Loading...
Bike safety advocate dies after car hits cycle (PBP) 10-20-98Bile safety advocate dies after car hits cycle Ray Howland, 69, kept active in community By A. Scharnhomt Palm Beach Post Staff Writer After his retirement from managing the Village of North Palm Beach in 1992, Ray How- land poured hours into making Palm Beach County safer for his favorite sport — bicycling. Sun- day, a driver in Mount Dora struck and killed Mr. Howland as he sat on his bicycle on the side of the road. He was 69. Mr. Howland became in- volved in educating officials about the need for streets to accommo- date both bicycles and cars. He'd survived being hit by a car on his bicycle in 1987. "He deserves a real tribute," said Circuit Judge John Phillips, who rode with Mr. Howland in the West Palm Beach Bicycle Club. "He was a wonderful athlete ... (and) was just committed to safety — which makes his death this way all the more tragically ironic." Mr. Howland was riding in the three-day Mount Dora Bicycle Festival, a 24-year-old event north of Orlando. He had begun a 25- mile road tour shortly after 8 a.m. Sunday when the crash oc- curred. It was the first fatality in the history of the festival, said Craig Willis, execu- tive vice presi- dent of the Mount Dora Mr. Howland Chamber of Commerce, which sponsors the festival. Mr. Howland had stopped his bicycle on the side of the road — well off on the shoulder — and was applying sunscreen and waiting for friends to catch up when he was hit, Willis said. A 35-year-old man driving a sport utility vehicle made a wide turn onto the road where Mr. Howland was stopped, crossed onto the shoulder and struck Mr. How- land. An investigation is continu- ing. Sunday's ride was not set to start for another 30 minutes, but Mr. Howland was out on the route early to try to finish before morning Mass, Willis said. Please see MR. HOWLAND/2B Victim was Korean vet, president of bicycle club MR. HOWL.AND From IB The ride began a few minutes later, carrying cyclists past the accident scene. It was a sorrowful ending to the festival, Willis said — "especially to lose someone like that ... one of the key people in the state fighting for bicyclists' rights." It wasn't unusual for Mr. Howland to be out in front of his fellow cyclists, said Linda Leeds, who often rode with Mr. Howland in bicycle club get-togethers. "He was always zooming ahead. `Pick up the pace!' he'd yell when we took out in the morn- ing," Leeds said. "He'd zoom ahead and then he'd come back and find us and then he'd zoom ahead again." Mr. Howland was president of the West Palm Beach cycling club, a member of the Triathlon Club of the Palm Beaches, man- ager of a local softball team and chairman of the Seacoast Utilities Board of Directors. He was a U.S. Army veteran and had served in the Korean War. , A native of Detroit, Mr. How- land had graduated from Alfred (N.Y.) University, and was a member of St. Clare Catholic Church.. He is survived by his wife, Edie; his sons, Michael Howland and Steven Howland; his daugh- ter, Victoria Lounsbury; two sis- ters; and six grandchildren, Visitations will be 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at the William N. Howard Funeral Home, 745 U.S. Highway 1, North Palm Beach. A wake is scheduled at the funeral home at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. A funeral Mass is set for 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Clare Cath- olic Church, 821 Prosperity Farms Road, North Palm Beach, with burial in Our Lady Queen'of Peace Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that contributions be sent to the West Palm Beach Bicycle Club — Ray Howland Scholar- ship Fund, P.OIstBox 6581, Wef Palm Beach, FIX, 33405.