Group ride where the bike lane was very dirty.  We had to ride the line.

Bike lane disappears putting cyclists into the street.

Even already rode on the extreme left lane, without any traffic jam, still got a closed pass by an ordinary car in Old Jurong Road, Singapore on Sunday morning.

Why?

Driver saved absolutely no time by driving aggressively.

Cycling in a group of 20 riders, two abreast, staying left and ‘doing the right thing’ – on a clear morning, good road with great vision and little traffic. Passed by several cars with no issue… then this idiot (Driver’s name is Tyler Morley) drove on a line designed to cut off the lead rider – at high speed with his horn blaring, the road here is 90KPH and he was significantly faster than the other traffic. His car passed the rear cyclist by less than one metre and the lead cyclist by about 10cm. This is currently with WAPOL – waiting their response.

Bike riders (5 riders in total) were waiting at the southern end of the dedicated cycle lane on the corner of Stanley St and Annerly Road. Cycle light at the crossing as red while we were waiting. The Cycle/Pedestrian light changed to green and we proceeded to cross the intersection over the the Mater Childrens hospital side where we waited to proceed to cross Stanley St. The Left Turn traffic light was also red (as seen in the video). The vechile tried to cross the cycle/pedestrian crossing while the red arrow was present for them and the cycle/pedestrian light was green. I did notice this and pointed up to the driver in the direction of the traffic lights indicating that it was red. After all of the cyclists/pedestrians had finished crossing, and the left turn arrow was still red, the driver then continued to turn left.

Drivers that don’t pay attention on the road are always dangerous.

The car behind was there for less than 30 sec before deciding to pass when it wasn’t safe to do so.

A car, a bus and a taxi cut into our lane dangerously.
The bus was the worst as it was a big vehicle.
A police report have been filed.

Why do drivers feel it is OK to do something wrong and then it’ll be OK if the apologies?