
A cyclist makes his way down a snow-covered street in downtown Richmond, Va., Saturday, during a winter storm. About a foot of snow was reported in the area.
Continue reading “Winter storm hits Southeast with ice, snow”
Western County Pedestrian & Bicycle Access Plan
Richard Layman, Bicycle & Pedestrian Planner
410-887-3524
rlayman@baltimorecountymd.gov
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The Western Baltimore County Pedestrian and Bicycle Access Plan will be an “action plan” for constructing pedestrian and bicycle improvements in the urban sections of the western part of Baltimore County.
The plan is being developed by an advisory committee composed of representatives from the community and county and state government, and will be based on the needs and desires expressed by the citizens who live or work in the area. It will identify specific projects to be implemented and provide recommendations for phasing and funding.
The main impetus for undertaking this plan comes from Baltimore County’s Master Plan 2010. The master plan describes the need to improve the variety of transportation options available to its citizens. It calls for a county-wide plan for developing and improving bicycle and pedestrian facilities.
Master Plan Goal for Pedestrian Facilities
Develop and maintain pedestrian facilities that provide desirable levels of accessibility and safety for pedestrians, and encourage walking for both utilitarian and recreational purposes.
Master Plan Goal for Bicycle Facilities
Develop and maintain bicycle facilities that provide an adequate level of convenience, mobility, and safety for bicyclists at all levels of experience, and encourage bicycle trips for utilitarian, recreational and commuting purposes.
Pedestrian and Bicycle Planning E-newsletter
Sign up to receive mailings about “County Pedestrian and Bicycle Access Plan” by subscribing to the Baltimore County Bicycle and Pedestrian Planning Newsletter.
Walking and Biking Survey
Please take this online survey to identify areas for walking and bicycling improvements in the Western plan area.
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Mandatory helmet age bill from 16 to 18 years of age
I’ll note there is a hearing on this bill on the 2/2 in conflict with the hearing on the 3′ passing bill (SB 51)
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Long Beach Combines Sharrows with Green Stripe
Or as US Today puts it: “City puts bicycles directly in the path of motorists”
Like roads have always been only for cars and sharing the road is a new novel concept.
So what do you think, a good idea or not?
Continue reading “Long Beach Combines Sharrows with Green Stripe”
Boy Scouts test life-or-death skills
"Today we went on a bike trip where we had to shoot BB guns and do archery," said Greg Streeton, an eighth-grader at New Market Middle School and a scout in Troop 268."
[I got this summery in my Google news alert and it made me think of a new style of self-defense riding skills class much like what was needed in the wild west where one would have to defend their rights in a very assertive manner because no one else would but it is simply the annual Klondike Derby. (Though riding your bike can at times seem like the wild west with every man for them self and the police getting involved is virtually unheard of.)]
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Bicyclists May Fight Back
[Add this to my wish list.]
Picture the perfect walk, run, or ride on a gorgeous Missouri morning spoiled by a frighteningly close encounter with a motorist who is angry just to see a bicyclist on the road. In the past, many of us were frustrated by our inability to take self-protective action or to incite others to protect us unless we were severely damaged by the encounter.
The Missouri Bicycle Federation offers its members an option that can be very satisfying…Report that safety threat! In an effort to make our state a safer place to walk, run, and bicycle, the Missouri Bicycle Federation (MoBikeFed) has established a program in which the details of the incident are reported to us and a letter will be sent to the offending motorist.
Details of the incident should include: motorist license tag number and description of the incident (time, place, description of vehicle & driver, what happened).
The letter sent to the motorist is accompanied by a summary of the Missouri state statutes and Missouri Driver Guide sections related to bicycling. The summary was compiled by the Missouri Bicycle Federation and may be freely reproduced without copyright restriction. The summary is available for viewing/download in MSWord format and PDF format.
In addition, the offender’s name and address will be keep on file in case the unsafe action is repeated and legal action becomes necessary. The names of both the offending motorist and the reporting bicyclist are kept confidential.
This program is open to all MoBikeFed members, including members of affiliated clubs.
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Too Late for Jack Yates: The Maryland Legislature Considers a 3-Foot Passing Law—Again
By Michael Byrne | Posted 1/28/2010
Last summer, cyclist Jack Yates was killed at the intersection of Maryland and Lafayette avenues. He was riding to the right of the right lane of Maryland as a truck passed him, also in the right lane. That is, both vehicles were smooshed into the right lane as the truck instigated a right turn onto Fayette. The accident that resulted is a classic “right hook,” one of the most dreaded occurrences in urban bicycling—and one of the most common.
Whether the driver didn’t see Yates or didn’t look, the turning truck sealed off the cyclist’s passage, and there are then only three things possible: 1) The cyclist veers right, impossible in this situation; 2) the cyclist stops, also impossible in this situation because there wasn’t enough time to react; 3) the cyclist crashes into the turning truck. Jack Yates—a regular bicycle commuter and by all accounts an experienced, safe, and responsible cyclist—met the latter fate, hitting the truck and becoming entangled in its rear wheels, which dragged him several feet across the intersection. He died on the scene, in the middle of a city intersection on a city-sanctioned bike corridor, and the truck drove off.
According to the Baltimore Police Department, Yates was the one at fault. Yes, Yates hit the truck, but he had no other option. Was he supposed to take the whole lane, and not yield to the right? That seems to be the message. And, in the immediate, that is the message received.
“You have the same rights as a motor vehicle and also the same obligations,” BPD Lt. Leslie Bank wrote in a letter responding to an inquiry about the incident from a member of local bike collective Velocipede. Indeed. If only we cyclists had any reason to believe that the Baltimore Police Department would have our back if we acted “properly” on city streets and took, always, the full lane.
Yates’ deadly empty-set could and should been have preempted. For a number of years, the Maryland legislature has considered what’s known as a 3-foot passing law. It’s just what it sounds like: If a motor vehicle passes a cyclist on a road, the driver must allow 3 feet of clearance. If such a law had been in effect, the truck driver would have been legally obligated to allow the cyclist following behind to proceed through the intersection before making the turn. And Jack Yates might be alive. In 2009, it was the House Environmental Affairs Committee that shot the bill down—citing “unenforcability”—after the Senate passed the bill 45 to 2.
The bill is once again in the legislature, sponsored by Del. Jon Cardin (D-Baltimore County) and Sen. Jamie Raskin (D-Montgomery County). It is not only a smart and sensible piece of legislation, it is a matter of public safety, as last year’s tragic event ably proves.
Advancing the ‘Green Rider’ Revolution

[Note more information about electric bikes is in the referenced link.]
Ray Carrier has recently opened a Green Rider store in Fells Point in Baltimore MD that exclusively sells and rents a wide variety of the best and latest in high quality and performance state-of-the-art LEV products available in North America today. These include Motorino electric scooters, eZee Bikes (‘the Rolls Royces of the e-bike industry’) and PEDEGO umbrella folding bikes, BionX Intelligent Energy Management electric bicycle conversion kits, and Razor kick-scooters for kids.
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Cycling in the Netherlands in the 1950s
Transportation Projects – Bicycle and Pedestrian Access – Funding and Reporting
HOUSE BILL 282
Synopsis:
Declaring that it is the policy of the State that, in developing the annual Consolidated Transportation Program, the Maryland Department of Transportation shall work to ensure that there is a balance between funding for specified transportation projects for pedestrians and bicycle riders and specified highway construction projects and place increased emphasis on specified transportation projects; requiring the Statewide 20-Year Bicycle-Pedestrian Master Plan to be revised in each year that the Maryland Transportation Plan is revised; etc.
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