Bikers like to point their finger at drivers as the reason for crashes, and drivers do the same to bikers.
It turns out both are almost equally to blame.
A new analysis of 10 years of crash data has found that drivers and cyclists are almost equally at fault in the 270 reported bike-motor vehicle crashes that Minneapolis averages annually.
Biker actions contributed to the crash in 59 percent of collisions, compared to almost 64 percent for drivers, according to the study presented Tuesday to the City Council. Sometimes both were judged at fault by investigating officers.
The city's Public Works Department plans to use the data to target education campaigns at drivers and bicyclists as well as to improve bike features such as lanes, bike-triggered traffic signals and other accommodations.
"We don't want to scare people from bicycling. We want to give them information they can take in their own hands," said Shaun Murphy, the city's bike-pedestrian coordinator. The department used police reports to analyze the crashes.
Crashes often occur because drivers don't see or yield to bikes, the study found, or when bikers behave unpredictably by ignoring red lights or riding against traffic.
Although investigators often were unable to determine a clear cause for accidents, the pattern differed by mode of travel. For example, drivers failed to yield in 32 percent of cases, often when making a right or left turn, compared with 13 percent for bikers. But bikers more often ignored signs or signals.