[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 18]
[House]
[Page 24430]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




    PUSHING FOR SAFER CYCLING CONDITIONS IN MEMORY OF JEANNE MENARD

  (Mr. INGLIS of South Carolina asked and was given permission to 
address the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
  Mr. INGLIS of South Carolina. Mr. Speaker, the bicycling community in 
Greenville, South Carolina, and my own office had a tragic loss this 
week. Jeanne Menard was a bicyclist and an enthusiast in Greenville who 
was struck and killed by a car. Maybe it was the fact that the sun was 
low in the sky, maybe it was a dirty windshield, maybe it was 
inattention, maybe it was all of those things. In any event, somebody 
who had given her time very recently to distributing helmets to school 
children in one of our parks was killed in our town.
  As a society, we want to promote a healthier lifestyle. We want 
people to ride bikes in order to relieve congestion on our streets, in 
order to make them healthier and just to have some fun.
  The problem is that we are not all attentive to those bikes. In South 
Carolina, there were 21 bicyclists killed in 2004; so far this year, 
10. Nationwide, 600 bicyclists have been killed yearly in crashes with 
automobiles.
  I applaud groups like the League of American Bicyclists, the Palmetto 
Cycling Coalition, the Spartanburg Freewheelers and the Greenville 
Spinners, of which Jeanne Menard was a part, in their efforts to 
promote bike safety; and I hope that all of us will take the 
opportunity to spread the word in our own districts.

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