To Change Your Community’s Streets, the Action Is in the Statehouse

[B’ Spokes: Just a few highlights from this article. I will also note that in Maryland the State owns ~10% of the roads yet funding for on-road bicycling facilities is predominantly limited to just State roads. Maryland’s stress of a trail “network” and only a trail “network” where too many do not feel comfortable biking to a trail even though they live within a mile of the trail has to stop! This is not about trail vs road but simply a need to put the stress where it belongs, and that is on a bicycling network, period. If you can’t use it to get from your home to your destination then it’s not much of a network is it? ]


by Tanya Snyder, Streets Blog

Anxious about Congress messing up the federal transportation bill? There’s a lot at stake in Washington, but consider this: 78 percent of transportation funds come from the state and local levels.

The federal transportation bill is extremely important, and national programs like Safe Routes to School have prompted state and local agencies to think about more than just moving cars and trucks. But advocates shouldn’t let Congress dictate the pace of change. Sure, it would be huge if Washington raised the gas tax, Grunig said, but “the states aren’t waiting.” Between 2008 and 2010, 17 states enacted 29 new transportation funding bills.

“We’re saying this is an important investment into our state’s transportation network. We can’t just keep building our roads and building our roads and not providing other alternatives.”

Delaware Secretary of Transportation Shailen Bhatt

Bhatt says he doesn’t act alone. He half-jokingly offered a four-part recipe for advocacy success:

  1. Elect a governor who bikes.
  2. Elect senators who bike.
  3. Elect a congressmember who bikes.
  4. Get them all to show up at all of your events.


Continue reading “To Change Your Community’s Streets, the Action Is in the Statehouse”

How to Engage More Women in Bicycling

[B’ Spokes: Just to highlight someone who lives in Baltimore at the National Bike Summit.]


Marla Streb, a former World Mountain Bike Champion who now works with the pro Team Luna Chix, discussed overcoming the challenges of being a female pro in a strongly male-dominated sport and how she’s become a mom of three who only drives once a month (hint: cargo bike!).

https://blog.bikeleague.org/blog/2012/03/how-to-engage-more-women-in-bicycling-nbs12/

League Honors Congressional Bike Champions

[Just to highlight Maryland’s own:]


Senator Benjamin Cardin (D-MD)

  • Senator Cardin’s leadership was instrumental in crafting a creative solution to maintain funding for Transportation Enhancements and Safe Routes to Schools in the Senate’s transportation bill and to ensure that cities and counties continue to have a voice in how federal dollars are spent on these important programs.

https://blog.bikeleague.org/blog/2012/03/league-honors-congressional-bike-champions-nbs12/



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New Video Shows Brooklyn Cyclist Moments Before Death, May Prove NYPD Wrong

B’ Spokes: This is very similar to Baltimore’s Jack Yates fatality, a turning truck did not signal and failed to turn from the right side of the road as required by law. Baltimore City Police went out of their way to vindicate the truck driver and to charge the cyclist. Seriously we need motorists to signal, it’s the law. To quote the article:
"Degianni did not have his turn signal on leading up to the intersection, a catastrophic failure that could have saved Lefevre’s life:"
Now I have to ask how many tickets have Baltimore City Police given for failure to use turn signals? It happens all the time yet goes unnoticed by the police.
https://gothamist.com/2012/03/14/new_video_of_brooklyn_cyclists_deat.php

Donna Edwards (D-MD) at the Bike Summit

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Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD) was among the high-powered speakers at the opening plenary on Wednesday

Via: Now Online: Photos from the 2012 National Bike Summit #NBS12


Update:
From Streets Blog:

Rep. Donna Edwards, a Democrat from Maryland, told the story of how she came to consider herself a cyclist. She explained that it began by being first a student who needed a bike to get to school, then a working mother without a car who needed to get her child to daycare on the way to her job. Given her background coordinating advocacy days for nonprofits, she stressed that personal stories would help carry the message to members of Congress.

https://dc.streetsblog.org/2012/03/21/big-crowd-bipartisan-support-bike-summit-gets-rolling/

New Maryland bike initiative, with funding!

by Jack Cochrane, CycleMoCo

Cycle Maryland

The state has created a new bike program called Cycle Maryland.  It looks very encouraging.  In keeping with its secrecy in goverment policy, the state did this without telling too many people, at least not MoBike.  But we’ll take it!

Part of Cycle Maryland is a bikeway “retrofit” program that will fund local projects costing under $100K each.  Counties and cities are supposed to request funding for specific projects.  However this year the county was given only one week’s notice to come up with projects!  As a result we ended up with just signage projects,  i.e. signing existing bike routes, mostly streets.  I personally suggested more robust improvements (in the 3 days notice I had) including upgrading the Bethesda Trolley Trail by White Flint Metro, providing better bike access to Rockville Metro and supporting two-way travel on Woodmont Ave to Bethesda Metro and the Capital Crescent Trail.  But things were too rushed.

Fortunately the state is requesting another round of projects from counties and cities, to be funded in 2013.  They’re accepting project submissions from local jurisdictions through May 4th, 2012.

This Gazette article describes the funding initiative, but it’s misleading because it states that “bike paths” are going to be built or upgraded when nothing more than signs are being added.  Here are the actual state-funded projects:

Montgomery Mall to downtown Bethesda route — Adding signs along a 5.2 mile on-road route connecting Montgomery Mall to Bethesda Metro and the Capital Crescent Trail, with a spur to NIH ($21,000)

Matthew Henson trail to Forest Glen metro — Adding signs along a 7.4 mile existing route (mostly on-road) connecting Mathew Henson Trail to Wheaton and Forest Glen Metro stations ($33,000)

Silver Spring US 29 local route alternate — Adding signs along a 2.5 mile route parallel to US 29 (mostly on-road) from New Hampshire Ave to East Randolph Rd ($9,000)

All these signs are part of a comprehensive signed route network for the county, which we need.  But we can do a lot better than just that!

Continue reading “New Maryland bike initiative, with funding!”