At the corner of Morewood and Ellsworth Avenues near my house in Shadyside, I've been riding past a bike that's locked to a street sign and has been there for over a month now. The inevitable happened, I guess, and as of a week ago, someone took the rear wheel off, and disconnected the front wheel from the fork, though the U-lock still held it and the chain to the street sign. There were some bike parts (quick release bar) scattered on the sidewalk the last I saw.
I'm not going to say it exactly breaks my heart to see that but it is becoming a bit of an eyesore. Is there any resource that could be a central clearinghouse for this situation where you have stripped-down or evidently abandoned bikes? I see them occasionally, and think (a) that an abandoned bike frame is taking up space that could be occupied by a working bike and (b) it projects a sense to non-bikers or casual bikers and others that the area is unsafe (not the case in this area, unless you're leaving a bike locked in a public space for months on end, which is kind of dumb to begin with) or other bike-negative thoughts. And it's an eyesore.
I'm thinking the police could come by with some super heavy duty bolt cutters, haul what's left of the bike to some stolen property depot, and if nobody claims it within a given time frame (one year?) they get donated to Free Ride or scrapped.
Anyone else with me?
Also, yesterday afternoon I was riding south-eastbound on Penn Avenue just before Whitfield Street and a guy in a car passed me with about three inches to spare. Catching up to him at the next red light (of course) he ignored me at first but I tapped on his window and gave him a fairly incoherent version of the "Way too close! Next time you're going to really hurt someone. Or maybe they'll smash one of your windows in with a U-lock!" rant. He sheepishly said he was sorry, but I'm not sure he meant it. Is the consensus that this kind of immediate confrontation works? It sure felt kind of good.
-- Ian