We’re going to take little different approach today, because we have a lot of ground to cover, and only limited time to do it.
So let’s focus on a number of top stories and meetings, and save our usual links for tomorrow.
Today’s photo show Blake Ackerman’s fiancee writing a message on his ghost bike on Fountain Avenue.
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Debate over a safety makeover of Fountain Avenue continues to raise its ugly head, seven months after Blake Ackerman lost his life on the deadly corridor.
And six months after we thought it had been approved once and for all.
Following years of unanimous votes of the city council to move the project forward, the West Hollywood City Council approved building protected bike lanes on the corridor in a split 3 – 2 vote in September of last year, following a highly contentious council meeting.
Ackerman’s needless death in a hit-and-run while riding his bike home from work occurred exactly where the protected bike lane would have gone in years before, if not for the endless debate over the project.
And that had seemed to seal the decision to move forward with the project.
Yet WeHo Online reports opponents came back to pack last Wednesday’s meeting of the city’s Transportation and Mobility Commission.
Although most of the article is devoted to a recap of September’s debate. And none of that recap even mentions Ackerman, or anyone else killed or injured on or near the deadly street.
According to the paper, the overall message from the people attending the meeting was “put the project on hold until the serious questions get answered.”
Even though it’s been on hold for years, while people continue to die and get injured.
Among those are the ongoing concerns over parking, as well as worries that property values for homeowners will drop — even though studies have repeatedly shown that property values usually increase along either side of a corridor after a Complete Streets project goes in.
And even though the meeting was packed with project opponents because most of the larger community didn’t even know about the meeting, because the project had already been approved six months earlier, and no action was to be taken at the meeting.
As I read the story, though, I also wondered if the opposition voiced at the meeting would have been so overwhelming if the friends and family of Blake Ackerman had been aware of it. Never mind the safety advocates and the larger bicycling community.
The paper pointed to an upcoming May or June meeting, the exact date still to be determined, when a contract to build the protected bike lanes is set to be approved.
It’s clear we’ll have to come back once again then to defend, and fight for, a project to save lives on the deadly corridor.
Because that seems to have been completely ignored at Wednesday’s meeting. And likely will be again if we don’t show up in force when the final contract gets approved.
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Streets For All sent out a notice about what’s missing from the Westside Cities Council of Governments recent announcement of plans for bus lanes throughout the Westside.
Namely, safe ways to get to them.
The Westside Cities Council of Governments is moving forward with a plan to make buses faster and more reliable on some of the region’s busiest corridors! But right now, the plan is missing something fundamental: how people actually get to transit. There are still no safe, continuous north-south bike connections linking these corridors to the broader system — including the E Line and D Line.
This means a lot of people are stuck driving to transit. We can fix that – WSCCOG needs to hear from you telling them to include bicycle facilities in these plans.
HOW YOU CAN HELP
- 🏛️ BEST: Show up in person and make public comment
- Wednesday, March 25 (6–8pm)
West Hollywood Park Aquatics Center
8750 El Tovar Pl
West Hollywood, CA 90069- Saturday, March 28 (9:30–11:30am)
Culver City Senior Center
4095 Overland Ave
Culver City, CA 90232- 📧 OTHERWISE: Send an email
- If you can’t make it in person, send an email
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Thanks to Andrew for pointing me to this recent video from Los Angeles mayoral candidate Nithya Raman, after I had posted online that I won’t vote for anyone who doesn’t commit to implementing Measure HLA, as well as recommitting the city to Vision Zero.
This may not be the ironclad commitment I have been looking for, but it’s pretty damn close. And we can push her for that commitment if she wants to be mayor.
There were more traffic deaths than homicides in 2025. I’m running to make LA streets safer for everyone!
— Nithya Raman (@nithyaforthecity.bsky.social) 2026-03-16T21:11:11.715Z
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Dr. Grace Peng, who lives and rides in the South Bay, offers recap of a recent bike trip.
You can click through for the rest of the story. But for today, we’re going to focus on wha passes for bike safety infrastructure in far too much of Los Angeles, and Southern California in general, with only a thin stripe of white paint to protect bike riders from traffic limited to 55 mph.
Never mind that we all know many, if not most, motorists exceed the posted speed limit, whether by a little or a lot.
CD11 Councilmember Traci Park recently expressed her concern for the safety of bicyclists, even if it took the death of Regan Cole-Graham and her unborn baby Ophelia to prompt her.
Now is exactly the time to push her to commit to real bike and pedestrian safety throughout her district, when she needs our support to continue representing it.
Or move to back someone else who does.
Today’s bicycle adventure starts with infrastructure that LA city council member Traci Park thinks is good enough. She’s up for reelection. Potholes, Large Asphalt Repair, posted speed limit of 55 mph, paint separating bikes from drag racers. @streetsforall.org @lintonjoe.bsky.social
— Dr Grace Peng (@gspeng.bsky.social) 2026-03-23T00:13:22.465Z
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The LA City Council’s Transportation Committee meets at 8:45 Wednesday morning, and need to hear from us to keep the pressure on to commit to safer streets for all of us.
And the aforementioned Traci Park is vice chair of the committee.
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Okay, so maybe this isn’t directly bike-related.
But Mayor Bass has once again stood with NIMBYs, and against supporters of non-motor vehicle traffic, by opposing the route selected by Metro staffers for the Northern Extension of the K Line.
Not only will this route result in the highest ridership, it will finally connect major centers like The Grove, the Beverly Center, Cedars-Sinai, WeHo’s Rainbow District, Hollywood and Highland, and the Hollywood Bowl.
At the same time, it would provide vital connections with the Red (B), Purple (D) and Expo (E) Lines, making genuine crosstown travel by train possible without having to first go downtown.
So make your voice heard by Thursday, before this gets delayed yet again.
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This is your chance to support the Sunset For All Complete Streets project, as well as other safety improvements on the inevitably soon to be renamed Cesar Chavez.
Which right now might as well be named Jeffrey Epstein Blvd, despite everything Chavez did to support farmworkers and Latino & Latina civil rights.
And even though Chavez had been a personal hero of mine for most of my life.
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Finally, good news from Paris, where mayoral candidate Emmanuel Grégoire was elected to continue the bike and environmentally friendly reforms begun by outgoing Mayor Anne Hidalgo, winning with 52% of the popular vote to replace her.
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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.
Oh, and fuck Putin.

















