What American Cities are Missing: Bikes by the Thousands



D

donquijote1954

Guest
Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks? It's
healthy for you as well as for your pocket and for the environment.
And it can be combined with public transportation for greater
flexibility.

Well, Paris is just making that possible, but France is the site of
the Tour de France. That surely is behind that overdue decision. But
hey, we do have a champion or two to show. And we even have some
politicians who are into bicycling and not SUVing.

Reality check, it ain't happening here in your lifetime. Too many
vested interests.

That would take a revolution, but that's another subject...


"Official Washington likes to think that it is bicycle-friendly. But
we often hear a different story, involving dodging bricks, menacing
drivers, annoying registrations, and brazen theives. For all but the
most hardcore cyclists among us, the thought of negotiating D.C.'s
streets on two wheels is harrowing, which is a shame. Washington is
blessed with compact development, historic neighborhoods, and
beautiful scenery which may be a bit spread out to enjoy on foot, but
is easily covered by bike. Many who would love to tour the miles
between Arlington Cemetary and the Capitol and beyond on two wheels
are relegated to tour busses and Metro, which both limits their
mobility and annoys the hell out of commuters. So, in the spirit of
the upcoming Bike to Work Day on May 18, we pass on a solution from
across the pond: municipal bikes.

In Paris, city officials have long wrestled with similar issues:
Thousands of sightseers filling the roads with cars (and the air with
exhaust) while attempting to visit its many historic sites. In
response, the Parisian goverment is launching an effort this summer to
provide cheap rental bikes. Lots of them.

>From WaPo:


On July 15, the day after Bastille Day, Parisians will wake up to
discover thousands of low-cost rental bikes at hundreds of high-tech
bicycle stations scattered throughout the city, an ambitious program
to cut traffic, reduce pollution, improve parking and enhance the
city's image as a greener, quieter, more relaxed place.

By the end of the year, organizers and city officials say, there
should be 20,600 bikes at 1,450 stations -- or about one station every
250 yards across the entire city. Based on experience elsewhere --
particularly in Lyon, France's third-largest city, which launched a
similar system two years ago -- regular users of the bikes will ride
them almost for free.

At first, we cringe at the thought of hundreds of street-clogging lost
tourists and a cottage industry of bike thefts. With more examination,
though, there's a lot to like. Providing bikes in those numbers
creates a critical mass that changes the way the city deals with them
-- pushing DDOT to crate a more continuous and extensive bike network
in the city. Streets and paths appropriate for bikers would get even
more so, which pulls bicycles off of streets that aren't, lessening
the dangerous competition with autos.

In Denmark, Copenhagen's City Bikes program has been established for
years, resulting in huge shifts in transportation, pollution, and the
city's image. As for theft, both Copenhagen and Helsinki's bicycle
programs have actually reduced it. The free bike use provided by the
program both eliminates the need for theft and removes a considerable
market for resale.

Now that we've got a triathlete Mayor, isn't it time to get Washington
some bikes?"

http://www.dcist.com/2007/05/02/what_were_missi.php

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BIKE FOR PEACE
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"donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?


Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
a few cents.
 
On Wed, 16 May 2007 19:08:13 GMT, "George Conklin"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>
>"donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?

>
>Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
>a few cents.
>


And for the obverse: come visit cities of the like of Vancouver BC,
Seattle WA, and Portland OR in the fall, winter, and spring.

Why the *********** would anyone ride a bicycle, and risk getting
drowned in any month from October to April?

The Bicycle Lobby lives in a Dream World.
 
One of the obstacles with regard to using a bicycle in my town is
that the local shopping centers forbid them. When I asked one of
the shopping center's management for the reason they're ban
bicycles from their property, they told me that their insurance
requires it.



On May 16, 11:16 am, donquijote1954 <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks? It's
> healthy for you as well as for your pocket and for the environment.
> And it can be combined with public transportation for greater
> flexibility.
 
In rec.bicycles.misc Nobody <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, 16 May 2007 19:08:13 GMT, "George Conklin"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>"donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>news:[email protected]...
>>> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>>> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?

>>
>>Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>>your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
>>a few cents.

>
> And for the obverse: come visit cities of the like of Vancouver BC,
> Seattle WA, and Portland OR in the fall, winter, and spring.


Oh, you mean like where I commute by bike year round? And where I see
people also commuting year round by bike? If you live in Seattle, you
don't let little things like rain stop you from doing things.

> Why the *********** would anyone ride a bicycle, and risk getting
> drowned in any month from October to April?


-- copied from a previous post of mine --

My reasons look more like this:
1. Enjoyment
2. Exercise as part of everyday life [1]
3. Money saving - I save a shedload of money by not having a second car.
4. Ease of parking [3]
5. I enjoy working on my bikes - I'm mechanically inclined
6. The social aspect - I see and talk to people on my bike I would never
get a chance to see in a car.[4]
7. It is often faster. In many cases [5] I get home faster from work
than the people driving.[6]
8. Pastry - I eat pastry instead of filling my car with gasoline.
9. Engineering reasons [7]
10. I don't like driving. [8]
11. Greeny-weeny reasons.
12. By riding my bike I build up self-righteousness points that i can
spend on making my friends feel bad about themselves for driving.
[9]

> The Bicycle Lobby lives in a Dream World.


I would say in a better world, but you're allowed your opinion.

And god, can't you people stop replying to DQ's trolls? Killfile the
idiot already.

[1] I used to weigh 280 lbs, I weigh about 200 now. My father and
brother are both type II diabetics. [2]
[2] Additionally I'm a computer programmer, so my everyday job is very
sedentary.
[3] No joke this. You try and fight for parking at my favorite Asian
grocer with the little old Chinese ladies. F$#% that noise. I roll up
and park right at the front of the store. Parking at Pike Place market
is a dream on the bicycle.
[4] Footnote elided
[5] Baseball games, snow, heavy rains, wind storms. This last winter
many of my coworkers were trapped for many hours on roads completely
jammed with traffic caused by downed trees and powerlines. One poor guy
spent most of the night in his car. I rolled up to the downed sections
picked up my bike, walked around, and was home about 15 minutes later
than usual.
[6] The best case - where the highway was completely empty - it used to
take me 25 minutes to get to work. It takes 40 minutes by bike. 30
minutes extra a day. In return I get 80 minuts of quality exercise I
enjoy. And of course on the many days where traffic was not so good it
could take much much longer in the car.
[7] Using a 3000 lb car to move a single 200 lb person from point to
point is just an inefficient solution. It's always grated at my
engineering sensibilities. Not to mention the huge amount of
infrastructure needed.
[8] I'm far too concious of just how much damage you can do with a car
to yourself of other people. Driving is fine at 2am when I'm the only
idiot on the road, but how often does that happen?
[9] That's a joke people. God, don't you people have any sense of humour
at all?

--
Dane Buson - [email protected]
Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.
-- Dykstra
 
On 16 May 2007 17:56:11 -0700, in misc.transport.urban-transit
drydem <[email protected]> wrote in
<[email protected]>:
>One of the obstacles with regard to using a bicycle in my town is
>that the local shopping centers forbid them. When I asked one of
>the shopping center's management for the reason they're ban
>bicycles from their property, they told me that their insurance
>requires it.


Ask them for the evidence. Tell them you want to see the insurance
policy that says that. If the policy actually says that, then start
screaming to your state's insurance commissioner's office. There is no
reason to allow such a limitation -- still my guess is that he made it
up to deflect responsibility.

>On May 16, 11:16 am, donquijote1954 <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks? It's
>> healthy for you as well as for your pocket and for the environment.
>> And it can be combined with public transportation for greater
>> flexibility.
 
In article <[email protected]>,
Nobody <[email protected]> writes:
> On Wed, 16 May 2007 19:08:13 GMT, "George Conklin"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>"donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>news:[email protected]...
>>> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>>> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?

>>
>>Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>>your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
>>a few cents.
>>

>
> And for the obverse: come visit cities of the like of Vancouver BC,
> Seattle WA, and Portland OR in the fall, winter, and spring.
>
> Why the *********** would anyone ride a bicycle, and risk getting
> drowned in any month from October to April?


As a lifelong cycling car-free Vancouverite, I avow bicycling
is my best option in wet weather. My inexpensive but effective
rain gear keeps me nice & dry -- drier than if I hoof it.
Fenders, and turning the bike lights on (even in the gloomy/
overcast/stormy/rainy daytime) complete my wet weather
defense system.

And cycling in the rain is much more pleasant than riding on
some steamy, crowded, jerky, disease-ridden, slow public
transit bus.

Vancouver drivers and cyclists are becoming quite well
habituated to the presence of each other. From what
I've read and heard, the same seems to be in effect in
Seattle and Portland (OR). I do know for sure that
each of these cities enjoy thriving bicycling cultures.

> The Bicycle Lobby lives in a Dream World.


I note many drivers experience a false sense of privacy
as they sit in their cars, whistfully picking their noses.
Dream world indeed!

Anyways, we're not big enough to have a "Lobby" (despite
the grandiose affectations of such as the League of
American Bicyclists.) At best we have a bunch of
hat-in-hand advocates who can't even agree on what's
best for the bicycling community.

I think it's because there are at least /two/ major
bicycling communities (probably more,) each with
their respective needs & wants, and the advocates
unsuccessfully try to generalize what's best for all,
and end up competing against each other. So we're
also too fragmented to have a Lobby.

I used to have inclinations toward cycling advocacy.
Now I have inclinations toward what's good for the
City in which I live -- and citizens' mobility within
the City is a big part of "what's good". It doesn't
matter to the property-tax-paying businesses in the
City how their clienteles get there, as long as they
and their money get there.

I guess this is where some driver might pipe up and
say: "I can't get there soon enough with all these
bikes in my way!"

And some cycling advocate might say: "I can't get there
at all with all these cars in my way!"

And then there'll be those who hold their peace, and
quietly, safely get to where they want to be, regardless
of their transport of choice. No fuss, no muss, in all
kinds of weather.

A pleasant urban environment that doesn't get its citizens
anxiously grinding their teeth in their sleep or coming down
with athsma is also good.


--
Nothing is safe from me.
Above address is just a spam midden.
I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
 
On May 16, 2:08 pm, "George Conklin" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> "donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> news:[email protected]...
>
> > Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
> > cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?

>
> Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
> your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
> a few cents.



Wow George your a **** not going to lie.
 
In rec.bicycles.misc Mr.Cool [Defender of Cities] <[email protected]> wrote:
> On May 16, 2:08 pm, "George Conklin" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> "donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> > Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>> > cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?

>>
>> Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>> your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
>> a few cents.

>
> Wow George your a **** not going to lie.


That should be "Wow George, you're a ****. I'm not going to lie."

See how much more erudite you sound now? [1]

It's "your", as in "your crack pipe".

It's "you're", as in "you're dumb as a bag of hammers".

[1] I'm not a member of the George Conklin Fan Club, but don't mangle
the language for Jehu's sake.

--
Dane Buson - [email protected]
"A University without students is like an ointment without a fly."
-- Ed Nather, professor of astronomy at UT Austin
 
In article <[email protected]>,
Dane Buson <[email protected]> writes:
> In rec.bicycles.misc Nobody <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Wed, 16 May 2007 19:08:13 GMT, "George Conklin"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>"donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>>news:[email protected]...
>>>> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>>>> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?
>>>
>>>Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>>>your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day for
>>>a few cents.

>>
>> And for the obverse: come visit cities of the like of Vancouver BC,
>> Seattle WA, and Portland OR in the fall, winter, and spring.

>
> Oh, you mean like where I commute by bike year round? And where I see
> people also commuting year round by bike? If you live in Seattle, you
> don't let little things like rain stop you from doing things.
>
>> Why the *********** would anyone ride a bicycle, and risk getting
>> drowned in any month from October to April?

>
> -- copied from a previous post of mine --


I hardly ever get drowned between October and April :)


cheers,
Tom

--
Nothing is safe from me.
Above address is just a spam midden.
I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
 
donquijote1954 wrote:

Didn't you say you were leaving Usenet? (Or at least the cycling
newsgroups?)
 
In article <[email protected]>,
"Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> writes:
> donquijote1954 wrote:
>
> Didn't you say you were leaving Usenet? (Or at least the cycling
> newsgroups?)


That was Bill B. I picture him tearfully hugging
the hood of his 440 Charger[*] and proclaiming: "I'll
never leave you! 'Til the end of time! You 'n me!"

DonQui just said he was quitting riding his
bike 'cuz he couldn't hack it. But apparently
he still fancies himself as some sort of lyric,
all-talk/no-walk revolutionary/****-disturber
who wants other people to do his "revolution"
for him.


cheers,
Tom

[*] Gas in Vancouver is $1.30+(Cdn)/litre


--
Nothing is safe from me.
Above address is just a spam midden.
I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
 
Tom Keats wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>,
> "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> writes:
>> donquijote1954 wrote:
>>
>> Didn't you say you were leaving Usenet? (Or at least the cycling
>> newsgroups?)

>
> That was Bill B. I picture him tearfully hugging
> the hood of his 440 Charger[*] and proclaiming: "I'll
> never leave you! 'Til the end of time! You 'n me!"


Hey, my very first car was a (used) 1968 Dodge Charger with a 440.
(Fire-engine red, black vinyl top.) I'm truly lucky to have survived
teenage stupidity and that much power. (Especially with relatively skinny
14" wheels/tires.)

> DonQui just said he was quitting riding his
> bike 'cuz he couldn't hack it. But apparently
> he still fancies himself as some sort of lyric,
> all-talk/no-walk revolutionary/****-disturber
> who wants other people to do his "revolution"
> for him.


Ah, I thought he included a promise to take his stylings elsewhere as part
of the parting. My bad.

Bill "anyone taking bets on when Mensa Baka will be backa?" S.
 
Don't hold your breath for America. With our obesity rates, lack of
adequate cycling facilities, along with our worship of the automobile,
there may not be much happening in the near future. I think what
America needs is a totally CAR-FREE city. If an investor decided to
take this on, he would have instant advertising, merely from the
publicity.
----
Jim Gagnepain
www.OilFreeandHappy.com

On May 16, 12:16 pm, donquijote1954 <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
> cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks? It's
> healthy for you as well as for your pocket and for the environment.
> And it can be combined with public transportation for greater
> flexibility.
 
In article <[email protected]>,
"Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> writes:
> Tom Keats wrote:
>> In article <[email protected]>,
>> "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> writes:
>>> donquijote1954 wrote:
>>>
>>> Didn't you say you were leaving Usenet? (Or at least the cycling
>>> newsgroups?)

>>
>> That was Bill B. I picture him tearfully hugging
>> the hood of his 440 Charger[*] and proclaiming: "I'll
>> never leave you! 'Til the end of time! You 'n me!"

>
> Hey, my very first car was a (used) 1968 Dodge Charger with a 440.
> (Fire-engine red, black vinyl top.) I'm truly lucky to have survived
> teenage stupidity and that much power. (Especially with relatively skinny
> 14" wheels/tires.)


Bill still Peter Pan'dly lingers there.

My very first car would have been a '48 Canadian Willys jeep
with a real Jeep engine c/w armoured oil pan. Handed down
from father to son to son. I would have been the next son,
but my mom gave the ol' death trap away to some "friends"
she didn't really like, before I could get my hands on it.
It was a hardtop faux woody. One of its characteristics
was that it could run on three wheels should one fall off --
which sometimes happened. Another other was, you could flick
a cigarette toward the windshield and it would instantly get
sucked out the no-draft.

>> DonQui just said he was quitting riding his
>> bike 'cuz he couldn't hack it. But apparently
>> he still fancies himself as some sort of lyric,
>> all-talk/no-walk revolutionary/****-disturber
>> who wants other people to do his "revolution"
>> for him.

>
> Ah, I thought he included a promise to take his stylings elsewhere as part
> of the parting. My bad.


He was asked to, but his reply was typically wishy-washy.

> Bill "anyone taking bets on when Mensa Baka will be backa?" S.


Mention of Dodge 440s will be irresistable to him,
that ol' fat-ass SUV NASCAR Lance Armstrong.


cheers,
Tom

--
Nothing is safe from me.
Above address is just a spam midden.
I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
 
On May 16, 9:17 pm, [email protected] (Tom Keats) wrote:

> [*] Gas in Vancouver is $1.30+(Cdn)/litre


Dear Tom,

If I'd known there'd be math, I'd have studied ;-)

Any way you can convert that into a more digestible unit of
measurement, like "Tim Horton's Jelly-filled's and a cup of coffee per
US Gallon" for me?

Thanks,

Neil
 
"Dane Buson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In rec.bicycles.misc Mr.Cool [Defender of Cities] <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> On May 16, 2:08 pm, "George Conklin" <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>> "donquijote1954" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>>
>>> news:[email protected]...
>>>
>>> > Will we ever see the day when American cities have thousands of
>>> > cyclists going up and down the street without unnecessary risks?
>>>
>>> Go to India to fulfill your dream. They do that now. You can even lock
>>> your bicycle up at the train station and let it sit in the rain all day
>>> for
>>> a few cents.

>>
>> Wow George your a **** not going to lie.

>
> That should be "Wow George, you're a ****. I'm not going to lie."
>
> See how much more erudite you sound now? [1]
>
> It's "your", as in "your crack pipe".
>
> It's "you're", as in "you're dumb as a bag of hammers".


Grammar and spelling lessons are like water off a duck's back with this
guy...
 
On May 16, 8:56 pm, drydem <[email protected]> wrote:
> One of the obstacles with regard to using a bicycle in my town is
> that the local shopping centers forbid them. When I asked one of
> the shopping center's management for the reason they're ban
> bicycles from their property, they told me that their insurance
> requires it.


They figure that cyclists would only spend peanuts, so they are not
their priority. I'd try though not to feed them in any way. Just go
with the ones that take you into account. Boycott is a great thing!
 
On May 16, 11:46 pm, "Bill Sornson" <[email protected]> wrote:
> donquijote1954 wrote:
>
> Didn't you say you were leaving Usenet? (Or at least the cycling
> newsgroups?)


I said "stop biking" as a way of getting around, but I guess I'm not
alone in screaming that we are discriminated against. Things good
though are happening in Paris that I doubt wil ever happen in this
country. I guess our politicians are looking for the wrong issues,
which regrettably mobilize the sheep...

--How about a Congress and President with guts enough to push for
small, economical cars, and penalizing the whoppers?--

It makes sense but I don't see even the most liberal candidates
talking about real solutions for the real world. The issues are at
hand turn me off...

Hillary: gender

Obama: race

and the rest are for those who don't have real solutions either but
are against gays, abortion, etc. Anyone for bikes and small cars?
 
On May 17, 12:17 am, [email protected] (Tom Keats) wrote:

> DonQui just said he was quitting riding his
> bike 'cuz he couldn't hack it. But apparently
> he still fancies himself as some sort of lyric,
> all-talk/no-walk revolutionary/****-disturber
> who wants other people to do his "revolution"
> for him.



For the cyclists the choice is clear: Revolution or die! Well, there's
another solution: get a stationary bike and work out from the comfort
and safety of your home.

Remember Orwell: "At a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is
a revolutionary act!"
 

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