor vehicles having to obey traffic rules on the road and at other times
just like pedestrians, in that they can be on the sidewalk. To be fair, it
appears that either a change in the ordinance should be effected or, if it
continues to be vigorously enforced, extensive education that it exists and
goes along with a fine of $110, would be in order.

Supposedly, Ann Arbor is one of the top three best bicycling cities of its
size in the United States. Let’s keep it that way.

Thanks very much for your attention to this matter.

Anna Ercoli Schnitzer
Ann Arbor