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#111
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What Motorist Advocacy Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 7:54 PM, Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 6:26 AM, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/3/2011 8:47 PM, Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote: On 3/3/2011 11:31 AM, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/3/2011 12:03 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 3, 3:22 am, wrote: On Mar 1, 9:57 pm, Tēm ShermĒn °_°""twshermanREMOVE\"@THI $southslope.net" wrote: Bicycle farcilities (sic) were originated as a way to confine cyclists to an area inferior to the motor vehicles, which is hardly a left-wing position. False, bicycle facilities were originated by bicyclists before motor vehicles existed. But don't let that stop ya. You mean those facilities called "paved roads"? Bicyclists lobbied for them, but very few of them were segregated, bike-only facilities. Yes, we've made significant progress since then. Yes, progress in herding cyclists into separate and unequal ghettos. Right, in the same way I find myself herded onto the beach ghettos during the summer and the mountain ghettos in winter. Read the studies, cyclists will go well out of their way to use facilities. You can go the opposite if you choose, no one is herding anyone. Put in bicycle lanes, and the motorists will try to herd cyclists into them. Ride elsewhere. |
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#112
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What Motorist Advocacy Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 8:40 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On Mar 4, 2:35 pm, wrote: Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 4, 7:26 am, Peter wrote: Read the studies, cyclists will go well out of their way to use facilities. Yep. If you spend ten years telling cyclists "We need bike lanes to be safe," then put in a bike lane, cyclists will say "Oooh, that's what _I'm_ going to use, to be safe!" They'll do that even if data clearly shows there's no increase in safety. This technique also works for selling underarm deodorant, funny foam plastic hats, and St. Christopher medals. Yeah great. In the city, cute unless I need to go to work or the grocery or the paint store or bank or whatever. Given a choice of bike trail or a real county road, I'll take the road thanks. YMMV, except I have to pay for all that. On the "pay" aspect, I still wish the linear parks AKA multi-use paths were paid for from the park budget, since that's 99% of their use. It would be a more honest use of public funds. I can't speak for everywhere, but around here (Boston) most of those facilities are heavily used by commuters. I don't think they should be penalized for being used recreationally any more than the highways are when people use them to go skiing or to the beach. I think of budget categorization as just a accounting game, but even if it were truly zero-sum, I'd much rather the funds come from road rather than recreational budgets, as I feel we have too much of the former and not enough of the latter. As I've said, I bet that for one mile of rail trail cost, we could have every traffic light in the metro area designed and tuned to detect bikes. Yes, or perhaps 0.1% of a new fighter plane. So what? This is the same old "pothole vs. bike lanes" argument. More bikes, more budget -- give them what they want, stop trying to tell them what they want. |
#113
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What Left-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 8:50 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On Mar 4, 3:51 pm, Dan wrote: On Mar 4, 10:50 am, wrote: Jay Beattie wrote: On Mar 4, 3:55 am, Peter wrote: On 3/3/2011 7:23 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 3, 4:14 pm, Peter wrote: I didn't bring up the topic of safety, Jay did. Yes, Jay pointed to some hazards of particularly weird bike facilities. But you were the one who brought up comparative statistics envy. "I wish we had Portland's safety stats," IIRC. Yes, that's accurate. I find facilities more pleasant, and there doesn't seem to be a safety downside. That's whitewashing with a very broad brush. Safety downsides of various badly-conceived facilities have been discussed here often. You're one small step away from "Any bike facility is a good bike facility," which is no more sensible than "If Portland is safer, Boston must be too dangerous." At least, qualify your enthusiasm. No, I'm not. All I'm saying is, that with all it's flaws, Portland is still safer than Boston, which has virtually no facilities. The real question, though, is whether Portland is any safer with bicycle facilities -- which would be a really hard thing to determine, particularly with the increased number of riders, some of whom are riding in to each other. Facilities as such don't make a lot of difference, IMO. A wide shoulder and compliant drivers are what makes a difference. If that shoulder is a marked bike lane, that's fine with me -- it gives me some legal protection if I get hooked, but practically speaking, more driver education is required before it gives me much actual or practical protection. Green boxes, sharrows, etc. make no difference to me as a cyclist, except that they present slipping hazards when wet. Separate facilities are populated with walkers and their dogs, so they are more dangerous in some respects and certainly slower. -- Jay Beattie. Well written. I'm totally with Jay on this. Sure, and I can take it or leave it myself (Mad Max on two wheels :-), but what they're doing is trying a *lot* of new stuff. Some of it will work, some won't, none of it will be perfect; but it will provide lessons, hopefully some good thinking will go into it, and continuous improvement will happen. Change is messy, but the current car-centric (what an understatement!) way has got to change, and they're actually doing something. But elsewhere in the world of engineering, the approach is not "Let's try _everything_ on the public and see what works!!!" If the current approach (which is "bike facility design by landscape architect") were applied to (say) freeway design, we'd have motorists sometimes driving on the right, sometimes on the left; sharp S-turns to get to exit ramps in the middle of three northbound lanes; entrance ramps with zero visibility of other traffic; telephone poles standing between the lanes, etc. And we'd have the American Automobile Association saying "Hey, don't knock it! It's INNOVATIVE!" People in the US are merely copying things that have been successfully used in Europe. Just as the Europeans copied our highway designs. |
#114
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What Left-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 4:39 PM, Duane Hebert wrote:
On 3/4/2011 4:34 PM, Peter Cole wrote: Facilities are aimed at n00bs, cajoling the weekend trail pootler into trying a shopping trip or a short commute to work in nice weather, they're not for semi-retired racers or adrenaline junkies. Maybe but it doesn't stop me from using them at 6:30am on my way to work before all of the noobs and dog walkers and inline skaters show up. They're not designed to stop you either. Facilities are quite popular with experienced cyclists, despite the minority view expressed here. There are benefits to increasing the numbers of cyclists even for those who don't want to use the facilities. More modal share means more transportation budget is available for cycling-specific programs. Those need not be exclusive to facilities, they might even include those educational TV spots that Frank pines for. More cycling visibility isn't a bad thing either WRT general cycling safety. See below Then there's the "safety in numbers" phenomenon. |
#115
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What Motorist Advocacy Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 7:57 PM, Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 3:11 PM, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/4/2011 2:35 PM, AMuzi wrote: Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 4, 7:26 am, Peter Cole wrote: Read the studies, cyclists will go well out of their way to use facilities. Yep. If you spend ten years telling cyclists "We need bike lanes to be safe," then put in a bike lane, cyclists will say "Oooh, that's what _I'm_ going to use, to be safe!" They'll do that even if data clearly shows there's no increase in safety. This technique also works for selling underarm deodorant, funny foam plastic hats, and St. Christopher medals. Yeah great. In the city, cute unless I need to go to work or the grocery or the paint store or bank or whatever. Given a choice of bike trail or a real county road, I'll take the road thanks. YMMV, except I have to pay for all that. Unlike Jay though, the cyclists who do use those nasty paths support your shop (unless you ban them on ideological grounds). I doubt Andy Muzi bans customers on ideological grounds: http://www.flickr.com/photos/19704682@N08/3601423733/in/set-72157619269876565/. There's an anti-folding bike ideology? Where do I sign up? |
#116
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What Left-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 8:08 PM, Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 5:55 AM, Peter Cole wrote: [...] No, I'm not. All I'm saying is, that with all it's flaws, Portland is still safer than Boston, which has virtually no facilities. Rent: http://boston.citysearch.com/listings/boston-ma-metro/portable_toilet_rental/82075_10428. We don't have any of those, either -- you know, budget cuts. A free economy and small government means people peeing in alleys -- just like the colorful third world. |
#117
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What Left-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
On 3/4/2011 8:11 PM, Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 12:50 PM, A. Muzi wrote: Jay Beattie wrote: On Mar 4, 3:55 am, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/3/2011 7:23 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 3, 4:14 pm, Peter wrote: I didn't bring up the topic of safety, Jay did. Yes, Jay pointed to some hazards of particularly weird bike facilities. But you were the one who brought up comparative statistics envy. "I wish we had Portland's safety stats," IIRC. Yes, that's accurate. I find facilities more pleasant, and there doesn't seem to be a safety downside. That's whitewashing with a very broad brush. Safety downsides of various badly-conceived facilities have been discussed here often. You're one small step away from "Any bike facility is a good bike facility," which is no more sensible than "If Portland is safer, Boston must be too dangerous." At least, qualify your enthusiasm. No, I'm not. All I'm saying is, that with all it's flaws, Portland is still safer than Boston, which has virtually no facilities. The real question, though, is whether Portland is any safer with bicycle facilities -- which would be a really hard thing to determine, particularly with the increased number of riders, some of whom are riding in to each other. Facilities as such don't make a lot of difference, IMO. A wide shoulder and compliant drivers are what makes a difference. If that shoulder is a marked bike lane, that's fine with me -- it gives me some legal protection if I get hooked, but practically speaking, more driver education is required before it gives me much actual or practical protection. Green boxes, sharrows, etc. make no difference to me as a cyclist, except that they present slipping hazards when wet. Separate facilities are populated with walkers and their dogs, so they are more dangerous in some respects and certainly slower. -- Jay Beattie. Well written. I'm totally with Jay on this. Madison has a new cycling facilities plan. Streets where the potholes are less than 18 inches in the largest horizontal dimension and less than 6 inches deep will be designated as bicycle routes. Just put in bike lanes. The reduced motor traffic will reduce the pothole formation -- at least where the vehicles are prohibited. We never get potholes on the bike paths, even after 30 years. Or keep "sharing the road" with your fellow "vehicle operators" -- as their vehicles predictably crater it every year. Have fun! |
#118
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What Motorist Advocacy Does For Cycling
Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 3:11 PM, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/4/2011 2:35 PM, AMuzi wrote: Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 4, 7:26 am, Peter Cole wrote: Read the studies, cyclists will go well out of their way to use facilities. Yep. If you spend ten years telling cyclists "We need bike lanes to be safe," then put in a bike lane, cyclists will say "Oooh, that's what _I'm_ going to use, to be safe!" They'll do that even if data clearly shows there's no increase in safety. This technique also works for selling underarm deodorant, funny foam plastic hats, and St. Christopher medals. Yeah great. In the city, cute unless I need to go to work or the grocery or the paint store or bank or whatever. Given a choice of bike trail or a real county road, I'll take the road thanks. YMMV, except I have to pay for all that. Unlike Jay though, the cyclists who do use those nasty paths support your shop (unless you ban them on ideological grounds). I doubt Andy Muzi bans customers on ideological grounds: http://www.flickr.com/photos/19704682@N08/3601423733/in/set-72157619269876565/. Although I have opinions, just like everyone else, I have voted for a successful candidate less than five times in 40 years of voting every single election (almost all write-ins). I surely do not set policy nor even influence The Powers That Be. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#119
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What Left-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/4/2011 12:50 PM, A. Muzi wrote: Jay Beattie wrote: On Mar 4, 3:55 am, Peter Cole wrote: On 3/3/2011 7:23 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote: On Mar 3, 4:14 pm, Peter wrote: I didn't bring up the topic of safety, Jay did. Yes, Jay pointed to some hazards of particularly weird bike facilities. But you were the one who brought up comparative statistics envy. "I wish we had Portland's safety stats," IIRC. Yes, that's accurate. I find facilities more pleasant, and there doesn't seem to be a safety downside. That's whitewashing with a very broad brush. Safety downsides of various badly-conceived facilities have been discussed here often. You're one small step away from "Any bike facility is a good bike facility," which is no more sensible than "If Portland is safer, Boston must be too dangerous." At least, qualify your enthusiasm. No, I'm not. All I'm saying is, that with all it's flaws, Portland is still safer than Boston, which has virtually no facilities. The real question, though, is whether Portland is any safer with bicycle facilities -- which would be a really hard thing to determine, particularly with the increased number of riders, some of whom are riding in to each other. Facilities as such don't make a lot of difference, IMO. A wide shoulder and compliant drivers are what makes a difference. If that shoulder is a marked bike lane, that's fine with me -- it gives me some legal protection if I get hooked, but practically speaking, more driver education is required before it gives me much actual or practical protection. Green boxes, sharrows, etc. make no difference to me as a cyclist, except that they present slipping hazards when wet. Separate facilities are populated with walkers and their dogs, so they are more dangerous in some respects and certainly slower. -- Jay Beattie. Well written. I'm totally with Jay on this. Madison has a new cycling facilities plan. Streets where the potholes are less than 18 inches in the largest horizontal dimension and less than 6 inches deep will be designated as bicycle routes. I thought we enjoyed that already. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#120
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What Right-Wing Governance Does For Cycling
Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote:
On 3/3/2011 12:12 PM, A. Muzi wrote: Tēm ShermĒn °_° wrote: On 3/2/2011 12:01 PM, Edward Dolan wrote: "TīŋŊm ShermīŋŊnT " wrote in message ... On 3/1/2011 8:04 PM, Edward Dolan wrote: "T?m Sherm?n? " wrote in message ... Seehttp://www.bikeiowa.com/asp/hotnews/newsdisplay.asp?NewsID=4894. Remember to thank the budget priorities of upper class tax cuts and subsidies, when your favorite rural riding routes change from pavement to road bike unfriendly aggregate surfacing. I think Minnesota has more miles of roads to maintain than almost any other state. If and when we return some asphalt roads to gravel roads, it just means that vehicles will have to go slower which will not to be such a bad thing. As far a cycling is concerned, I NEVER see cyclists doing any riding on rural roads. Cycling is best restricted to urban areas anyway. As for raising taxes to pay for ever more and better roads, forget about it. The states and counties are all going broke just like the federal government. Everyone is already paying more than enough taxes. Nonsense. The upper classes and corporations are only paying a fraction of what they did under the REPUBLICAN Eisenhower Administration (when the middle classes were much better off). But everything is constantly changing. We now live in a global economy and the upper classes and corporations can take whatever they have to foreign lands. It is what makes it possible for me to shop at Wal-Mart and not be robbed. Jeez, try to get up to date if that is possible. The solution to all our problems is to stop the spending and to learn to get along on less. What we spend on education is especially a boondoggle. Yea, tighten the belt and welcome deprivation. It is good for the soul! The biggest boondoggle is what is spent on subsidizing Wall Street incomes. Frankly, I do not understand how Wall Street works at all. I would never give those *******s a single penny. Wall Street produces no added value, leading to the obvious conclusion that the investment bankers are merely parasites sucking the economic blood out of the working classes. The original purpose of the stock market allowing corporations to raise capital has been perverted into the world's largest de facto gambling operation and Ponzi scheme. In theory there is added value in distribution of information and enhancing more efficient capital allocation. At one time those were true. To our great benefit. We seldom agree but I do on this. It's sadly obvious now. The coming stock market implosion and destruction of the remaining middle class retirement funds and wealth will make things *very* interesting in the US in the coming decade. What is apparent is that the current capitalistic system is like cancer - very successful at growth for a short time, but eventually it kills the host. The sickness and arrogance is evident in the current Republican efforts to break the remaining unionized workers, despite falling wages of these workers for the last 35 years and great upwards transfer of wealth to the top 1% over that time. The greed of the super-rich will only be stopped by the people demanding it, which time will come after things get bad enough. Our brief kumbaya moment of agreement has passed . -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
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