|
RIDING TO MB BIKEWEEK OR AB BIKEFEST? MAKE YOUR STAND ON THE STRAND!
A Call-to-Action for Black Bikers, White Riders and All American Motorcyclists!
Release Number 0130
|
"If a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so." --Thomas Jefferson
|
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." --Martin Luther King, Jr.
|
Despite all the rumors and the City of Myrtle Beach's best efforts to discourage them, next month hundreds of thousands
of motorcyclists are expected to ride or trailer to South Carolina's Grand Strand for
"Myrtle Beach" Spring Bike Week (May 8-17) and the
Atlantic Beach Memorial Day Bikefest (May 22-26). Yes, the Carolina Harley-Davidson Dealers Association
claims they are moving their "Spring Rally" to New Bern, NC...
http://tinyurl.com/bnvyt3
...but that little burg is only gearing up to handle 3,000 to 4,000 "safe and law-abiding"
(which in North Carolina includes DOT-lidded) motorcyclists:
http://tinyurl.com/dxnjxe
And according to this website...
http://tinyurl.com/dbusro
..."The Carolina Dealers Association, which had a 10 x 30 booth selling t-shirts last year, decided to start an
event in New Bern, NC. This will have no impact on Spring Bike Week in Myrtle Beach. We wish them well in New Bern,
but nothing from Myrtle Beach is moving to New Bern." That means virtually all of those 300,000 to 500,000
riders the Associated Press referred to will still be headed for "the Strand":
http://tinyurl.com/ccejxc
If YOU plan to be one of them, be advised that bikers ... especially BLACK bikers ... are no longer welcome in
Myrtle Beach. And why is that? Here's the official explanation from Myrtle Beach Mayor John Rhodes:
http://tinyurl.com/acf9os
But others hint this is merely whitewash to cover racial undertones, and that in order for the city leaders to
silence the NAACP while they axed the predominantly black Atlantic Beach Memorial Day Bikefest, they chose to
sacrifice the predominantly white Harley-Davidson Dealers Association Spring Rally along with it:
http://tinyurl.com/byf3co
They have even gone so far as to pass a series of anti-biker ordinances that went into effect on February 28:
http://tinyurl.com/dlyztg
Hungry for your biker bucks, vendor websites are now saying "Ride on in and let's party!
Just NOT in the city limits..." They're even giving you the "Best Ways to Avoid the City of Myrtle Beach":
http://tinyurl.com/chgefr
Those may be good directions, but THAT IS BAD ADVICE: One of the worst things American motorcyclists could do
is allow Myrtle Beach--or ANY municipality, for that matter--to effectively "ordinance away" our Right to Ride on
"their" streets (streets paid for in part by "our" local, state and federal taxes!). So if YOU are riding to
Myrtle Beach Bikeweek or Atlantic Beach Bikefest next month, here is what I challenge YOU to summon the courage to do:
MAKE YOUR STAND ON THE STRAND!
Ride to and RIGHT THROUGH the City of Myrtle Beach:
http://tinyurl.com/map-of-myrtle-beach-sc
But SPEND NO MONEY within the city limits. And cruise at very safe and VERY SLOW speeds, taking your own sweet time
at every stoplight and intersection to demonstrate YOU are a responsible rider. And most importantly ...
OBTAIN A MUNICIPAL CITATION (i.e. a ticket for an "administrative infraction") ... and either contest or refuse to
pay the fine for violating one or more of the following ordinances:
http://tinyurl.com/dlyztg
My specific recommendation is to violate the helmet ordinance (have a DOT lid with you, just not on you, as YOU safely
and slowly cruise through Myrtle Beach). Don't think for a moment this ordinance was intended to keep you safe:
It was written to keep YOU out! And as I told a reporter recently, if the biker-hating bozos on the
Myrtle Beach City Council thought we were all lid lovers, their "helmet ordinance" would have required YOU to
ride bare-headed!
Will there be consequences if YOU violate these municipal ordinances? Yes. But keep in mind that the willingness
to take a stand means the willingness to fight. Do NOT simply pay your fine. All that does is embolden the
City of Myrtle Beach to continue to discriminate against motorcyclists. For violating the helmet ordinance,
the most the City stands to gain is a $100.00 fine from you. However, when YOU fight the city it costs them
much more than that. They have to pay the police officer to come to court. They have to pay a prosecutor and a
judge. They have to pay the clerks and staff to collect the fines etc. The more motorcyclists who stand up
and fight the more expensive it is for the City of Myrtle Beach.
Yes, there is a $100.00 fine, but you may
never have to pay it. Lawsuits have already been filed challenging the constitutionality and enforceability
of a municipal helmet ordinance in a freedom-of-choice state. And in direct response to a memorandum from
the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Carolina, the City of Myrtle Beach has already been forced to
scrap the "administrative courts" it set up to deal with "civil infractions" such as this one:
http://tinyurl.com/c4rr8n
So for now, your case will be heard in municipal court. And will you need a lawyer? Probably so. But you should
not have to pay for one. Those who participated in the "Myrtle Beach Freedom Ride" on February 28 were offered
free legal representation by Tom McGrath's Motorcycle Law Group (
TomMcGrathLaw.com
):
http://tinyurl.com/TheRideOfTheOneHundred
And since then, South Carolina State Representative Thad Viers (
ViersT@schouse.org
) has volunteered free legal help for any rider like
YOU choosing to defy Myrtle Beach's discriminatory lid law:
http://tinyurl.com/ck6q9s
And what if YOU simply refuse to pay the fine?
Well, if those challenging the ordinance in court prevail, in the end
no one ticketed for a helmet violation will have to pay! But if they don't, I am told the municipal court clerk is
empowered to collect fines, and might seek a judgment that could affect your credit. And conceivably, an arrest
warrant which could be served anywhere in South Carolina might be issued. So if you live in South Carolina, an
attorney will likely advise you to contest rather than refuse to pay the fine. But if you live outside of South
Carolina, you might want to ask yourself just how much time, effort and money the City of Myrtle Beach is willing
to expend chasing a hundred bucks. And keep in mind that violating these ordinances result in
"administrative infractions", which are NOT like regular traffic tickets. So consult with an attorney in your
state to be totally safe, but chances are your driver's license will NOT be subject to suspension or points
penalties no matter what YOU choose to do.
A few days ago, on March 31, over 4,000 British bikers jammed the streets of London England to protest unfair
parking fees being imposed on motorcycles there, concerned that the precedent would spread to the entire country:
http://tinyurl.com/cwrvfg
WILL AMERICAN BIKERS DO LESS to take back their Right-to-Ride through Myrtle Beach, and prevent the establishment
of a precedent by which municipalities from coast to coast and beyond could "ordinance" motorcycling right out
of existence? We certainly hope not. But ***YOU***, by your action or inaction, will be the one who answers
that question...
With thanks to Robert "RC" Conroy (
BigBendBikersForFreedom.com
) for contributing to this call-to-action, and otherwise speaking strictly for myself and no other individuals
or organizations,
Bruce Arnold
Bruce@LdrLongDistanceRider.com
Author and Publisher, LdrLongDistanceRider.com
Co-Moderator, Bruce-n-RC's Biker Forum
Mile Eater Gold Member, Iron Butt Association (IBA)
Sustaining Member, Motorcycle Riders Foundation (MRF)
2009 Chairman's Circle, American Motorcyclist Association (AMA)
###
|