Cyclists wait for a light to change at Bushwick Avenue and Grand Street, where a truck passes on a banned route. View Full Caption DNAinfo/Gwynne Hogan

BROOKLYN — Bicyclists were hit with twice as many traffic tickets as commercial truck drivers in Williamsburg's 90th Precinct so far this year, and more than any other precinct in North Brooklyn, according to NYPD data.

Between January and Sept. 28, cyclists were ticketed 1,160 times for violations like running red lights and riding the wrong way on a one-way street, compared to 463 tickets written to commercial trucks, for violations like texting while driving or not wearing seatbelts, the data shows.

Of the trucks ticketed since the beginning of January in the 90th Precinct, only 16 trucks were given summonses for driving on streets where heavy construction vehicles and tractor trailers are banned, according to the NYPD's figures.

How many trucks at this corner? Spent this morning counting: NYPD Targets Cyclists and Goes Easy On Truckers:https://t.co/BfYQ7GMESx pic.twitter.com/qJTT5EMxYF — Gwynne Hogan (@GwynneFitz) October 10, 2017

Just last week, a cyclist was hospitalized when a dump truck driver traveling on Bushwick Avenue, a street not authorized for heavy truck traffic, made a right turn on Grand Street and crushed the biker under his wheels.