Posted 02/05/2010
General News
Portland City Council Considering Ambitious Bicycle Plan
Portland, Ore. - The Portland City Council is considering the Portland Bicycle Plan for 2030 at a hearing today. The plan was a product of two years of work by the Portland Bureau of Transportation and its partners in the community.
“There has been some commentary that ‘we can’t afford to do this.’ I believe we can’t afford not to do it. As the manager of our multi-billion dollar transportation system during a time of declining funding, it’s my job to make efficient use of what we already have. The most cost-effective way to do that is to shift trips from driving alone to walking, bicycling, and transit,” Mayor Sam Adams said in a speech available online here.
“Dollar for dollar, investing in bike infrastructure makes economic sense. For less than two percent of our transportation budget since 1996, we have seen bicycle use grow from one percent to more than six percent of commute trips in the city. That’s a good return on investment.”
The principles of the new plan are to attract new riders, strengthen bicycle policies, form a denser bikeway network, increase bicycle parking, expand programs to support bicycling and increase funding for bicycle facilities. If adopted by City Council, the Portland Bicycle Plan for 2030 will guide the Portland Bureau of Transportation in expanding its bicycle network over the next 20 years. The new plan supersedes the Bicycle Master Plan, which was adopted in 1996.
"Our efforts have been guided by a distinguished steering committee and an inclusive public process – hundreds of Portland residents participated," said Ellen Vanderslice, project manager for the Portland Bureau of Transportation. "Throughout the process we listened to the people who know their neighborhoods best and responded with changes."
Since the 1996 plan was adopted, Portland has doubled its bikeway network to more than 300 miles, added thousands of bicycle parking spaces, has a successful Safe Routes to School program and seen bicycling increase more than 300 percent
By passing the plan, the City Council would direct PBOT and other city bureaus to form a finance task force to find funding, promote implementation and report back in nine months. The Portland Planning Commission voted 5-0 on November 10, 2009, to "enthusiastically and warmly support" the Portland Bicycle Plan for 2030 and recommend it to City Council.
More information can be found here.
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Features
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- Perhaps the greatest thing about mountain biking is the diversity of one trail to the next and how each trail has its own character — whether it’s the climbs, descents, its flow, length, “explorability,” the technical aspects or simply the destination itself. What exists in Washington State alone is all the reason needed to get out and do some epic trail riding.
- Paralympians are an emerging group of athletes and the Paralympics has experienced rapid growth. The International Olympic Committee and United States Olympic Committee have recently made a change in their charter to support both Olympians and Paralympians.
- In 2007, an estimated 23.6 million children and adults living in the United States suffered from diabetes. Founded in 2005 by cyclists Phil Southerland and Joe Eldridge, Team Type 1 is united by its mission to encourage people with diabetes around the world to take control of their health through diet, exercise and proper medical care.
Opinions
- Sign of the times: the indication for setting my bottles and cans outside for recycling day was three deep when I came out of the house. This being Portland, though, the trio of homeless gents rode brand name bicycles; one was smoking American Spirit cigarettes.
- I’m riding on the road around Cherry Creek Reservoir, a light-traffic training loop for Denver cyclists. Inches from my elbow a cyclist passes without a nod or wave or any acknowledgment of my presence. He’s going one mph or so faster than me, passing as if we’re in a race....
- Panic, adrenaline, flight, that brief window when you don’t know if you’ll outrun chomping canines, until a final kick of speed and a few braveheart howls gets you over. Few activities shock the monkey like a good sprint to safety ... allowing you to live more fully in the present.
- She rode on the left side of the path, the wrong side, the side oncoming cyclists, skaters and runners use. There was no reason for her choice of the left side, but that’s where she’d stay. Occasionally, she’d drift to the right but soon she’d be back on the left. I remember wondering if she drives her car on the wrong side of the highway.
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