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Bus company investigates employee filmed driving on cycle lane and pavement

Local councillors – discussing a campaign that encourages cyclists and pedestrians to ‘be safe, be seen’ – described the incident as “shocking” and “scary”

A bus company in Dublin has confirmed that a “full investigation” is being carried out after one of its employees was filmed driving a double-decker bus on both the cycle lane and footpath in order to undertake a queue of traffic.

The shocking incident, which took place on Tuesday morning on a residential street in south Dublin, was captured on a car’s dashcam.

The footage, uploaded to Twitter later that evening, shows the driver of the bus – which appears to be out of service – travelling at speed past a row of houses on the Rathfarnham Road towards Terenure, as half of the vehicle straddles the footpath and the other half the adjacent cycle lane.

A cyclist riding in the bike lane comes into view mere seconds after the bus passes, while the law-breaking and reckless driver is soon forced to swerve back into the line of traffic as another motorist emerges from an adjoining road. The video has since been viewed almost 200,000 times on Twitter, with one user describing the incident as “one of the scariest things I’ve ever seen on the roads”.

> “One of the scariest things I’ve ever seen on the roads”: Bus driver filmed undertaking on cycle lane AND pavement

A spokesperson for Dublin Bus, the state-owned bus operator for Ireland’s capital city, announced last night that “a full investigation is underway” into the incident, the Irish Independent reports.

A statement from An Garda Síochána also said that it has “commenced inquiries into an alleged incident of dangerous driving”. The Fine Gael transport minister Hildegarde Naughton confirmed to RTÉ News this morning that police were investigating the “extremely serious” incident, which she said was “very concerning”.

The video was also discussed yesterday afternoon during a meeting of Dublin City Council’s Traffic and Transport Committee. The meeting, ironically, was scheduled to discuss the Road Safety Authority’s ‘Be Safe, Be Seen’ campaign, which encourages cyclists and pedestrians to wear bright, reflective clothing at night so they can avoid being struck by motorists.

Green Party councillor Carolyn Moore told the committee that, following Tuesday’s incident, the upcoming road safety campaign should instead focus on the behaviour of drivers.

“If you take that bus in Terenure yesterday, any pedestrian who stepped out of their front gate into the path of that bus could have been lit up like a carnival and they still would have been injured in that scenario,” Moore said.

Fianna Fáil councillor Keith Connolly added: “I saw that video myself, I think it was shocking, but ultimately it is down to an enforcement issue. Someone illegally mounting and driving down the pavement is an issue for the guards. It is dangerous driving essentially, and if anyone had walked out on that, it would have been a really bad outcome.”

Connolly later told the Irish Independent that there was “absolutely no excuse” for the bus driver’s actions.

“The video is quite scary. That’s completely unacceptable. It’s unforgiveable in my eyes,” he said.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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6 comments

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Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
4 likes

Why is only the bus company carrying out an investigation? Surely the police should be seeking to arrest this bus driver. This is not careless driving. This is a professional driver, therefore the company could also be liable for prosecution. A 12 ton bus hurtling down a pavement ffs! Get this driver behind bars asap. 

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Muddy Ford | 2 years ago
3 likes
Muddy Ford wrote:

Why is only the bus company carrying out an investigation? Surely the police should be seeking to arrest this bus driver. This is not careless driving. This is a professional driver, therefore the company could also be liable for prosecution. A 12 ton bus hurtling down a pavement ffs! Get this driver behind bars asap. 

From TFA:

Quote:

A statement from An Garda Síochána also said that it has “commenced inquiries into an alleged incident of dangerous driving”. The Fine Gael transport minister Hildegarde Naughton confirmed to RTÉ News (link is external) this morning that police were investigating the “extremely serious” incident, which she said was “very concerning”.

Avatar
JMcL_Ireland | 2 years ago
3 likes

While I'd agree with the sentiments that this eejit should be frogmarched rapidly out the door, to be fair to Dublin Bus, they have to follow procedure. Like in the UK, Irish transport unions are strong and have their moments of militancy, so any disciplinary measure will have to be absolutely by the book. Hence I'll give them their "full investigation", but would be less than impressed if it doesn't lead to substantial consequences eventually

Avatar
wtjs replied to JMcL_Ireland | 2 years ago
1 like

If I lived there I wouldn't be campaigning for dismissal, but for a genuine warning- not one where, if he does something so crass again, they say 'we can't warn him again, he would lose his job, so we'll have to cover it up'. That's the nature of police warnings in Lancashire

Avatar
wtjs | 2 years ago
3 likes

A bus company in Dublin has confirmed that a “full investigation” is being carried out

No it isn't! An investigation takes 10 minutes- they know who the driver is, and they know they're going to do nothing about it. They also know the police aren't going to take any action either. This is just a 'holding dodge' to make it all go away, while they decide if they can get away with nothing at all or have to go to the trouble of a pretend warning- asuming Dublin Bus is like Stagecoach Lancashire, and the Garda is like Lancashire Constabulary

Avatar
mctrials23 | 2 years ago
9 likes

As soon as they are sure who it was, which lets be honest shouldn't be hard, he should be sacked on the spot. Unbelieveably dangerous thing to do. Its this sort of dangerous driving that escapes killing people through blind luck. 

Punishing people only when they eventually roll the dice and lose is just telling them that its OK to do it and the punishment is always vanishingly small considering the likely outcome of their actions. It shouldn't be treated as an accident when people do this and hurt someone. It should be considered the likely outcome and punished accordingly. 

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