A transport industry leader has called for calm in Dunedin, after a cyclist said he was verbally abused when he complained about a truck driver parking across a cycle lane.
Mayor Dave Cull supported the call by Road Transport Forum chief executive Ken Shirley for an easing of tensions in the city, encouraging cyclists and truckies to share the road.
In the latest incident, a man said he was riding along Fryatt St on Wednesday when he noticed a Fairfield Transport truck double-parked on the marked cycle lane near the Steel & Tube warehouse.
He stopped beside the truck and asked the driver whether he was aware he was parked in a cycle lane, but received a blunt reply.
Aware Fairfield Transport was a contractor to Steel & Tube, he entered the complex to complain, but was told to speak to the transport company directly.
The cyclist then rode around to the nearby Fairfield Transport depot where he asked to speak to a manager.
He met a man who said he was a manager, who he said "laughed loudly" when told of the encounter with the truck driver, as a crowd of employees gathered.
The cyclist said the man then unleashed an "expletive-ridden tirade that was directed at me with anger and venom".
Fearing for his safety, the man said he left the depot as he weathered further abuse, and called Steel & Tube's head office when he returned home.
Steel & Tube quality manager Damian Miller said an investigation had been launched into the incident.
The ODT understands two Steel & Tube health and safety employees will fly down from Christchurch for a meeting with the man in Dunedin today.
A Fairfield Transport spokesman said he had taken issue with the man entering the yard without permission and not wearing the required safety gear, but otherwise declined to comment.
The rider, who asked to remain anonymous because he feared retribution from the men who allegedly abused him, said he would be approaching police if he was not satisfied with the outcome of the investigation of the incident by Steel & Tube.
Road Transport Forum chief executive Ken Shirley called for an easing of hostility on local roads.
"There's obviously ongoing tensions."
The forum promoted tolerance between all road users, but riders were not blameless for the escalating tensions and could be "hot-headed," Shirley said.
Cull said there would be winners and losers in any reallocation of road space, but rejected any suggestion the cycleway should be moved away from the harbourside industrial area.