Alert: AASHTO wants to weaken US DOT bicycle accommodation policy from the League of American Bicyclists

Note: this alert is now old, please do not act.

Bike Portland has some wonderful coverage on this topic, with this update from Kit Keller, the Executive Director of the Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals:

“AASHTO officials seem to be oblivious to blossoming interest and innovation of local governments across the land that want walkable, bicycle-friendly communities. AASHTO’s recent pronouncement contributes to a growing sense of the irrelevance and irrationality of applying state mandates to local road conditions and needs. Hence the development of new tools like the NACTO Urban Bikeway Design Guide.”

Please take action


Update: Please consider bicyclists on ALL road projects

Jim Titus just told me that he is having a constructive dialogue with SHA about MD-564 and that the email from SHA to Jim that I quoted (provided to me by someone else) was SHA’s response to Jim’s question about whether the final decision was made by officials in Baltimore or Greenbelt. Jim added: “Although I objected to a particular re-routing of the through lane over what had been the shoulder, SHA has not slammed the door on the suggested mitigation, which would be to put sharrows along all of the conflict points between Lanham and Bowie. The problem now is that the road has a combination of a good shoulder most of the way, with occasional choke points that lack the striping and signs necessary to inform cyclists and drivers the appropriate route for bicycles using the full lane. MD-564 is a perfect example of why Maryland needs to adopt the use of R4-11 signs and start using sharrows.” The R4-11 signs say “Bicycles May Use Full Lane”. “The nearby Glenn Dale Citizens Association has also asked SHA to install sharrows and R4-11 signs in this area.”

Glenn Dale Citizens Association Letter to SHA

But theLeague of American Bicyclists Take Action is still very much appropriate.
Continue reading “Alert: AASHTO wants to weaken US DOT bicycle accommodation policy from the League of American Bicyclists”

Ellicott City family steadfast for comatose son

from Howard County Times By Janene Holzberg,

When she enters Nathan Krasnopoler’s room at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Susan Cohen gives her middle child a special physical therapy workout. She gingerly raises each of his arms above his head and then manipulates his wrists, ankles and legs to get his joints and muscles moving.

“All that motion gets his one eye to open, and I try to get him to track with my hand, but he never does,” she said. “Then I call his name to see if he’ll respond, which he doesn’t. Lastly, I talk to him about current news events, like the disaster in Japan.

“I have no idea if he hears me or not, but I do it anyway.”

Cohen plans to continue her daily routine, even though doctors recently told the Ellicott City family that Krasnopoler will never regain cognitive function or have “a meaningful recovery” following an accident nearly two months ago.

Krasnopoler, a 20-year-old sophomore at Johns Hopkins University, recently entered his seventh week in a coma after he was struck by a motorist Feb. 26 at 11:50 a.m. while bicycling northbound on University Parkway near 39th Street, in Baltimore.

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Obama Replaces Costly High-Speed Rail Plan With High-Speed Bus Plan [video]

From the Onion News Network:
President Obama’s proposed high-speed train system will be replaced with a fleet of buses that will rocket along highways at speeds up to 165 mph.
https://www.theonion.com/video/obama-replaces-costly-highspeed-rail-plan-with-hig,18473/
[B’ Spokes: The animations are very funny and there are some parallels to accommodating bicycling on existing roads, like with shared multi-vehicle routes.]

The significance of signal timing that treats bicyclists and pedestrians as second class road users

from A view from the cycle path – David Hembrow

Delays at traffic light controlled crossings


Cyclists and pedestrians elsewhere often feel that their time is wasted by pedestrian and cycle crossings which are timed in such a way that they prioritize “keeping traffic moving” over people who want to cross roads. This often causes people to cross against a red light, especially if they are in a hurry.

Here in the Netherlands, timings are quite different. This video shows two crossings which are on the route to school for my youngest daughter. She never has to wait too long for a green light, so I am happy that she is never tempted to cross while the cars are still moving.

Some years ago, I did some calculations based on a pedestrian crossing which we used together on the route which we walked to school in Cambridge. Crossings in the UK almost always work as described below. Even though the highway engineers can claim that the cycle time is the same for motorists and pedestrians, the average delay for motorists works out as far shorter than that for pedestrians:

Assuming that the junction splits time 50:50 for the two different directions, and that there is a 1 minute cycle time, a motorist can expect to be delayed a maximum of 30 seconds. Half of drivers are not delayed at all as the light is already green, and the other half are delayed by an average of 15 seconds, making an overall average delay of just 7.5 seconds for a driver.

On the other hand, a pedestrian only gets to cross if they walk right up to the crossing and push the button. Typically, the green phase for a pedestrian will last as little as 3 or 4 seconds, fitted into the 1 minute cycle. What’s more, there is an initial use delay on the button intended to make pedestrians bunch up. The intention of this is to make best use of the this short time and “keep traffic flowing” on the road in the meantime.

So, you push the button. Wait, say, 10 seconds, then have an average delay of (60-4)/2 = 28s. As a result, the average delay for a pedestrian is 38s. That’s 8s longer than the maximum for a driver or 5x as long as the average for a driver even though they are subject to the same cycle time.

Now I know that some people will say “it’s just a few seconds”, but let me explain further. At one time I would walk my children to primary school, then return, walk again to collect them, and return again, using this crossing four times a day. That means that on average the pointless extra delay would consume one and a half minutes day – about as long as it would have taken to make one of the whole journeys by car. I literally worked the numbers out while waiting for a green light to show.

Continue reading “The significance of signal timing that treats bicyclists and pedestrians as second class road users”

4th Annual May Day Roll: Labor History Bike Tour of Baltimore

Time Sunday, May 1 · 9:00am – 2:00pm
Location Baltimore Bicycle Works
Created By Baltimore Bicycle Works

More Info
Join the Baltimore Brew and Baltimore Bicycle Works for the 4th Annual May Day Roll. This bicycle tour of Baltimore will explore the City’s labor struggles both past and present. The ride will be guided by Brew reporter and historian of Baltimore industry Mark Reutter. We will leave from BBW Sunday morning and roll downtown making our way across the Harbor at a leisurely pace, stopping to explore various points of interest in Baltimore’s labor history. We will end the ride in Greektown with lunch at Ikaros.

Meet at Baltimore Bicycle Works, 1813 Falls Road, Baltimore, 21201
We will conclude the ride at Ikaros, 4805 Eastern Avenue, Baltimore, 21224

Donughts and Coffee served from 8 to 8:30am
Wheels Roll at 9am

Registration is $25 per person and includes a three course lunch from Ikaros.

Pre-registration and more details at https://maydayroll.eventbrite.com/
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All advocacy is local

Bike Maryland

Please register for the May 13-15, Winning Campaigns Training by this Tuesday April 19th at 8am. The training will be canceled if registration does not increase by this deadline.  Baltimore is one of six U.S. cities awarded to host this training. We worked to bring this opportunity to Maryland and we hope that for $100 (depending on your membership status) you will register for this three day action-oriented workshop that gives novice and veteran advocates the tools to create and manage powerful campaigns to increase biking and walking in their communities. Please don’t let this opportunity pass.

Curriculum will be taught by longtime advocates and national experts with first-hand experience conducting — and winning — bicycle and pedestrian campaigns. 

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER AND LEARN MORE! 

Location: Baltimore, MD; Friday, 5-9 p.m., Saturday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Sunday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.  

Take advantage of this vital, affordable training this spring in Baltimore! Hosted by: The Alliance for Biking and Walking and Bike Maryland.

Register now please and play an important role in making Maryland the best place it can be to live, work and BIKE!

Thank you.

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