Life is better on a bike!

Category: advocacy (Page 8 of 10)

You Know Me, I Ride a Bike

“You Know Me, I Ride a Bike†is a campaign started in Fort Collins, CO to improve drivers attitudes toward cyclists.

What an ingenious idea!  I want to do this type campaign in Oklahoma!

Read about it:

 

You Know Me, I Ride a Bike – Momentum Magazine

“When the people at Bike Fort Collins talked about the attitudes of drivers towards cyclists, they found one commonality — many drivers lump all cyclists into one category. And so their ad campaign, “You Know Me, I Ride a Bike,†was born.â€Â

“Each poster has a photo of a local cyclist, along with his or her name and description, and the words “We are one community of cyclists, motorists and pedestrians. Travel safe today.â€Â

YouKnowMeIRideaBike-JenGarvey-SarahBoyd

 

bikefortcollins.org

Build It and They Will Come

 From:  Invest in non-motorized transportation | The Salt Lake Tribune


“Transportation studies show that more pedestrians

and bicyclists on our streets make the streets safer

for everyone: As the percentage of trips made by

non-motorized transportation increases,

the percentage of injury accidents per miles

traveled decreases.” 

 


This is because:

1. More bicyclists and pedestrians increase driver awareness.

2. As more people bike and walk, they become more empathetic drivers, better able to anticipate and respect non-motorists.

3. Pedestrians and bicyclists have a “traffic calming” effect. Slower traffic means fewer and less severe accidents.

4. More pedestrians and bicyclists result in more spending on safer infrastructure for active transportation.

“This is a classic chicken-and-egg problem. Do we ignore the safety needs of non-motorists because they are a minority? Or do we invest in facilities to make walking and bicycling safer and more convenient? There is ample evidence that building infrastructure for active transportation substantially increases the number of pedestrians and bicyclists. Build it, and they will come.”

Good Signs

We have signs that bicycling in Oklahoma City is getting better.

Hopefully, getting safer too.

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As I posted earlier in “Use Full Lane” there are plans underway to mark 70 miles of designated bike route in Oklahoma City with signage to include the standard green “bike route” signs, sharrows – in the street bike/arrow painted signs, and most impressive – alerting motorists (and cyclists) for cyclists to “use full lane” and for drivers to change lanes to pass cyclists.

These signs are along Hefner Road, just east of the Hefner Parkway.

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In light of the news that another cyclist was hit this past Wednesday in Oklahoma City, these signs bring hope to cyclists and their loved ones that roads in Oklahoma City will become safer for those riding bikes.

Part of our struggle has always been to make drivers aware that cyclists have a legal right to be on the road – these signs clearly make that point.  As cyclists, we need to do our part and follow the laws of the road as specified in Oklahoma, which also can only help to ensure our safety.

Adding this signage to designate various bike routes is a significant step toward making Oklahoma City more bikeable.

Use Full Lane

In Oklahoma City there are plans underway for “Use Full Lane” signage to be installed along 70 miles of designated bike route.  This is a huge step forward for our bicycling community toward making the roads safer and more rideable.

Photo provided by Mike Flenniken, Team Bike Buddies

Unfortunately, when you have progress you sometimes encounter opposition to that progress.

Mike Flenniken,Team Bike Buddies, notified TBB members this morning that someone had vandalized by running over the very recently installed “Bicycles Use Full Lane” signage installed on a four mile section of Hefner Road between Morgan Road and Cemetery road in Oklahoma City.

Flenniken reported that the signs were singled out as it appeared the driver had to cross from one side of the road to the other to take them all out.

No good deed goes unpunished as they say.

No bad deed should go unpunished either.

In an effort to apprehend the person or persons who destroyed the signage, a fund has been established for a reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.

To donate to the reward fund, please contact Mike Flenniken at [email protected] or call him at (405) 613-9767.

Mark and I donated to the fund this morning, hopefully the biking community will contribute what they can, and with any luck the person(s) that did this will be caught and convicted.

Until then, ride safely and take satisfaction in the fact that here in Oklahoma City, we are getting signage installed along 70 miles of designated bike route that spell out our legal right to use the road.

CicLAvia

We need more events like this one.

 (Gina Ferazzi, Los Angeles Times / October 11, 2010)

In Los Angeles Sunday, an estimated 100,000 bicyclists, runners, walkers, skateboarders, rollerbladers – all turned out for the city’s first CicLAvia – a bike festival focused on fitness, alternative means of transportation and just plain ol’ outdoor fun.

According to Joel Rubin, Los Angeles Times, CicLAvia was far more successful than organizers expected.  The event took place on a 7.5 mile stretch of streets in East Hollywood – an area reported as generally jammed up with motorists. 

Participants at CicLAvia – commented that the city felt smaller and more manageable.  That is exactly what happens when you slow down and walk, bike or even run through an area – you see it, you feel it.

Governments at all levels should take notice.  People of all ages, shapes and sizes want to be able to bike, walk and run safely in their cities and neighborhoods.

We need to have the room and the means to get outside, together in a safe and protected environment.  If it can happen there, it can happen anywhere.

People in cities and towns across the country want their streets to belong to them – not just cars/trucks. 

It is past time to transform our streets – and make them work for everyone.

I like the way these participants explained it:

“We’re alone in our cars. We pass above whole neighborhoods on freeways and never actually see them. Today, I’ve seen buildings I never took the time to lay eyes on before. Today gave people a chance to just slow down and it connected the neighborhoods of the city in a new way. That’s important,” said Rafael Navar, 32, who was taking a break on the 4th Street Bridge with his brother, sister-in-law and their three young kids.” (L.A. Times, Joel Rubin)

It was not lost on Cyndi Hubach, 49, and Kevin Mulcahy, 45, that the 45 minutes or so they took to cover the route may have been faster than what it would have taken in typical stop-and-go traffic. For them, and many others, that realization led to musings of what life could be like in Los Angeles — a city inhospitable to cyclists.

“Being able to ride freely and safely right through what you knew were usually really dangerous intersections, it got you thinking about what it could be like if the city created a network of dedicated bike routes. Getting from place to place would take on a whole new light,” Mulcahy, an architect, said. (L.A. Times, Joel Rubin)

Read article: “An estimated 100,000 turn out for L.A.’s inaugural CicLAvia event

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