'I got my head whacked': N.B. cyclist on the mend after Friday the 13th hit and run - Action News
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New Brunswick

'I got my head whacked': N.B. cyclist on the mend after Friday the 13th hit and run

A New Brunswick cyclist is in the hospital with a fractured pelvis, a concussion and cuts and bruises after a vehicle hit him and fled the scene in Fredericton on May 13.

Brian Atkinson suffered fractured pelvis, concussion in hit and run on May 13

Brian Atkinson lies in a hospital bed while holding up the helmet and the jersey he was wearing when he was hit by a driver.
Brian Atkinson was hit by a driver while cycling on Woodstock Road in Fredericton on the morning of May 13. (Jill Peters/Submitted by Brian Atkinson)

The last thing Brian Atkinson remembers about the morning of May 13 is putting on hisbright orange cycling jersey and turning on his flashing red bike light.

The next thing he remembers is waking up later that afternoon in a bed at the Dr. Everett Chalmers Regional Hospital in Fredericton with a fractured pelvis and a concussion.

His smashed cycling helmet andthelargebruise on his hip were evidence of the crash's severity.

The vehicle involved and the person driving it, however, remain a mystery.

"Leaving the scene of an accident is one thing but if you actually hit the personit doesn't make me very happy, that's for sure,"said Atkinson, who spoke to CBC News from his hospital bed on Thursday.

"You can kill people, you can change people's lives forever. And we don't have any protections. I mean, that helmet, that's it... and when a truck or car hits you, you don't have much of a chance."

The Fredericton Police Force have appealed to the public for information about the crash Atkinson was involved in.

The Fredericton Police Force shared an image of a car as part of a Facebook post asking the public for tips to help find the person or vehicle involved in a hit and run on Woodstock Road on May 13. (Fredericton Police Force/Facebook)

In a Facebook post on Tuesday, the force said at about 8:20 a.m. on May 13, policeresponded to a hit and runat 3532 Woodstock Roadinvolving a cyclist with injuries.

"At this time, police are following up with witnesses but are looking for the public's assistance to identify a vehicle and the owner who may have information related to the accident," the force said.

The force included a grainy image of a light-coloured sedan inthe post, which asks anyone with information related to the vehicle or suspects involved to contact Const. Kristen Main at kristen.main@fredericton.ca.

CBC News asked police if there have been any updates in the investigation, but did not receive a response by publishing time.

No memory of crash

Atkinson might be of more help topolice if he could remember what happened.

He said he set out for what was supposed to be a quick40-kilometre ride from his home in Upper Kingsclear, throughMazerolle Settlement, and down into Fredericton to take Woodstock Road back home.

Atkinson said he doesn't remember anything that happened after he geared up to leave home, and only has a few details based on what police and others who were near the scene told him after the incident.

"I think I got my head whacked well, I know I got my head whacked," Atkinson said.

"You can look at the helmet and it's really smashed in the back. So either that's the the mirror of the vehicle, which is the first guess, and we did find some shattered side mirror a little further down the road."

Brian Atkinson's helmet was smashed after his crash with a vehicle on Woodstock Road May 13. (Submitted by Brian Atkinson)

He said he later found out that an employeefrom a nearby childcare centre came out after the crash to slowtraffic and call police.

"And then what I understand is she stayed with me and I was talking to her the whole time, supposedly for whatever it was 15 minutes til the ambulance came. I guess she did a great job."

Atkinson said he's currently on morphine for the pain, and is awaiting news on whether the pelvic fracture will be able to heal without the need for surgery.

He said it could be as longas four months before he can get back on his bike.

Need for better education

Atkinson is 70 years old and said he's been cycling for most of his life.

In recent years, he said he's noticed drivers have become more courteous around cyclists, particularly since Ellen's Law came into effect in June 2017, requiring them to leave at least a metre of space when overtaking cyclists.

Brian Atkinson says motorists generally give enough space when overtaking but there is usually at least one that passes too close every time he rides. (Submitted by Brian Atkinson)

Still, he said he thinks more could be done to remind drivers to keep an eye out for cyclists and to share the road.

"In general, drivers have been really way better since they passed that law. I just think there needs to be a lot more education.

"You know, [put] the odd billboard up, like justsomething to tell people that this is a law andyou got to share the road and we pay taxes too andwe are supposed to be there."

Wayne Arrowsmith is the advocacy director for Velo NB, and was part of the group that lobbied government to enact Ellen's Law, which was named in honour of Ellen Watters, who was struck and killed by a car while cycling in Sussex in December 2016.

Wayne Arrowsmith, director of advocacy for Velo NB, was at the New Brunswick Legislature for the introduction of Ellen's Law by then Public Safety Minister Denis Landry.

Arrowsmithsaid the law mandating drivers give a one-metre berth when overtaking was a positive step, but more could be done to educate drivers.

"I would like to see it as part of the curriculum when people who are trying to get a driver's license," Arrowsmith said.

"That they're educated about Ellen's law, that they're educated about their responsibility for not texting and driving, and despite the fact that everybody knows that, I think it's an epidemic out there of people who are on their cell phones."

4 convictions under Ellen's Law

The Department of Justice and Public Safety says there have been four convictions for violations under Ellen's Law since it was passed in June 2017.

JudyDsalliers, a spokesperson for the department, also saidin an email that 52 collisions between vehicles and cyclists happened in 2019 the latest year thatdata is available.

She said the information provided by the Department of Transportation and Infrastructuredidn'tindicate the number of fatalities.

"It's an excellent reminder that motorists must share the road, and that all users motorists, motorcyclists and cyclists need to adhere to the rules and pay attention to other traffic,"Dsallierssaid.

"An education campaign on sharing the road has been in place since 2017. Cyclists have a responsibility to make themselves visible to drivers, and drivers have a responsibility to make sure they look carefully for cyclists."