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Delaware Bicycle Law
This information has been extracted from the Delaware
Bicycle Council.
In accordance with the Delaware Code Title 17, Section 1006, bicycles may
be operated on all streets and on all highways, except specifically signed
controlled access highways.
- 1. Parents and guardians shall not authorize or permit violation of these
laws by the child or ward.
- Every person riding a bicycle shall have all the rights and responsibilities
of a driver of any other vehicle.
- No bicycle shall carry more persons than it was designed to carry,
except an adult rider may carry a child securely attached in a back
pack or sling.
- A trailer or semitrailer may be securely attached to a bicycle.
- Persons riding a bicycle, coaster, roller skates, sled or toy vehicle
shall not cling to another vehicle upon the highway.
- When traveling less than the normal speed of traffic a bicycle
shall be ridden "as close as practicable" to the right-hand
edge of the roadway except: a) When passing another bicycle or
vehicle, b) When
making a left-hand
turn, c) When avoiding parked or slow moving vehicles, fixed
or slow moving objects, animals, surface hazards, etc., or d)
When
the lane
that is narrow
for a bicycle and a vehicle to travel safely side by side within
the
lane.
- Riding no more than two abreast is permitted only within a single
lane and when not impeding the normal and reasonable movement
of roadway traffic.
- A person riding a bicycle shall have both hands available to operate
the bicycle. At least one hand shall be kept on the handlebars
at all times. A
one-armed person may ride a bicycle and must use mechanical turn
signals.
- Left turns shall be permitted according to:
a. Normal motor vehicle
type of left turn procedure
b. Approach the turn on the right edge of the roadway, cross the intersecting
roadway, stop out of the way of traffic, yield to all vehicles and pedestrians,
obey all traffic control devices and then proceed in new direction.
c.
Special traffic control devices
- The right arm may be used to signal right turns
- Right and left turn signals shall be given not less than 100 feet
from turn and while stopped waiting to turn. Such signals may be
given intermittently,
rather than continuously, if the hand giving the signals is needed to
control the bicycle.
- A person riding a bicycle on a sidewalk or in a crosswalk shall yield
to pedestrians and give an audible signal before overtaking.
- A person shall not ride a bicycle on a sidewalk or crosswalk when
prohibited by official control devices.
- A person riding a bicycle on a sidewalk, or pushing a bicycle across
the road at a crosswalk shall have all the rights and responsibilities
of a pedestrian.
- A bicycle may be parked on a sidewalk except when prohibited by official
control devices or when impeding the normal and reasonable movement
of sidewalk traffic.
- Bicycles may be parked where vehicle parking is allowed.
- Bicycles may not be parked in such a way as to obstruct the movement
of a legally parked motor vehicle.
- A uniformed police officer may stop, inspect and test a bicycle that
is suspected to be unsafe or to have improper equipment
- When riding at night, a bicycle shall be equipped with a front,
white light visible for at least 500 feet from a motor vehicle
with lawful low
beam head
lamps.
- Every bicycle shall be fitted with a rear, red reflector
visible for at least 600 feet from a motor vehicle with
lawful low beam head lamps.
- When riding at night, a bicycle shall be equipped with
reflective material visible from both sides for at least
600 feet, or a lighted lamp visible
from both sides for at least 500 feet, from a motor vehicle
with lawful low beam
head lamps.
- A bicycle and its rider may be equipped with additional
lights and reflectors.
- Every bicycle shall be equipped with brakes that are
capable of stopping the bicycle within 25 feet from a speed
of 10 mph
on dry, clean level pavement.
- Every bicycle sold at retail shall have a permanent identification
number stamped or cast on its frame.
- A person riding a bicycle shall not wear ear plugs in
both ears or a headset covering both ears.
- A person who is hard of hearing may wear a hearing aid
while riding a bicycle
- Child Bicycle Helmet Law (HB 57)
Effective April 1, 1996 a
person under sixteen years of age shall not operate, ride upon, or
ride as a passenger any bicycle, unless that person is wearing
a properly fitted and fastened bicycle helmets which meets or exceeds
the ANSI Z90.4 bicycle helmet standard (or subsequent standard) or
the Snell
Memorial Foundation's 1984 Standard (or subsequent standard) for Protective
Headgear for Use in Bicycling. This requirement shall apply to a person
who rides upon a bicycle while in a restraining seat which is attached
to the bicycle or in a trailer towed by the bicycle. This requirement
applies
at all times while a bicycle is being operated on any property open
to the public or used by the public for pedestrian and vehicular purposes.
Any
guardian who fails to cause his child to wear a bicycle helmet shall
be fined for the first offense $25, and for each subsequent offense
$50. The court may dismiss all charges if presented evidence that a
violator
has purchased or obtained a bicycle helmet meeting the standards mentioned
above.
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