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Other Resources--Neal Peirce Column

Category: Article (Journal or Newspaper)
Jurisdiction:
City/County Government, International
Management Issues:
Catalytic Government, Community Based Strategies, Community/Economic Development
Policy Area:
Cities/Counties

For Release Sunday, April 15, 2007


© 2007 Washington Post Writers Group


CITY BIKES: CLEAN, HEALTHY, FUN --
AND FASTER THAN CARS?

By Neal Peirce


Are we ready to go bicycling?   Could these times of climate change, gas price inflation and bulging beltlines be prepping us for new waves of weekend biking  adventures?  Maybe even to leave cars parked and cycle to work daily?

Louisville Metro Mayor Jerry Abramson is one of an growing coterie of city leaders who believe the moment is ripe.  Keynoting last month’s National Bike Summit in Washington, Abramson described how an early 2005 Louisville gathering of cycling enthusiasts has changed his city’s goals and focus.

Louisville’s existing bike paths are being connected into a citywide system.  Miles of highway bike lanes are being added. The city’s adopted a “complete streets” policy requiring the placement of sidewalks, bike lanes and bus stop locations in any major road improvement.  And the city’s planning two commuter-friendly bike stations, similar to the major installation with indoor bike parking, rentals and repair facilities that Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley installed in his city’s new lakefront Millennium Park.

Revived bicycling is easier to proclaim than achieve in an America that’s experienced a half century-plus of freeway construction, Hollywood/tv hype of fast cars, and the multi-billions of advertising dollars the industry continuously pours into auto glorification.

But the new bike campaign isn’t against cars per se -- It just asks autos and trucks to yield a share of the road to a transportation means that occupies a fraction as much pavement, doesn’t pollute, combats obesity, builds overall physical fitness, and can help congestion by taking a share of autos off the highways.

Of course any city can anticipate some angry motorist reactions if new bike lanes cut back on lanes for regular traffic.  Competition for limited roadway space can be furious.

That’s one reason bicycle advocates like Brooklyn-based community organizer Aaron Naparstek, a leader of New York’s “Livable Streets” movement, are broadcasting a countervailing new message.  “Private passenger cars and SUVs,” insists Naparstek, “are not the most efficient way to move people through a limited, precious commodity-- our street space.  Bikes and public transit are.”

The reformers’ prize example is Copenhagen,  which has focused on new bikeways since the 1930s and now has more than 250 miles of them.  Over a third  -- 36 percent -- of Copenhagen workers commute by bike, 32 percent by mass transit, and only 27 percent by automobile.

And that, adds Naparstek, “in a place where it’s cold and rainy half the year.”  Copenhagen goes all-out to promote the cycling: there’s one parking lot for suburban commuters, for example, in which a bike is part of the deal -- pay your parking fee and automatically get a bike to pedal into town.

Paris may be world bikers’ next cause for celebration -- Mayor Bertrand Delanoe has announced a program to scatter 1,450 high-tech bicycle stations across the city, 20,600 bikes by this summer.  The plan, based on an already-successful program in Lyons, is designed not just to reduce congestion but, in the words of a Delanoe aide, “change Paris’s image--make it quieter, less polluted, a nicer atmosphere, a better way of life.”

In an interesting twist, Paris is also promoting bikes as the swiftest way to get around town -- faster than cars, taxis and walking.

Personally, I’ve found that true in Washington for years -- at least anywhere closer to center city, my bike’s the fastest form of transportation.  I couldn’t agree more with Rep. Earl Blumenauer (Ore.), founder of the Congressional Bike Caucus, who said last week of his experience riding his weathered Trek bicycle around Washington:“I have saved hundreds of hours of time.

I have burned thousands and thousands of calories instead of gallons of petroleum and, after 10 years, have probably saved $50,000.”

But there’s a big psychic side to biking too. Louisville’s Abramson describes it as “the intimate connection you feel to neighborhoods and neighbors as you bike through a community. You don’t just smell the roses and the forsythia, you smell the barbeque, see vegetable and flower gardens, hear music.  You make eye contact with folks on front porches.”

All that, plus aging baby-boomers favoring bikes over jogging as their knees and hips give out,  may explain the active bike programs now being pushed from Seattle to Gainesville (Fla.), Davis (Calif.) to Chattanooga (Tenn).  The League of American Bicyclists lists many, with ratings from bronze to platinum, at www.bikeleague.org.

Rising bike use will also help with bike safety -- a major issue everywhere.  Cyclists, even when tempted, need to stop all daredevil maneuvers.  And motorists have to get accustomed to watching for bikes, and sharing the road with them.  Designated bike lanes and signage help. Experience in such cities as Copenhagen and Portland, Ore., shows safety for bike riders actually rises as there are more and more riders and the auto world learns to share the roadways with them.

Comments may be addressed to npeirce@citistates.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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“The events of September 11, 2001 revealed serious deficiencies in government organization, systems and management. National Academy of Public Administration Fellows recommend strategies to manage effectively in a post-9/11 world in Meeting the Challenge of 9/11: Blueprints for More Effective Government, published this month.

The book, edited by Fellow Thomas H. Stanton, tackles a wide range of issues, including designing an organization that provides a strong government capacity to deliver services citizens need and deserve; making the Undersecretary for Management a key linchpin in bringing DHS functions together; restoring the President’s capacity to manage effectively; using the imperative of national security to improve federal, state and local relations especially with critical services like police, fire and health; capitalizing on tested and proven management strategies to surmount new and upcoming challenges for our nation; sorting through constitutional alternatives for holding government contractors accountable for the work they perform; and transforming military personnel system policies to avoid staffing crises during the War on Terror.

“This book provides invaluable insights and recommendations on how to improve government organization and performance as our nation faces new and imposing threats here and abroad,” Academy President Howard Messner said.

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