Tag Archive for political cowardice

Why don’t Angelenos with a “passion” for transit and bikes just move, and AZ man busted for threatening 3-day bike tour

Day 65 of LA’s Vision Zero failure to end traffic deaths by 2025. 

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Seriously?

A writer asks why people who are “extremely passionate about improving public transit and making the city more bike-friendly,” don’t just leave Los Angeles, when it’s too often the exact opposite.

And especially when it seems like things will never change, thanks to our risk-averse and overly car-friendly leadership.

So I’m genuinely curious—why do people who are really passionate about transit and biking stay in LA instead of moving somewhere that already supports that lifestyle? Cities like NYC, SF, Portland, or even international places like Amsterdam or Tokyo offer great transit and biking infrastructure without needing massive overhauls.

Is it optimism that LA will change? Other factors like work, family, or weather? What makes the fight worth it?

Um, maybe because we live here?

I get that it’s frustrating.

I feel like Don Quixote tilting at windmills most of the time. And Sisyphus the rest.

But Los Angeles can change. This used to be the most transit-rich city in the country, thanks to the Red and Yellow Lines. And it can be again.

The overwhelming support for Measure HLA a year ago shows the demand for safer streets that serve us all, with two-thirds of voters supporting the ballot measure.

So the problem isn’t with the city, or the people who live here.

It’s with the people in charge who refuse to listen, and only hear the angriest voices who fight progress, rather than the ones demanding it.

We don’t need to move. We just need to do something to move them.

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If you see something, say something.

An Arizona man faces charges for threatening to run over bicyclists participating in the three-day El Tour de Zona, after a city worker saw his comment on the city’s Facebook page.

Clearly, they’re taking it seriously in the wake of the Show Low massacre, when a pickup driver intentionally slammed into people participating in a master’s race — then made a U-turn and threatened to do it again, before police shot him and took him into custody.

And taking it seriously exactly what they should do.

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Mark your calendar for this November, when the cities of El Monte and South El Monte will host the five-mile Corazon Del Valle active streets event, courtesy of ActiveSGV, Metro and the San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

Boston’s mayor is engaged in an active policy of revanchism, reviewing — and possibly ripping out — bike lanes and protective barriers installed during her more bike-friendly first term, as drivers demand their right to reclaim the few feet of street space they may have lost.

Momentum looks at the Toronto business owners who are shooting themselves in the foot by suing to rip out one of the city’s most popular bike lanes, assuming that most of their customers arrive by car. Never mind that bike lanes have been repeatedly shown to create the kind of bike and pedestrian friendly neighborhoods that benefit local businesses. 

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Local  

Streets For All offers their Neighborhood Council endorsements for Region 11, including North Westwood, Mar Vista and Venice.

Streetsblog’s Sahra Sulaiman considers the legacy of redlining, saying the late Nipsey Hussle “understood cities better than you, so why didn’t you know who he was?” Personally, I knew of him as a community activist and business owner for some time before his murder, but had never actually heard his music.

A Culver City writer says they’re obsessed with bike commuting, and the five-to-six mile ride is the perfect way to end a working day. Except the city has already ripped out some of the bike lanes that makes it so enjoyable.

 

State

Congratulations to Caltrans on averaging more than one home or business demolition per mile of new freeways over a five-year period. Because really, who needs a home or a job if it stands in the way of the God-given right to sit idly in induced demand-induced congestion?

Santa Paula is using a $1.5 million county grant to build two-and-a-half mile of bike and pedestrian paths.

Calbike catches up with the ongoing fight to save the bike/ped lane on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. Which is under threat by those poor, put-upon drivers who only want 100% of it.

San Francisco’s transportation agency unanimously approved a new bike plan designed to connect all the city’s bike lanes and put everyone in the city within a quarter mile of one. Then again, that’s what LA’s unbuilt bike plan was supposed to do after it was also unanimously approved by the city council.

Napa is reducing lanes on one of the city’s major east-west corridors to make space for buffered bike lanes and better pedestrian safety.

Sacramento’s bicycle-friendly side streets help bike riders navigate through the city.

 

National

Streetsblog questions why there’s so little research on the “unspoken” travel needs of the women and caregivers when it comes to mobility hubs.

Seattle ripped out a highway that blocked views of, and access to, Puget Sound, and replaced with a new fully separated bike path along the waterfront, which officially opens this weekend.

Even the state college in my bike-friendly Colorado hometown is bike-friendly, as Colorado State University is honored as one of the nation’s first Accredited Transportation Demand Management Organizations, in recognition of their “commitment to innovation, efficiency and providing advanced mobility solutions.”

Houston advocates complain that no one told them a two-way bike lane was going to be completely closed for construction. Evidently, it was on a need to know basis, and someone clearly concluded they didn’t.

Cincinnati has a new interactive bike map that shows all of the city’s bicycle infrastructure, completed and planned, including bike lanes, shared-use bike paths and protected bike lanes. Which is exactly what LA bike riders were promised years ago. And never got.

A new documentary from the Ann Arbor, Michigan public library captures the semi-official, semi-bandit mountain bike trails that make up the city’s Loop of Pain. Yes, the public library.

An Indiana newspaper solves the mystery of a missing ghost bike, which was apparently mangled by a snow plow and taken to a recycling center. On the other hand, it’s nice that people cared enough to want to know what happened to it. 

Good Samaritans came to the rescue of a four-year old boy who was found riding his bike unsupervised in near-freezing temperatures, providing him with a juice box and a fur coat until police arrived. Because every kid should be wrapped in mink for a winter bike ride, right?

A 73-year old Memphis woman faces charges for a drunken hit-and-run, after she allegedly crashed into a firefighter who was just riding a bike around the firehouse.

The rich get richer, as New York defies Trump’s demand to rip out the city’s bike lanes, and widens five of them, insteadincluding one on 6th Avenue.

 

International

Oxford, England is extending a program to provide local businesses with next-day deliveries by electric cargo bike.

British bike riders complain about a new $20 million bike/ped “bridge to nowhere,” which leads to a dangerous road on one side, and a muddy quagmire on the other.

An Italian website mourns the passing of an 87-year old “giant of journalism” famous for riding his bicycle everywhere — including the time he revived a driver who doored him, then fainted after he realized who he whacked.

An Aussie writer falls in love with biking in Japan.

More young people are biking to work in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City. Young evidently being a relative term, since the story features mostly 30-something bike commuters.

 

Competitive Cycling

Cyclist previews next week’s very nice Paris-Nice stage race.

 

Finally….

The feeling when you’re hooked on Strava, and don’t care who knows it. Did Kevin Bacon and Lawrence Fishburne really star in the worst bicycle movie of all time?

And this is who we share the road with.

 

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

LA to audit failed Vision Zero, memorial for Prynsess Brazzle, and guilty plea in drunken Solana Beach hit-and-run

No irony here.

Outgoing CD5 City Councilmember and city attorney candidate Paul Koretz called on Los Angeles to audit the city’s Vision Zero plan, in an effort to determine why traffic deaths continue to rise seven years after it was adopted.

And just three years before traffic deaths were supposed to be a thing of the past.

Yes, that’s the same self-proclaimed environmentalist who has blocked bike lanes and Complete Streets projects in his district, including on Westwood Blvd and Melrose Avenue, since taking office 13 years ago.

Which certainly couldn’t have anything to do with it, right?

According to the story by LAist, the city saw 186 people killed in crashes in 2015, when the plan was adopted, with a jump to 294 last year. And it’s on a pace for over 330 traffic deaths this year.

Los Angeles Walks Executive Director John Li pointed out one glaring problem with the program.

“Structurally, we have a political system that has not had a unified vision of Vision Zero — it’s 15 different approaches to Vision Zero,” Yi told LAist. “How do we give political elected officials the confidence, or the political courage… to get more bike lanes, more bus lanes, flatter sidewalks, [and] slower streets? Because right now, it’s just too politically risky for elected officials and they’re not willing to be a leader on this.”

But honestly, how do you audit something that was never more than the political equivalent of vaporware?

LA’s Vision Zero has never received more than a fraction of the funding required to implement it, let alone the support from the mayor’s office necessary to even make a dent in traffic deaths.

There was no multi-agency task force dedicated to implementing it. No dedicated staff at LADOT, or any other public agency. No one with the power to cut through the red tape and NIMBY objections to reimagine our mean streets.

And no one with the ability to overrule LA’s 15 little kings and queens, who each rule their own fiefdom from their offices at city hall. Each of whom has the power to unilaterally water down or halt any changes to the streets in their districts, just as Koretz has proudly done.

Never mind “Roadkill” Gil Cedillo in CD1, Mitch O’Farrell in CD13, or Paul Krekorian in CD2, each of whom halted major shovel-ready lane reductions and other badly needed traffic safety programs.

Or any of the other councilmembers who, with very few notable exceptions, cowardly hid behind claims of public opinion and the demands of the almighty automobile to avoid making any of the tough choices necessary to make even a modest reduction in traffic deaths.

Let alone put an end to them.

The simple fact is, LA’s Vision Zero has never been more than smoke and mirrors, with a little modest nibbling at the edges so minor no one could complain.

But that was exactly what we warned about when the plan was first adopted, questioning whether Los Angeles elected leaders had the political will and courage necessary for the plan to succeed.

In retrospect, the clear answer is no.

And 300 Angelenos, and all of their friends and loved ones, are now paying the price every year.

Mayor Garcetti signs the Vision Zero order behind his comically huge outdoor desk; photo from Streetsblog LA.

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Speaking of Vision Zero, we live in a city where officials are willing to honor the victims of traffic violence.

But won’t lift a finger to keep them alive.

https://twitter.com/RIDEInLivingCol/status/1521590864820113408

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A 22-year old San Diego man faces 15 years behind bars for the drunken hit-and-run death of 75-year old Allen Hunter II as he rode his bike on South Coast Highway 101 in Solana Beach last year.

Beau Morgan pled guilty to gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, hit-and-run causing death and driving under the influence; he was over twice the legal limit when he turned himself in 45 minutes after the crash.

Once again destroying two lives with one careless act.

Thanks to Phillip Young for the heads-up.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

No bias here. San Jose drivers call a proposal to make them change lanes to pass bike riders insane and evil. Then again, so is hiding the story behind a paywall. 

No bias here, either. A Berkeley writer complains that the city’s policies are turning bicycles into a “weapon of civic destruction…damaging neighborhoods, endangering bicyclists and undermining the legitimacy of governance while squandering millions of dollars.” Okay, so some articles would be better hidden behind a paywall. Or under a rock.

Police in Britain are looking for a road-raging driver who head-butted a bike rider after a dispute.

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Local

The LA Times endorses Katy Young Yaroslavsky — longtime LA politician Zev’s daughter-in-law — to replace Paul Koretz in CD5, although they also like Scott Epstein, who has a much better bike safety pedigree.

Plans are in the works for new bus only lanes on Florence Ave in South LA, which would also allow bike riders to use them; however, like other LA bus lanes, they would only be in effect during peak traffic hours.

A South Pasadena website looks back fondly on Sunday’s 626 Golden Streets.

Palmdale will conduct a Complete Streets overhaul of Avenue R, including walkable sidewalks and painted bike lanes.

 

State 

Social media users are understandably up in arms after video of San Diego workers destroying bicycles during a homeless sweep went viral.

A homeless man already on probation for another crime is back behind bars after shoplifting merchandise and stealing a bicycle from an El Cajon Target, then forcibly taking another bicycle in a strong arm robbery.

The Los Osos woman who got out of prison after just two years of her seven-year sentence for the drunken death of a bike-riding San Luis Obispo college student was released early thanks to pre-sentencing credits and a re-entry program; she’s now back behind bars after crashing into several parked cars with a BAC four times the legal limit.

A new bill in the state Assembly would mandate secure bike parking in new residential buildings; AB 2863 would also require the California Building Standards Commission to update its bike parking standards for commercial buildings. Although they should also require building owners to allow tenants and workers to take their bikes inside to their homes and offices.

Calbike is once again asking for your support for the Bicycle Safety Stop Bill, aka Stop As Yield, aka the stop sign portion of the Idaho Stop Law, somehow assuming Gavin Newsom will sign the bill after vetoing it last year.

Streetsblog talks with a San Francisco ER doctor, who says preventable injuries dropped when JFK Drive was closed to drivers, and pleaded with city officials to keep it that way.

 

National

America Walks takes a deeper look at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s call for public comments on how to make motor vehicles safer for pedestrians — and for people on bicycles. You have until Monday to get your comments in.

A writer for Popsugar replaces her car and reduces her carbon footprint with an ebike from women-owned Bluejay.

Seriously? A Utah paper asks if it’s time to get serious about road safety after three pedestrians were killed in a single hour, with four bike riders killed in the state in recent weeks — wait, make that five. The time to get serious was before anyone got killed.

More proof that NIMBYs are the same everywhere, as Houston residents decry plans for a 1.5-mile lane reduction and bike lanes, calling it a disaster that will cause traffic congestion and force drivers into neighborhoods.

Surprisingly, Minnesota has the nation’s longest paved bike trail, running 800 miles along the Mississippi River, as well as a 315-mile path through two national parks and nine state parks.

 

International

A Welsh police official is “hugely supportive” of bike cams, saying police can’t be everywhere but the public can.

That’s more like it. British drivers complain that they could be fined the equivalent of $6,250 for distracted eating behind the wheel, calling it nonsense and daylight robbery. Although everyone else on the road likely likes the idea.

A Melbourne, Australia city councilor says a proposal to remove bike lanes would be economic vandalism.

A Perth, Australia e-scooter rider was killed in a collision with a bike rider when the two crashed on a blind bend; the bike rider was treated for minor injuries.

An Aussie op-ed complains that Sydney’s new bike plan completely ignores half the city.

 

Competitive Cycling

Mark Cavendish insists there’s no rivalry between him and Fabio Jakobsen for a spot on the Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl team in this year’s Tour de France.

Women’s cycling continues to grow, with plans for a women’s Milan-San Remo next year.

  

Finally…

Your next bike could be the two-wheeled offspring of Formula 1. We may have to put up with angry LA drivers, but at least we don’t have to deal with road-hogging grizzlies.

And that feeling when a bike path is named after a creepy clown, or maybe the other way around.

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin, too.