World Oceans Day Wednesday, June 8 · 10:00am – 3:00pm

Special programming and activities will be happening throughout the day. Aquatic-themed Animal Encounters will take place in the Harbor Overlook at 10:30, 12:30, and 3:00. Ride your bike to the Aquarium and get a free tune-up courtesy of Joe’s Bike Shop (11 a.m.-1 p.m.). Stop by the Children’s Discovery Gallery for arts and crafts, and check out fun and educational stations throughout the Aquarium. Wear blue to show your support for ocean health!

Every year on June 8, organizations around the world join together to observe World Oceans Day and draw attention to the critical need for change. At the National Aquarium, we recognize the importance of this event and believe ocean health starts at home.

FREE! with Aquarium admission
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Waterfront Partnership’s Summer Celebration Friday, June 10 · 4:00pm – 7:00pm

Whether biking to work or strolling around the Harbor, to take in the breathtaking views, people of all ages are heading outdoors to enjoy the warm weather! In celebration of the arrival of summer, the Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore will host a free event at West Shore Park including live music, food, drinks, and family activities on Friday, June 10th from 4-7pm.

The event will include cookout fare ($2 hamburgers, $1 hot dogs, $3 veggie burgers) and beverages ($2 beers) for sale with proceeds going to the Waterfront Partnership’s Healthy Harbor initiative; children’s activities including face painting, beanbag tosses, games and balloon animals; live music by local Latin music group Mambo Combo; and much more. Additionally, the Walter Sondheim Fountain will be flowing for children to play in throughout the event.

During the event, the winners of the Baltimore Bike Month Challenge 2011 will be announced.

Families can bring a blanket and enjoy a relaxing evening outdoors on the waterfront. All attendees are encouraged to use alternate modes of transportation to get to West Shore Park whether it be walking, biking, the Charm City Circulator by way of the Purple Route Stop #301 (Baltimore Visitor Center) or #320 (Conway), or the Baltimore Water Taxi. Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore would like to thank Charm City Circulator, Zipcar, and Bike Baltimore for their contributions to the event.

For more information, visit www.waterfrontpartnership.org
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Can Baltimore become a truly bike-friendly city? Can it afford not to?

by Mat Edelson – Urbanite


The signs—or to be more accurate, the sharrows—are everywhere. Ask any cyclist about these international road lane markings—usually two forward-pointing stripes sitting atop an outlined bicyclist—and they’ll tell you that they amount to a two-word battle cry: "We belong."

While Congress wrestles with the idea of "Complete Streets"—a 2009 bill by that name, aimed at making all streets accessible to cyclists and other non-motorized users, ultimately died in committee—policymakers are still targeting bicyclists as key players in transforming neighborhoods. Last March, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, perhaps caught up in the moment, eschewed the speaker’s podium and jumped on a table at the packed National Bike Summit in Washington, D.C.; he was there selling the Livable Communities Initiative of 2010 by announcing that President Obama planned to set aside federal money for bike paths. (The bill never got to the floor, but Obama hasn’t slashed those funds in his proposed federal budget.) [B’ Spokes: Just to note Complete Streets is not dead in congress just the issue has become very polarized.]

LaHood told the assembled D.C. biking advocates that he and his wife spent every nice weekend cycling on the 200-plus-mile-long C&O canal. "We ride [the canal] as far we can," he said.

"Pittsburgh?" called out some of the seasoned riders in the crowd.

But in truth, it’s not going to be the hardcore, spandex-clad, 3-percent-body-fat cycle hounds that lead this extreme urban makeover. While these lean, mean, veering machines prove, by sheer persistence, that people-powered vehicles can breathtakingly navigate even the most car-coveted thoroughfares, if there’s to be a biking revolution in Baltimore—or anywhere else in this country—it’s more likely to take place at space-normal speed, among waistlines as accustomed to donuts as Diet Pepsis.

Think of it as the bell curve of potential ridership. On the far left side of the bell, representing perhaps 10 percent of cyclists, are the hale and hearty sorts. "We call them the ‘Kamikaze Cyclists,’ the bike messengers, and, frankly, people like myself who’ll ride no matter what the conditions are," says Greg Cantori, executive director of the Knott Foundation and former president of Bike Maryland. On the other end of the curve is a group, Cantori says, "who won’t ride no matter what." But between those two groups, there’s a large group—perhaps 60 percent of the population—who will ride if the right incentives and safety protections are in place. [B’ Spokes: If my memory is correct the Baltimore Metropolitan Council did a survey in the early 2000s that came up with this 60% of the population would like to bike which is rather startling considering we have 80% car ownership, that’s not a huge difference.]

Experience has shown across the world that if cities create a solid infrastructure, biking can catch on extremely quickly in a populace seeking alternative forms of transportation. Call it the sardine effect: The little critters, before they end up in those tin cans, like to swim in one direction, but studies show that just 15 percent moving against traffic can cause the entire school to shift en masse.

In Baltimore, Bike Czar Nate Evans (his official title at the city’s Department of Transportation is Bicycle & Pedestrian Planner) has done a quarterly ad hoc riding census, standing on relatively busy bikeways such as Falls Road and Maryland Avenue. The citywide numbers speak of a small but growing ridership, up 35 percent in 2010 over the previous year, according to Evans, who puts the total number of daily commuters at "maybe a thousand." That’s progress, but as a percentage of total commuters that’s pretty paltry: The much-maligned Light Rail draws, at last count, 36,300 daily riders; Metro pulls 56,800; and buses 232,857, according to the Maryland Transit Administration. [B’ Spokes: Just to note, I would love to see those numbers by dollar spent (I’ll assert over the long term in real dollars supporting cycling costs less per person then other modes) but even more importantly we still have no way of capturing daily bike riders like they do for riders of mass transit or even cars.]

As an aggregate, one wonders what bicyclists’ numbers have to be to achieve some kind of critical mass.

It’s been a long time since anyone in Baltimore had that kind of unifying force. Former Mayor Sheila Dixon, renowned for her biking forays around town, didn’t have the time—or perhaps the desire—to make cycling a central focus of her administration. Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake is considered middle-of-the-road on the issue. The results? There’s no doubt that biking in this town has suffered, relative to the rest of the country, because it lacks a single, high-visibility advocate. In a very real sense, Baltimore’s just beginning to kick off its training wheels.

Given Mobtown’s notoriously fractious nature, it seems only de rigueur that the push for biking here is coming from many small but determined voices, as opposed to a shout from on high. Like free-floating ions, these biking proponents aren’t always the most cohesive lot, but it’s not for lack of trying. And there’s a chance—just a chance, mind you—that they could coalesce into a mighty powerful front.

The pieces are nearly all in place: From the growth of cycling competitions to the recognition (and city funding) of infrastructure improvements, the consciousness for the potential of biking in this town has probably never been greater. More than 1,300 riders participated in last year’s thirteenth annual regional Bike to Work Day, a 30 percent jump over 2009. Other regular events such as Tour Dem Parks and the availability of some 39 miles of off-road trails and 77 miles of city bike routes are drawing greater numbers to local cycling clubs and regional organizations such as Bike Maryland.

It falls upon the city’s Nate Evans to help ensure riders can get there safely. Buried deep inside the City’s Department of Transportation data cloud is Baltimore’s Bike Master Plan. Evans has the unenviable task of trying to connect the dots, and he’s been forced to take an entrepreneurial approach. Three years ago, Evans became the first (and to date, only) full-time city employee (he has a part-time assistant) whose primary responsibility is getting bikers on city streets and getting them home in one piece. His budget on day one was $1.5 million; since then it’s been slashed (hello, recession) nearly in half.

To stretch his bucks, Evans has learned to play piggyback. Whenever a road-resurfacing project is on the transportation department’s book, Evans tries to get, at a minimum, some bike lane striping and sharrows laid down. (So if you’re wondering why bike lanes suddenly appear and then disappear, well, there you go.) In theory, given enough time and enough lane resurfacing, the city’s bike lanes will eventually knit together to provide riders with some sense of continuity.

While one can’t blame Evans for working with the hand he’s been dealt, the lack of political will to create completely segregated lanes at least along some major north-south and east-west routes is distressing to many riders. City Hall’s response could best be characterized as good intentions but, to date, incomplete (to be kind) follow-through. Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke, a biking enthusiast, introduced seven biking bills in 2009 either enacted or adopted by the city. These included a Cyclists’ Bill of Rights, a "Complete Streets" approach to road planning, requirements to install bike-friendly storm grates on city streets, and "BMore Streets For People"—Baltimore’s official adoption, according to the bill, of Bogotá’s Ciclovia program, which had been tried on a small scale in Roland Park earlier in 2009 (and again in 2010), attracting some 1,000 participants.

The initiatives have been battling inertia or downright resistance from the start. Despite the police department’s pledge to work with the city on BMore Streets, it reportedly wants to slap a $35,000 fee on coordinators who wanted to expand the event to include a 12-mile loop from Lake Montebello to Druid Hill Reservoir. "That’s just not sustainable; you’re not going to be able to have that kind of event every few weeks," says Bike Maryland Executive Director Carol Silldorff. "Other cities have allowed crossing guards or trained volunteers [to control intersections] so it almost costs nothing. We want to work with the police, and I think they want to work with us, but until their fear of liability is diminished, the price will be too outrageous for us."

Switching storm grates would seem to be a simple enough fix: Turn the grates 90 degrees, perpendicular to the lane, so a rider’s tires won’t get stuck in them, destroying the wheel (and sometimes the cyclist) in the process. And yet, when Public Works was initially approached about changing or adapting the storm grates, they threw up their own roadblock, requiring the Mayor’s Bicycle Advisory Committee to produce documentation showing that the new grates would conduct water. "We said to them, ‘Every other city in the country is putting in this newer design’; and our Public Works was saying, ‘Oh, no, that doesn’t have sufficient water flow,’" recalls Greg Hinchliffe, who chairs the committee. [B’ Spokes: A note on liability and storm grates, a bit of an oversimplification but just as a pot hole can be a hazard but as long the City has a procedure for fixing them there is no liability. But if the City decides to stop fixing pot holes to save money it will open itself up to lawsuits. The same goes with storm grates, the City has received notice that they are a hazard and there is no procedure to fix them in place (yet.) While I am not a lawyer there have been successful multi-million dollar lawsuits elsewhere by cyclists who have gotten injured by these things. To close the liability gap the City needs to start a procedure to fix these things.]

Biking in Baltimore is clearly at a crossroads. The opportunities are there (as are the bike racks—some three hundred of them since Nate Evans showed up), but so are the impediments. The deciding factor may ultimately be found in the distinction between livability and survivability. Eventually those terms, when relating to the city’s viability, might become synonymous. If the future of any city is, arguably, its youth, then catering to those aspects of city life they desire—and being bike-friendly certainly ranks up there—could economically sustain a city such as Baltimore, which currently is seeing its best and brightest prospects leave, post-college, in rates higher than comparable cities.

"Companies, if they decide to move to or stay in Baltimore, are looking at who is here that’s educated, young, talented, and available," says Mary Pat Clarke. "A lot of young people commute and get around on bicycles. If that’s the case, let’s become a bike-friendly city, encourage this as a city for young people."

Maybe what biking comes down to is a two-wheeled prescription for health, for both Baltimore and its citizens. It may well be a ride worth taking.

—Urbanite contributing writer Mat Edelson’s first bike was a banana seat Schwinn on which he learned to ride wheelies and skid to a perfect, rubber-burning stop.
Continue reading “Can Baltimore become a truly bike-friendly city? Can it afford not to?”

Why we promote bicycling – because everyone benefits.

It may serve to remind the greater public that:
We do not promote bicycling for the benefit of a few grumpy old guys trying to relive their youth, they’ll keep on biking no matter what.
We do not promote bicycling for the yuppies and their the “new golf.” They will find areas to ride and compete irregardless of what happens locally.
We do not promote bicycling for any made up or perceived minority of population.

We promote bicycling so everyone benefits. Those that bicycle enjoy a great many personal benefits and those that don’t bicycle enjoy the cleaner air and safer streets, just to name a few things. And to help put a face on a new bicyclist that we do this for, here’s Victoria Vox:

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Study: Building Roads to Cure Congestion Is an Exercise in Futility

from Streetsblog New York City by Tanya Snyder

We’ll spare you the calculus in the report. Here’s the upshot: “Roads cause traffic.”

Duranton and Turner: If you build it, you will sit in traffic on it. Photo: Arch and the Environment

Professors Gilles Duranton and Matthew Turner analyzed travel data from hundreds of metro areas in the U.S., resulting in what they call the most comprehensive dataset ever assembled on the traffic impacts of road construction. They write:

For interstate highways in metropolitan areas we find that VKT [vehicle kilometers traveled] increases one for one with interstate highways, confirming the “fundamental law of highway congestion” suggested by Anthony Downs (1962; 1992). We also uncover suggestive evidence that this law may extend beyond interstate highways to a broad class of major urban roads, a “fundamental law of road congestion”. These results suggest that increased provision of interstate highways and major urban roads is unlikely to relieve congestion of these roads.


The implications for this research are significant, especially as Congress considers whether to integrate performance measures into federal transportation spending decisions. These findings make a strong case that Congress should not allocate too many scarce resources to road expansion when that’s not a real solution for congestion.

Continue reading “Study: Building Roads to Cure Congestion Is an Exercise in Futility”

Lesser fine for driver who hit bicyclist was [a police] blunder

[B’ Spokes: I would like to remind everyone of our Bicyclists Bill of Rights: "3. Cyclists have the right to the full support of educated law enforcement." With all the attention this crash gathered, you would think things would be doubled checked for accuracy. Whether this was a "simple" mistake or part of a long trend of what seems to be Baltimore Police going easy on at fault motorists who injure/kill cyclists, I cannot say but in either case I am disturbed, if you are too write your city council rep. https://cityservices.baltimorecity.gov/citycouncil/ ]
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from Getting There by Michael Dresser

The Baltimore woman whose driving errors led to a crash that left bicyclist Nathan Krasnopoler in a coma with possibly permanent brain injuries has resolved the traffic charges against her by paying $220 – about half the amount she would have been fined if the Baltimore police had not erred in writing the tickets.

Jeannette Marie Walke, 83, pleaded guilty May 11 to negligent driving and failure to yield tight-of-way to a bicyclist in a designated lane. There was no indication in court records that she chose to appear in court. Such charges can be resolved by sending in a standard fine by mail.

Nathan Krasnopoler, a Johns Hopkins University student, collided with Walke’s car Feb. 26 when she turned in front of him on University Drive near the Homewood Campus. According to his family, he retains brain stem function but is not expected to regain consciousness. The Krasnopolers have filed a $10 million lawsuit against Walke.

Walke could have been fined $400 had not the police officer who wrote the tickets blundered.

The negligent driving fine was assessed at $140 rather than the $280 allowed under state law for cases involving a crash. On the failure-to-yield charge, she was fined $80 rather than the $120 she could have been assessed for an offense that contributed to an accident.

Terri Bolling, a spokesman for the District Courts of Maryland, said the officer wrote in the higher amounts but failed to check off the boxes indicating the charges involved a case that led to an accident and personal injury.

Bolling said that when the boxes are not checked, the fines default to the lower, pre-set amounts. She said the staff that enters the data into the court’s electronic system is not permitted to check the boxes or correct the amounts because the tickets are legal charging documents.

The police error comes after the department acknowledged mishandling the case up front by initially saying no charges would be brought against the driver. After a public outcry led by bicycle advocates, the police conducted a more thorough investigation and the State’s Attorney’s Office decided to charge Walke with the two traffic offenses.

Andrew G. Slutkin, the Krasnopoler family attorney who filed the civil suit, said he was surprised to learn that Walke had been charged the lesser fines. He said that while the family didn’t want to see the driver jailed, they believed it was important that she be charged because they felt she was “legally and morally responsible for the collision.”

“The family believes the fine should be the maximum available under the law,” Slutkin said. “If anyone deserves a break, it’s not this defendant.”
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Light rail and pedestrians: Why not a crosswalk?

from Getting There by Michael Dresser

A light rail train was heading north on Howard Street in downtown Baltimore when it made a stop on the right side between Lexington and Saratoga. Dozens of passengers disembarked, and the vast majority of them crossed over the street in the middle of the block, just behind the train.

This may not be strictly legal but it is human nature. No amount of legislating or fulminating or lecturing will stop it. Rich or poor, black or white, male or female, young or old — it seems we all want to get from Point A to Point B by taking a straight line.

My question for the city Department of Transportation is this: Given that this is how pedestrians react to this configuration of transit and street, why not create a crosswalk at the point where they are going to cross anyway? Even when pedestrians are in the wrong, drivers are obligated to avoid hitting them anyway, so why not provide that extra measure of protection to people on foot?

Here’s a modest suggestion: Have one of those sharp traffic engineers with the department follow the light rail through town and chart where the passengers are crossing. Then design measures to protect them. It’s not as if Howard Street was intended to be a fast-moving street for drivers.

Yes, the city could wait for a fatality. Or, at the risk of sounding unoriginal, it could "do it now."

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Guilford Avenue to Become “Bike Boulevard”

By Adam Bednar North Baltimore Patch

The Baltimore Department of Transportation will begin developing a “bike boulevard” along Guilford Avenue later this summer.

Nate Evans, a bike pedestrian planner with the department, briefed Charles Village Civic Association members about the project at a meeting Wednesday night.

“You’re not going to see much difference on Guilford except more bike traffic,” Evans said.

The planned bike boulevard will extend south to Mount Royal.

Cyclist will still share the roadway with cars and trucks.

Construction of the boulevard is expected to take four months.

Planned improvements include:

* Building bike-friendly traffic humps
* Constructing mini traffic circles where Guilford Avenue intersects with 32nd, 24th and 22nd streets
* Adding curb extensions at the intersection of Guilford and North avenues.
* Painting sections along 33rd Street green to show where cyclists should ride
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Cyclist run over by ice cream truck – Don’t ride on the sidewalk

Don’t get me wrong, I am empathetic to those of you who do not feel comfortable riding in the street but when a driver of an ice cream truck (trained to watch for pedestrians) hits a cyclist, well that should sound some alarm bells. One of the reasons why I report pedestrian issues on this site is that behaving like a pedestrian does not make you safer in the slightest around here.

To gain some confidence riding in the road try riding with other cyclists
Biking in B’more meetup group: https://www.meetup.com/Biking-in-Bmore/
Baltimore Bicycling Club: https://baltobikeclub.org/

Sidewalk riding is illegal in the Baltimore Metro Area, if you must ride on the sidewalk ride WITH the flow of traffic as studies show that has a lower risk then against the flow of traffic (but most studies show that riding on the road with the flow of traffic is even lower in risk.) And remember the danger of sidewalk riding is at every driveway and intersection you cross, so approach with caution.
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