Seattle wants to attract willing but wary bikers
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this May 31, 2012 photo, a bicyclist commuting during rush hour keeps an eye on a car turning in front of him, in Seattle. For many in Seattle, the image of a typical cyclist is a Spandex-clad, yellow-jacketed two-wheeled warrior who braves the steep streets of this city. But as the city prepares to overhaul its five-year-old bike plan, some are seeking to make the city safer and friendlier to those not so accustomed to navigating the streets on two wheels. There's a new push to get willing but wary cyclists on their saddles with protected bike lanes buffered from traffic, designated bicycling boulevards where traffic is slowed and walkers and bikers have priority, and traffic calming features like speed bumps. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)(Credit: AP)SEATTLE (AP) — For many in Seattle, the image of a typical cyclist is a Spandex-clad, yellow-jacketed two-wheeled warrior who braves the steep streets of this city.
But as the city prepares to overhauls its five-year-old bike plan, some want to make the city safer and friendlier to those not so accustomed to navigating the streets on two wheels.
There’s a new push to get “willing but wary” cyclists on their saddles with protected bike lanes buffered from traffic, designated bicycling boulevards where traffic is slowed and walkers and bikers have priority, and traffic calming features like speed bumps.
“We want to make sure we’re building infrastructure for people who are eight or 80,” and not just for the more experienced commuters, said Blake Trask, statewide policy director for the Washington Bicycle Alliance who formerly headed Seattle’s bike advisory board.
The city is planning to build seven miles of walking and biking boulevards in five neighborhoods this year, with more likely on the way. So-called neighborhood greenways modeled after ones in Portland, Ore., are designed to make it safer for walkers and bikers to get between their home and school, the grocery store and park.
The city is taking public comment on the new plan, which would also consider features that separate cyclists from cars, called cycle tracks. They’re common in bike-friendly European cities like Copenhagen and Amsterdam, but more U.S. cities such as Washington, D.C., and New York City are trying them out.
Still, any talk of bike improvements in Seattle is sure to stoke resentment from some, who believe the city’s policies favor bike and transit over cars. Local talk-show hosts and columnists have ranted against what they call the city’s anti-car campaign.
It hasn’t helped that the city’s most famous biker, Mayor Mike McGinn, sometimes known as “Mayor McSchwinn” for his enthusiasm about two-wheeled transportation, has irked some by increasing parking rates downtown and backing a measure to tax cars to pay for transit and bike improvements that even tax-friendly Seattleites rejected.
“We don’t have a problem with the city investing in bike infrastructure,” said Michael Ennis, transportation director for the conservative Washington Policy Center. “It’s just when it’s at the expense of auto lanes, then we start running into issues of fairness.”




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