Category: san francisco

Bay Area: Bike commuter of the year 2008

San Francisco Bay Area: Nominate a cyclist for bike commuter of the year.

Do you know someone in your community who is committed to making every day a Bike to Work Day? Does this person epitomize and actualize the health, environmental, social and economic benefits of bicycling? Please share his or her story with the San Francisco Bay Area Bicycle Coalition.

The deadline for nominations is midnight Tuesday night, so get your nominations in now at Bay Area Bicycle Coalition website.

Critical Mass in 1896

Here’s an interesting article [PDF] on “The Great San Francisco bicycle protest of 1896.

Since the 1880’s, riders across the country had lobbied for access to the streets. Increasingly organized, their mission was political and social as cycling became a way of life. Bicyclists demonstrated in large American cities, including Chicago, where wheelmen and wheelwomen held riding exhibitions and mass meetings, forcing the city to withdraw a rail franchise for a west end boulevard.

Cyclists were encouraged to decorate their wheels, citizens along the route to decorate their properties, with prizes offered for the finest display. A few men rode in drag, one “in the togs of a Midway Plaisance maiden,” another as an old maid. Uncle Sam rode in bloomers next to a down-home hayseed.There were meaner stereotypes: Sitting Bull and Pocahontas; a man in bloomers mocking “the new women;” one in blackface; one “imitating a Chinese in silks and slippers.”

Approaching Powell and Market, “the cyclists encountered a surging mass of humanity.” Bells of a dozen trapped streetcars added to the chaos.When the number 21 car got too close to one division, some in the crowd began rocking it, attempting to overturn it.

Read more in this PDF from Processed World.

KQED Forum on bicycle safety – show notes

Update: See the transcript here. It has pictures! The stuff in this article below is boring and dull.

KQED is the local public broadcasting station in San Francisco. The topic for the 9 A.M. “Forum” show was on bicycle safety.

Guests were

  • Leah Shahum, executive director of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition
  • Sean Co, bicycle and pedestrian planner for the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.
  • Sean Comey, spokesman for the AAA of Northern California.
  • Rob Anderson, the blogger who filed suit holding up implementation of the San Francisco bicycle plan.

When I tuned in, AAA spokesman Comey (who says he rides a bike), instructed cyclists to be more careful and “cyclists need to act as ambassadors. You need to follow the rules of the road. Motorists are protected by a ton of steel and latest in engineering and technology, but cyclists are out in the open,” he reminds us. “You are very vulnerable. When I ride, I expect motorists to not see me and I watch for the unexpected. I watch for doors and people pulling out.” Comey gave some good advice, but it’s rich that this spokesmen for motorists tells cyclists to be ambassadors, when he should be doing the same thing on behalf of motorists. There’s at least as much bad behavior from motorists as there is from cyclists.

Shahum reminds Comey of this when she reminds Comey and KQED listeners that “drivers of large vehicles have a grave responsibility to take care” in their driving.

Host Michael Krasny asked if road conditions are a factor in safety. MTA planner Co responded that “90% of collisions are due to human factors. If you throw money into improving roads and other engineering, you can only get so much in return. The most important thing is changing behavior.”

Rob Anderson joined the show for a short time. Anderson cites the figure from the 2000 Census showing that only 2% of commutes in SF are by cyclists and he said, “I don’t see any increased number of bicycles in The City.” Anderson doesn’t believe that money and space should be given to a mode of transportation that’s used by only a tiny minority of the population.

Shahum, though, retorts that “According to Anderson we shouldn’t have sidewalks, we shouldn’t have transit. That’s a very archaic way of thinking.” Because of issues with climate change, air pollution, and much higher energy prices, “We have to think about other ways to get around.” Shahum also cites figures from a November 2007 study and traffic count showing that “16% of San Francisco adults — that’s 120,000 people — bicycle in The City for transportation at least once a week.” She also makes the comparison that “if you look at one person in a car versus one person on a bike versus 30 people on a bus, motorists take a disproportionate amount of space.”

Host Krasny then spoke with Nick Carr of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, asking him about the progress of the city bicycle plan. Carr said, “we’re completing the environmental analysis” and that “I’ve seen very noticeable growth in cycling in San Francisco.” He then plugged MTA’s work with the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition in Bike Ed to “teach folks what they need to know so they’re not operating a bike in ignorance. Bike Ed is like a driver training class for cyclists. Also Bike To Work Day is coming up so we’re starting to promote that.” When asked about Critical Mass, “Critical Mass is still out there. We don’t hear too many complaints like used we used to. One thing San Francisco has going for them is the exposure of cyclists on the streets, which makes it safer for them.”

Krasny started taking some calls at this point.

  • Call John from San Bruno is a cyclist who bikes into the city. “Cyclists really need to obey the traffic laws” and “they need to be more visible.” He pushes Robert Hurst’s (excellent) Art of Cycling book. Leah’s response: “It’s the scofflaws you notice, whether its cyclists or motorists or walkers. It’s not a bicycle issue, it’s a human nature issue and it’s applicable to any mode of transportation.” In city counts at 30 intersections, Shahum said they count violations as well as just absolute counts, and during these counts the violators are not the majority. 600 people in the Bay Area are killed by motorists every year, so its clear that the main problem is not scofflaw cyclists but scofflaw motorists.
  • Caller Helen complains about cyclists on Cesar Chavez in San Francisco, because the road is there for motorists to get on the freeway. Leah Shahum gets animated, responding that “those lanes are not designated motorists only — they are for all traffic, including cyclists.” Shahum explains the concept of “taking the lane” — where cyclists ride in the middle of the lane to increase their visibility and protect themselves — and exhorts Helen to “hang back and give them room.”
  • Another caller complains about bike lanes on Guerrero St, how replacing traffic lanes with bike lanes backs traffic up and he ends up taking side streets instead of main boulevards. He advocates instead for bike boulevards (like in Berkeley and Palo Alto) where side streets have traffic calming features that limit motor traffic but allow for easy bicycle access. Shahum notes that in the case of Guerrero Street that it was the local residents who wanted traffic calming engineering, with a median added and a traffic lane removed to discourage traffic on that street.
  • Krasny brought up comments from emails received during the show, of cyclists who blow through stop signs and don’t signals, of motorists who do the same, etc.
  • Caller Randall said cyclists should have a different set of laws. “Many laws are created for the convenience of motorists, not for the safety of bicycles,” he said.
  • Derek Liecty of the East Bay Bicycle Coalition called in to encourage listeners in the East Bay to attend one of the many bicycle safety classes that teaches people to “ride a bicycle like a car to reduce accidents.” He also said every cyclist should read John Forester’s Effective Cycling book.
  • Michael is a cabbie in San Francisco and a frequent caller to Krasny’s show. He talked about his recent trip to China, where people of all ages and types ride to get around. He compared it to California where, “there are so many pickup trucks and one person SUVs that it’s just embarrassing.” In 30 years of driving a taxi in The City, “I’ve never been in an accident with a bicycle. I always watch for cyclists and I always give the right of way. I try to be courteous but even then I still sometimes get the middle finger from some cyclists.”

As the hour closed, Shahum mentioned a study from the Netherlands showing that twice as many motorists as cyclists are killed per mile of travel and that the health benefits of cycling outweigh the risk of accidental death 20 to 1.

Finally, Krasny asked about helmets, and Comey (the AAA guy) brought up the completely discredited and ridiculous “helmets reduce serious injury and death by 85%” figure, which isn’t even used by the helmet lobby anymore.

More bike riders in San Francisco in 2007

The number of San Francisco bike riders rose by 15 percent from 2006 to 2007, according to a report by The City’s bicycle program.

In the study, which will be presented today at the Bicycle Advisory Committee, observers from the Municipal Transportation Agency’s Bicycle Program counted 6,454 cyclists on the streets during sample days in August 2007, which is 800 more than noted in 2006, the first year of the bicycle counting program.

Read more at the San Francisco Examiner.

VTA: Big route and schedule changes on Monday

Remember, Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority has big changes in routes and scheduling that begin Monday morning, January 14, 2008. While VTA will provide more frequent service on a number of bus lines and convert a number of routes to “Community Bus Service” using smaller buses, several routes have also been eliminated, shortened and combined with other routes. Route 60, for example, will not continue south beyond the Winchester Transit Center, and Route 22 will no longer serve the Menlo Park Caltrain Station. Visit the VTA website (which has been significantly redesigned) for details.

Public transportation to MacWorld

Apple fans heading to the annual Macworld Conference and Expo at the Moscone Center Jan. 14 – 18 can focus on technology rather than traffic and parking by taking Caltrain to The City.

Attendees of the week-long conference will find Caltrain’s 96 weekday trains a convenient way to avoid the city’s traffic and parking hassles. All northbound trains end at the San Francisco Caltrain Station at Fourth and King streets. From there, passengers can either walk to Moscone Center, approximately six blocks away, or they can catch either of Muni’s 30 or 45 lines, which stop right across from the train station on Fourth Street. They can get off at Third and Folsom, and the Moscone Center is just a block away at 747 Howard St.

The last southbound train leaves San Francisco at 12:01 a.m., which leaves plenty of time for the most ardent Mac user to spend a full day at the expo and spend some time sight-seeing or dining in The City as well.

Secure bicycle parking is available at the new bike station at the 4th & King Caltrain Station in San Francisco. Caltrain schedule and fare information is available at Caltrain website. Leave a comment here at Cyclelicious if you have a specific question about riding Caltrain.

BART considers increased bike lockers fees

The Bay Area Rapid Transit system considered increasing the annual locker fees charged at BART stations and introducing an hourly charge for lockers with electronic locks. For details, read the Examiner.

Infrequent BART users should also be warned that BART recently changed its service to SFO Airport. You can no longer head straight to SFO from Millbrae Caltrain, but now must go to San Bruno then backtrack to the airport. Regular travelers to SFO have discovered it’s faster to get off Caltrain in Hillsdale then take a bus to the airport.

SF Bay Area: rain Rain RAIN RAIN. And wind, too.

This is for all of you bicycle commuters who neglect to check the weather forecast (and you know who you are) — three storms systems are barreling down from Alaska with two to four inches of rain forecast in Santa Clara valley and up the Peninsula into San Francisco beginning Thursday at noon. On Friday, 20 to 30 mph winds gusting to 50 mph are expected throughout the Bay Area and coastal areas. Up to ten inches on rain is expected in the Santa Cruz Mountains (where I live) over the weekend, with snow falling as low as 2,500 feet.

bicycling in the rain

As the storms move east over the Sierra Mountains, the snow is expected to fall in crippling volumes. “They could see up to eight to 10 feet [of snow] by Sunday,” Weather Service Meteorologist Steve Anderson. “It’s going to be a major winter storm with white-out, blizzard conditions, winds up to 100 miles per hour on the peaks and around 50 miles per hour down on Interstate 80,” he says.

Although big swells are expected through the storms in Santa Cruz, surf conditions will be too choppy for it to be any fun.

Before you break out the bikes for your commute to work on Thursday morning, break out your rain gear.

Photo: “Cycling through the rain” by Annemiek van der Kuil. With expected high winds, an umbrella is not recommended this week.