Aspen Police Department Warns Kids Having Fun Is a Crime
“You could end up with a ticket or a trip to the emergency room.”

"When you see this, do you think it's just fun? Or do you think that it's illegal? It is definitely the latter. Whether it's fun or not."
This is the beginning of a Facebook post by Colorado's Aspen Police Department (APD). What is this possibly fun but definitely illegal activity?
The post includes a photo that shows two children on a bike—one child sitting on the seat and the other on the first rider's lap—riding on a sidewalk.
"Colorado law says that two-up riding on a single seat bike is against the law, and of course, bikes are not allowed on sidewalks," the post continues. "These 'Sidewalk Sallys' could potentially hurt themselves or others." (If you had to Google "Sidewalk Sally" you are not alone, as it's not a real term. A daytime talk show seems to have coined and used it once, unrelated to riding a bike on a sidewalk.)
The APD post goes on to inform Aspen's citizens that this behavior could result in a "ticket or a trip to the emergency room," both of which seem like rather dramatic consequences for an activity that has been popular since the invention of bikes. The tone-deaf post is signed "The Aspen Police Department—protecting the Wild West on two wheels since the 1880s," which seems to inadvertently imply that APD officers get around exclusively on bikes.
The post has garnered over 300 comments—far more than the department's other posts—most of which are not thankful for the Department's caution and concern:
"Tell me you don't have real crimes in Aspen without telling me you don't have real crimes."
"'Kids never go outside anymore!' Proceeds to police every single thing kids do."
"Lol yes. Our children should really be playing IN the traffic. Not away from it. Got it." (That one really resonated. My mom made me ride on the sidewalks, so it's not obvious to all of us that biking on the sidewalk is a crime.)
Many of the comments were very libertarian-toned, naturally:
"So basically every kid since the bicycle was invented has broken the law!"
"Find a crime to deal with or reduce your force."
"The more laws you make, the more police you have to hire to enforce new laws, the more police you hire to enforce those new laws, the more criminals you make. This pattern doesn't stop one day. It keeps growing."
Several commenters asked if the page was satire, while one dealt a devastating blow:
"Colorado used to be cool."
Despite this, in 2022, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed the Reasonable Independence for Children law, clarifying that "a child is not neglected when allowed to participate in certain independent activities that a reasonable and prudent parent, guardian, or legal custodian would consider safe given the child's maturity, condition, and abilities." Utah passed the first such law in 2018 and has since been joined by Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, Virginia, Illinois, Connecticut, and Montana. This year alone, Georgia and Missouri also passed similar legislation, with Florida expected to follow soon. Let Grow, the nonprofit I run, supported all of these laws and continues to work with broad coalitions to see legislative protections for childhood independence enacted.
No child should be treated like a criminal for riding a bike with a friend. And no police department should be proud of doing so. Facebook commenters know this. Hopefully, the APD will catch up soon.
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Is Jared Polis aware of this?
Is Reason aware of Jared Polis's authoritarian tendencies?
I got in a short flamewar with several people hysterical over Trump's "authoritarian tendencies" and a couple even mention dictatorship. I said every politician, almost by definition, has authoritarian tendencies, and did any of their Trump hysteria ever come true in his first term? The universal response was that I was a fascist or something else unspeakable.
What do you get when cross a penis, a potato and an ocean liner?
A dick-tater-ship.
Ideas™ !
Reminds me of Colorado's governor.
You know you're getting old when everything you did for fun as a kid is now illegal.
Mostly in places where reproduction are frowned upon.
Altitude sickness is real.
Aspen is a shopping mall of very, very expensive art work catering to golfers and medical conference attendees.
It's not to be disrupted by children.
Don't forget celebrity skiers.
Don't forget the 1 star - 4 dollar sign restaurants.
What about helmets and elbow pads?
Gee, I'm sorry you don't care about skinned knees.
This is why Hunter S. Thompson shot himself.
Have you tried riding a bike on the streets of Aspen? It is a good way to get your kids killed.
and of course, bikes are not allowed on sidewalks,"
Of course not. Nor does Aspen have a real bike path network for utilitarian purposes on streets in town. Aspen has hundreds of bike trails - but they are for adults and tourists and entertainment/recreation. To Aspen, 'bike-friendly' means put bikes on the bike rack, drive hundreds of miles to Aspen for vacation, drive around town wherever you want with annoying 'bike lanes' to get in your way, and then drive out to the trail head where you can then bike.
Sounds a lot better than California. Reduce the 4-lane road to 2 lanes on a "road diet", put in bike lanes used by 1% of the population, and hope art galleries and microbreweries magically appear instead of strip clubs, tattoo parlors, and marijuana dispensaries.
result in a "ticket or a trip to the emergency room"
After we catch them and beat the shit out of them for “resisting” or “being mouthy” or they “took an aggressive stance” or “made a furtive movement” or …
More opportunities for police citizen interaction! What could possibly go wrong?
This is an example of an unenforcable law being suddenly emphasized for some reason, or no reason at all, by an LE agency. Kids learn how to ride bikes and are given some general instructions for safe riding, which call for things like riding on the right and the use of hand signals. We could decide to make bike riding functionally and totally equivalent to car driving by requiring legal licensing via classroom instruction and "behind the handle bars" proficiency testing. But we won't because that would be absurd. We won't, right? Right!!?
There is no possible equivalence between bikes and drivers in following traffic laws. Bikes get killed - drivers don't (and get away with it too). Therefore - drivers don't give a shit.
I see people riding bikes and not following laws or curtesy to pedestrians. Many pedestrians are hit by bikers here in the big city of bike lanes.
Walking and biking is literally what the sidewalks and trails are FOR. So you're not having to rub elbows with the two-ton speeding death machines in which even the slightest contact will likely put you in traction.
I mean, what's next here? Cross-country skiing down the turnpike? FFS.
Many of the same trails you are not allowed to bike on are xc ski trails in the winter. It is a decent network they mostly groom.
I think there are some pedestrians on the city council that hate bikes and want bikers to die.
If we were worried about trips to the emergency room when I was a kid, we would have stayed inside all day. And no one had health insurance back then.
The only time you went to the emergency room was when you couldn’t get the bleeding to stop, a bone was sticking out, or you stopped breathing or didn’t stop barfing or something.
Otherwise it was, “Rub some dirt on it and quit being a baby.”
I’m a 100% convinced of the fact that we DIDN’T do this with the Millennials and Zoomers is why were in such a state today.
If we would have stuck with "Sticks and stones", words wouldn't be considered as violence.
I don't know about Colorado, but riding on the sidewalk in Illinois is not illegal. A bicyclist on a sidewalk is required to yield to pedestrians; not doing *that* is illegal.
Whoever posted this from the Aspen PD is a mission creep.
Of course sidewalks are for bikes, at least they were when I was a kid back when dinosaurs roamed free. 30 years later, some hardcore bicycle nut (a co-worker, I'm sorry to say) screamed at me for riding on the sidewalk on my way to work. The road is busy and narrow, and there is no one walking on the sidewalk. And btw, I wasn't wearing proper biking gear (no helmet! ooooo, gonna die soon I"m sure)
This is NOT a good thing--
the Reasonable Independence for Children law, clarifying that "a child is not neglected when allowed to participate in certain independent activities that a reasonable and prudent parent, guardian, or legal custodian would consider safe given the child's maturity, condition, and abilities."
The State delineating the 'reasonable' parameters of freedom allowable to children is a step in a direction that Polis, who Reason is not going to make happen, wants to go.
Leftists love state control.
They love it best when they can frame it in such a way that it looks like freedom.