I don't see why you object to cyclists riding in emergency lanes. They don't obstruct traffic, like at all ever. The dangers are all taken on by the cyclists themselves: glass/debris in the breakdown lane, idiotic drivers who think passing 2inches from them is hilarious. Should an emergency vehicle need to get through or a driver need to get off the motorway, it's hardly difficult for a cyclist to maneuver themselves out of the way.
1. BECAUSE it is a
legally binding contract for all nations who sign the United Nations Convention on Road Traffic, have with each other in relation to this specific topic. MOST Australian road rules directly reflect those requirements.
We did so in regards motorways, on the basis of road safety. International drivers do not expect to be seeing cycles down the F3 in NSW, be they on the shoulders or within a traffic lane at any time.
2. "The danger" is NOT just taken by cyclists themselves, but by all other traffic, and if an event happens, as it does, then "the other traffic" - driver and passengers,- then have to live with the often tragic outcome of the event; it might be cyclist survives, but that other traffic might have veered and crashed into other traffic. A zillion ways for each event to play out.
3. It is NOT safe being in the wide (2.0-3.0m) left emergency shoulder; we get road workers killed when in them, heck - they are often in vehicles too.
We get stopped vehicles, including police, who are hit by other traffic when in them, and we don't need to deliberately add to all potential by allowing much slower forms of transport on what are
purpose built, and expensive-by-the-kilometre, high-speed roads that generally carry speed limits of 110km/h, but may one day carry 130km/h, or even be derestricted for a length, and that carry BIG volumes of traffic by the hour.
We will continue building motorway class roads with separate, divided cycleways, a la M7 in NSW.
I again promise; NSW *WILL*, come hell or high water, - reinstall the signs at entry point ramps that prohibit cycles, tractors, pedestrians, and horse-drawn vehicles from using them.
This includes the M7 carriageway and shoulders, the F3, M2, the new F3 to Branxton freeway.
I invite you to organise cycle groups to campaign against this probability, by the next NSW election, 2010-2011.