WOBO
Improving neighborhood livability, vitality and sustainability by making Oakland a better place to walk and bike

Archive for July, 2009

Long Beach Leadership – painted bike access on roads without dedicated bike lanes shows the Way cheaply and easily

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

I was struck to hear about this amazingly creative bike access too developed by the City of Long Beach.  When I think of Long Beach, I generally think of cargo ships.  Sorry, NorCal bias.  But I should know better!  Long Beach has an amazing BikeStation, parking thousands of bikes each month and a growing bicycle advocacy community and bike route system.  A perfect example of a City taking real leadership on cycling, I know Oakland will get there soon with our help. This would be a great treatment to use througout much of Oakland more urban streets, where bikes, cars, and buses will all have to share space.

Painted1 Long Beach

From the good people at BikeLongBeach.org
Pilot Project: Painted Bike Lane with Sharrows on 2nd Street  
In an effort to coax cyclists off the sidewalks and into the streets where they belong, green painted bike lanes with sharrows will be installed on 2nd Street in Belmont Shore along with modified “Share the Road” signs. 

This treatment will be installed between Livingston and Bayshore Avenue to raise motorists’ and cyclists’ awareness that the right hand lane should be shared by both cars and bicycles. Riding a bicycle on the sidewalk is unlawful in Belmont Shore and any Long Beach business district, but cyclists often do so because they don’t feel safe riding their bicycles in the street. There is not room to install a painted bike lane on 2nd Street, and motorists as well as cyclists are often not aware that the right traffic lane should be shared. This treatment is designed to raise and reinforce that awareness.

Lakeside Dr – repaved without its bike lane? We’ll see by the End of the Week

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Riding home the other day, I was please to see the barriers on Lakeside, in front of the Boathouse near 14th & Oak, gone.  New sealant down on the road.  The new bike lane must be right around the corner……

But if you look closely in the picture below, the street is stenciled with those little white tabs for THREE car lanes, instead of the TWO that are in the plans and drawings.

Repave and stenciled for no bike lanes - what gives

Repave and stenciled for no bike lanes - what gives

WOBO will be working with the city and the good folks on the Measure DD committee to make sure this critical link in the City’s bike network gets done.  Sometimes, when I ride home from work, I really wonder if the city just has it in for me.  But I’ll save that for another post.

<update, city staff say the 6 foot bike lane is going to be painted in by the end of the week, and that there will be a press event next week to celebrate the work here, we’ll post more information asap>

If you have a question about Measure DD projects or access to the Lake, call 238-3389.

Police: Asheville Firefighter Shot Bicyclist (Plus: Some Thoughts on Addressing Rage Issues)

Monday, July 27th, 2009

The article below, from an NBC affiliate in Asheville, N.C., is a reminder that some drivers (a minority of them, I believe) have bike rage issues. There is no possible version of this incident where a reasonable person would have considered violence against a cyclist, much less pulling a gun on one. Thankfully, most motorists want to (and do) co-exist peacefully with cyclists.

When people are predisposed to anger at cyclists, often it’s because they perceive cyclists as a group as being unsafe or breaking the same traffic laws that motorists are expected to obey. The thing is, I’m not a “cyclist” or a “motorist”, I’m a person. If we’re going to combat the hate out there, we have to do it on a human level.

One way we can do this, and help protect ourselves in the process, is by following the traffic laws (whether we agree with all of them or not) and being as courteous and respectful to motorists as we hope they’ll be to us. I know that a great many of us are already doing this. I’m just saying that consciously and conspicuously being a friendly, law-abiding cyclist goes a long way towards changing a bike-negative person’s perception of those who bike. Can you imagine what it would do to a “hater” if you stopped at a stop sign they expected you to run and then flashed them a smile and waved them on? It might just blow their mind.

I’m not saying that doing this will completely prevent people with issues from acting out (because crazy is as crazy does), but the more we can use our example to change the minds of people who think cyclists are bad, rude or dangerous, the better it is for all of us. When we’re out on the road, we’re helping create the culture of the road, which means we’re also able to change it.

Gandhi put it well: “An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind.” You don’t attack the haters with hate, you confront them with love… bike love.

As for the hows of riding safely, you can get the skinny on urban riding (and some solid practice doing it) with one of the East Bay Bicycle Coalition’s great FREE bicycle safety classes. Who doesn’t like free?

Be safe out there. Here’s the article [NOTE: I did a little digging to see if the "child seat" was a bike seat or not, and according to this article it was a child's bike seat.]:

ASHEVILLE, N.C.A driver, now identified as an Asheville firefighter, shot a bicycle rider because he was angry the man was riding with his child on a busy road, Asheville police said.

Charles Alexander Diez

The shooting happened Sunday morning on Tunnel Road. Officers said the victim was riding with his wife and had his 3-year-old son in a child seat attached to his bicycle when a driver approached him. Police said the driver, Charles Diez, claimed he was upset that the victim was bike riding with his child on the heavily traveled Tunnel Road. Diez pulled a gun and opened fire, hitting the victim in his bicycle helmet, according to police. They said the bullet penetrated the outer lining of the helmet but did not actually hit the victim’s head. Police arrested Diez and charged him with attempted first degree murder. His bond was set at $500,000. Diez has been a firefighter with the Asheville Fire Department since 1992, according to officials. On Monday, they confirmed he has been placed on paid investigative leave pending the outcome of this investigation. For the source article, click here.

This Wednesday: bike to “FRESH” the 09 documentary on local food at Humanist Hall on 27th St

Monday, July 27th, 2009

“Fresh”

New Thinking About What We’re Eating

Stories about real people changing how we grow & eat food, featuring Will Allen, Michael Pollan and other people working to make our food system healthier, more sustainable and more accessible. FRESH celebrates the farmers, thinkers and business people across America who are re-inventing our food system. www.freshthemovie.com

Wednesday, July 29th

Humanist Hall - the only SOLAR-POWERED movie theatre in the East Bay

390 27th Street, uptown Oakland between Telegraph and Broadway

Wheelchair accessible at 411 28th Street, Oakland

HumanistHall@Yahoo.com (510) 681-8699

$5-$10 donations are accepted to support Humanist Hall

• Potluck 6PM • Film 7PM • Discussion 8:15PM

Please bring some food to share for the potluck. Please also bring your ideas on what it will take to build a powerful and inclusive green movement in Oakland and beyond for the discussion after the film.

Bike 4 Life Today (Ride w/Scraper Bikes) – 2pm at Lakeside Playground (468 Perkins St.)

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Today is the big day! Your chance to ride with Oakland’s legendary Scraper Bikes. It’s the 2nd Annual Bike 4 Life – Healing from Killin, Bike Ride for Peace. The ride – led by the Scraper Bikes – starts at 2pm at Lakeside Playground (468 Perkins St.), and at 3pm the party kicks off at DeFremery Park (1651 Adeline Street). Expect food, prizes, a skateboard exhibition, turf dancing, and performances by the Trunk Boiz, Queen Deelah and special guests! You can check out the event flyer here. Holla!

Harrison-Oakland Community Planning Workshop Tonight – Give Your Input! (Westlake Middle School, 6pm)

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Join WOBO and neighbors from the Harrison-Oakland corridor in a City-sponsored community planning workshop tonight (July 23), from 6:00-8:30pm. Give input on the latest plans for bike lanes, sidewalk improvements and other amenities!

Details: Westlake Middle School, Cafeteria at 2629 Harrison @ 27th Street (across from Oakland’s Whole Foods Market). Click here to see the event flyer (pdf format).

Transportation Day of Action Wednesday July 22

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Wednesday, July 22 is the Federal Transportation Day of Action – and it also happens to be the day the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) will be discussing the Oakland Airport Connector project.  What a perfect day to stand up for better transportation choices in Oakland!

Start the day off right at a rally for more transit funding at the federal level.  In solidarity with communities around the nation, citizens will gather at 8:30am  at Frank Ogawa Plaza (14th & Broadway) for a mock “funeral” mourning the death of transit lines resulting from inadequate funding for transit operation.  As proposed, the Federal Transportation Bill allocates only 20% of spending to transit, as opposed to 80% for highways – a formula for disastrous cuts in transit services that will
* harm already-disadvantaged low-income communities dependent on mass transit
* dramatically expand greenhouse gas emissions from continued automobile over-use
Join your neighbors as well as local advocacy groups Urban Habitat, TransForm, Genesis, and BOSS, and staff from Congressperson Barbara Lee’s office to demand a transportation bill that takes us in the right direction.  The rally will also highlight the current opportunity to win federal support for AC Transit, BART, VTA, MUNI, SAMTANS, and the rest of the Bay Area’s transit operators currently facing major service cuts and fare increases.  Click here for more information on the Federal Transportation Bill and what you can right now.

Then, once you’re all riled up, you can head to the MTC hearing on the Oakland Airport Connector.  Tell the commission that they cannot give another $140 million to a project that costs nearly $300 per new rider. Priority regional transporation projects are starving for money, while MTC and BART continue to spend more than the cost of an airline ticket to travel 3.2 miles from BART to Oakland airport. The hearing begins at 10am at MTC headquarters at 101 8th Street (near Lake Merritt BART).  Click here for more information about the project, and the more cost-effective and community-oriented alternative, RapidBART.

Now’s the time to show our leaders that Oakland wants transportation choices that are just, affordable, and sustainable.  See you Wednesday!

Bike Love Tomorrow: BFF-Oakland with Group Ride (no Posey Tube) and Sunday Streets-SF

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

For those of you looking for some bike love this weekend, there a couple of great options tomorrow (Sunday, 7/19). In the East Bay, enjoy the last day of the Bay’s Bicycle Film Festival here in Oakland! I’ve contacted the organizer about the group ride from San Antonio Park to Michaan’s Auctions Movie Theater in Alameda and he’s confirmed that the ride route will include the Park Street Bridge and not the icktastic Posey Tube. There’s a bike polo tourney at San Antonio Park before the ride and (obviously) films after – you can get the rundown of Sunday’s BFF events here.

If you want to hop across the Bay, tomorrow is the second and final Sunday Streets in the Mission (the last two Sunday Streets, in Aug. and Sept., will be along the Great Highway). The event runs from 10a-2p, and after the streets surrender their car-free status, the good vibes keep flowing at the after party at Valencia Cyclery.

WOBO members get trained on Bike Ped evaluation

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Yesterday eight WOBO members got trained on the use of SF Dept of Public Health’s Pedestrian (PEQI) and Bicycle Environmental Quality Index (BEQI) tools.  Both will allow WOBO to demonstrate what the on-the-ground conditions for bicycling and walking are based on a careful analysis of streets, major projects, and neighborhoods. We are excited to use this in the coming months, starting in the Estuary planning area!  Stay tuned for upcoming volunteer opportunities for the PEQI and BEQI.

Ped and Bike analysis tool - WOBO trainings

WOBO members getting trained on Bike and Ped enrionmental tools

WOBO members getting trained on Bike and Ped enrionmental tools

Sample PEQI report showing range of walking conditions

from Tuesday’s blogpost:

To learn more about the PEQI and BEQI visit http://www.sfphes.org/HIA_Tools_PEQI.htm (check out the user’s manual on the left hand side) and http://www.sfphes.org/HIA_Tools_BEQI.htm

Thanks to Vice Mayor De La Fuente whose staff set this up and who will be conducting a pilot project this summer where interns and volunteers will use the BEQI/PEQI to collect walkability and bikability data around the Central Estuary Specific Plan Area in Oakland (for more info visit www.oaklandnet.com\central_estuary_plan).

WOBO volunteers will have a number of opportunities to use this tool, including help with the Estuary Plan, the Lake Merritt BART Plan, Broadway Auto Row Plan, and the massive Kaiser project set for 20th and Webster.

Kidical Mass – Social Ride for Families – Saturday July 18 10:00 am

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Oakland’s first Kidical Mass

A social ride or families with kids of all ages.
This is your opportunity to get to know some other families who are moving around Oakland by pedal power.

Saturday July 18
Meet up at Mosswood Park (Corner of MacArthur and Broadway)
10am by the play structure
Leave when it feels right
Ride to Willard Park (2720 Hillegass Ave, Berkeley, CA)
Have lunch and hang out

See the proposed route at:
http://www.mapmyride.com/route/us/ca/oakland/376124761062769359

Bring the kids on the the trail-a-bike, the trailer, the Xtracycle, or however you happen to make it work and enjoy the comradierie of others who are doing the same. This ride is about 3 miles. Expect a leasurely pace and relaxed atmosphere. We will, hopefully, spend a few minutes talking about the future of Oakland Kidical Mass. So please be ready to share ideas for fututre rides.

Questions contact:
Mark
mark@walkoaklandbikeoakland.org