Tag Archives: city politics

Fort Worth City Planner, Don Koski

Bike Friendly Oak Cliff published an interview with Fort Worth City Planner, Don Koski, discussing how he incorporates consideration for bike/pedestrian planning into his overall design philosophy.  Fort Worth has committed itself to an incredibly ambitious people-first multi-modal transit plan, and Don is the key player who will oversee execution of the transit plan.

I have a lot of experience in the planning of bicycle and pedestrian transportation systems and the development of bicycle and pedestrian transportation projects. Bicycle and pedestrian planning has always just been one of the many duties that I have had, along with arterial street system planning, project identification and prioritization, capital program development, and others. I jumped at the opportunity in Fort Worth because of the tremendous challenges and opportunities the city has with its rapid pace of growth and evolving development strategies.

I was intrigued by Fort Worth’s walkable downtown, investment in mixed-use urban villages, relatively unconstrained growth potential, and interest in improving its bicycle and pedestrian transportation systems.

Cool, that sounds like Denton too: rapid pace of growth, evolving development strategies, walkable downtown, mixed-use investment, unconstrained growth potential, interest in improving bicycle and pedestrian transit.

Fort Worth has had some great recreational trails along the Trinity River and elsewhere for many years. What was lacking was a way to make connections for people interested in cycling for transportation purposes. In 1999, the city worked with the North Central Texas Council of Governments to develop an on-street bicycle route network plan that would create linkages between downtown and its surrounding neighborhoods. The City came across some difficulties implementing the plan and the bicycling advocates in Fort Worth became frustrated with the lack of progress.

That reminds me of the Denton Mobility Plan, which proposed ambitious changes.  The bicycle component was never fully realized.

When I came on board in December 2006, I was immediately approached by the late Dr. Byron de Sousa – a community leader who had been Chair of the Fort Worth Plan Commission and was an avid proponent of bicycle transportation infrastructure – to develop a truly comprehensive bicycle transportation system plan encompassing infrastructure, education, encouragement, city policies and programs, and law enforcement. That was when we kicked off the effort that led to the Bike Fort Worth plan.

Excellent!  A comprehensive program touching all aspects of a properly planned endeavor: infrastructure, education, encouragment, city policy, and enforcement.  Bike lanes alone won’t do it, this holistic approach is the most likely to succeed, and the only logical choice.

However, there are a number of streets that are oversized for the level of vehicular traffic that they experience today or are likely to have in the future. In some of those cases, a “road diet” may be possible that could provide dedicated space for cyclists. We look at these on a case-by-case basis to determine how best to accommodate cyclists, based on the criteria established in the plan.

Bike lanes are a nice accomodation, bike racks are a nice accomodation, road diets would show incredible commitment to the growing Denton cycle community.  Does Carroll Blvd need to be 6 lanes wide?  I don’t know, but perhaps that could be asked of every huge artery which squeezes out cyclists and pedestrians and encourages traffic congestion and high speeds.

Regarding temperature, I don’t buy the argument that people won’t bike because it’s too hot/cold/wet/etc. Look at the cities that have the highest bicycle commute rates in the country: Portland (wet), Minneapolis (cold), Seattle (wet), and Tucson (hot). Certainly there are many cyclists who won’t bike for transportation purposes when it’s hot, but there are other ways to address that, like by promoting the provision of shower and change facilities at major employers. In fact, I would say Fort Worth has great potential as a bicycling city: relatively flat, decent street block pattern, great trail system to which to make connections, great cycling weather 8 months out of the year, etc.

Ditto.  Here, Denton has an advantage over Ft Worth in smaller size, reducing complexity and cost of cycling infrastruction improvements.

From the city’s perspective, the impetus behind this effort today are many, but include making transit service (bus and rail) more accessible and attractive, making the city more attractive to the creative types who want to live and work in bicycle-friendly communities, helping residents lead more active and healthy lifestyles, and giving people more transportation options – especially those that help alleviate air quality problems and that are easy on the wallet during these tough economic times.

All true, and very reassuring to see a comprehensive, progressive, sustainable vision from the transportation head.  I’d like to do an interview with the Denton transportation czar for comparison.

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Austin Master Bike Plan Passes 6-0

So two weeks ago, while I was in Austin for a friend’s wedding, I went to visit Mellow Johnny’s bike shop, a Lance Armstrong endeavor at 4th and Nueces in a great old building.  We ate at the Juan Pelota cafe inside, which has really really good little prepackaged salads.  The espresso I had was really good, surprisingly better than the one I had earlier at Ruta Maya.  The bike inventory was impressively varied: cruisers, mountain bikes, practical bikes, roadies.  They have a commuter station inside with lockers, showers, and practical biking accessories.

As I ate the killer (no, really) salad, I eyed the magazine rack in the cafe and noticed a big binder.  What’s this?


Austin master bike plan

It’s the Austin Master Bike Plan, which was unanimously passed by the Austin City Council 6-0.

I read the whole thing, cover to cover, and it is really really good.  An incredible amount of effort and coordination went into creating this document, and I was shocked at the size of the list of citizens who are advising the city on the project.  This document is so good that it could perhaps be borrowed from by other aspiring cities, surely saving thousands of hours of research.

I’ll close this post with a quote from Elliott of AustinOnTwoWheels.  This quote reminds me of Denton’s lack of execution regarding the council-endorsed bicycle plan from several years ago.  Dedication is the hardest part.

I would like to close by saying while this plan has our support, it remains only a words on paper if it is not implemented. When we were circulating this petition, the number one issue that upset people most was that only 1/3rd of the projects in the 1996-98 plan every got completed. By establishing timelines in the new plan, we will not have to wait over ten years to see if progress is being made. In fact, some of the deadlines in the plan will arrive in the next budget cycle and before the terms end for the incoming council. The cycling community is more active and organized that ever before in this city, and I think you can expect us to remain engaged while working with you to ensure progress is made and this plan is honored.

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Madison, WI: Going Beyond Gold

On a bus ride this morning, I was reading the new issue of Bicycle Times, an excellent new commuter cycling magazine.  A short, pg 16 article about the Wisconsin Bike Summit had some quotes that I wanted to share.  

From Bicycle Times writer Mark Parman:

Madison mayor, and more importantly bicyclist, David Cieslewicz, led off the Monday evening speakers, addressing the issue of making communities more bikeable, hence more livable.  He was unambiguous about his goal of making Madison the most bike-friendly place in the country, just as BFW director Andy Hardman was unequivocal about the Federation’s goal of making the Badger State the most bike-friendly in the nation.  “A city that’s good to bike in is a city that’s good to live in,” said Cieslewicz.

“If we can’t do it now [get funding from a bike-friendly Obama administration], we should all be fired,” said Andy Clarke of the League of American Bicyclists. 

Madison is 84.7 square miles with a population of 221,551.  

Denton is 62.3 square miles with a population of 115,506.

From the bikeleague.org entry for Madison

Mayor Dave Cieslewicz formed the Platinum Biking City Planning Committee, members included leaders from the business and advocacy communities, to work in concert with city staff and the police department. The committee’s goals include achieving the Platinum BFC designation and to create a roadmap for Madison to become the best city in the country for bicycling.

The bicycle is considered at every level of planning, design and engineering. Specific bicycle policies include a provision of all needed bicycle facilities when constructing or reconstructing city streets and including the requirements of bicycle traffic in the design of all traffic control devices. All or almost all roadway projects funded with STP-Urban Program funding over the past 10 years have included bike lanes.

On University Avenue, in the heart of downtown Madison and the University of Wisconsin campus, the city recorded 10,000-12,000 bicycle trips per day at the peak and 2,000 plus trips per day in January’s bitter cold when the University is out of session for 3 weeks.

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Times Square Goes Car Free

photo courtesy of nytimes.com

NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg has officially designated Times Square as car-free, for a period to last at least till the end of 2009.

Newsday asked onlookers what they thought:

“It’s great,” Hance said. “Usually we are trying to just jump out of the way of cabs.”

Said Villaran, “I have seen shops and signs I have never noticed before. You can see people are more relaxed. They are not pushing and shoving. It’s great.”

For street vendors, store owners and shoppers, the freedom meant happier customers and easier window gazing.

Dawn Fowler, 24, of Crown Heights, who wears a bulky sandwich board to urge people to see the Holocaust-era play “Irena’s Vow,” called her newfound freedom “incredible.”

“Normally you feel like a sardine on the sidewalk,” Fowler said. “I usually take people out with my sandwich board. Not today.”

NYC Transportation Commissioner of the last two years, Janette Sadik-Khan, has created 200 miles of bicycle paths (many protected/separated from traffic lanes), public esplanades, and effectively pursued a vision of civic amenities instead of utilitarian corridors.

Too much of the time I think pedestrians have been seen as guests in this space. Putting a prime role for designing for people — designing for pedestrians, designing for cyclists, designing for buses, designing for better mobility, designing for a more sustainable city — is all part of the package. 

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RETRACTION: City Council candidates unresponsive to BikeDenton questionnaire

RETRACTION: Embarrassingly, I didn’t correctly forward my bikedenton.org email account, and as a result I missed the responses to the questionnaire from Charlye Heggins, Andrew Teeter, Dalton Gregory, and Eli Beltran.

I am compiling the responses right now, and I’ll have them posted up shortly.

On Monday, we sent (via email) a BikeDenton.org voter guide questionnaire to every single council candidate for the May 9 election.  We asked for responses by Friday at noon, which is admittedly short notice, but I thought it better late than never to have even tried this approach.

We didn’t get a single reply.  Not even a request for more time.

From the candidates who spoke at the recent Neighborhood Alliance forum, I noticed an overwhelming under-recognition of bicyclists in Denton except from a few candidates (Andrew Teeter, Bob Clifton, Eli Beltran).  There were about 6 of us who rode to the meeting, out of maybe 30 people in total attendance.  To me, that is not an insignificant slice of the voting population, not by any stretch of the means, especially in a town as “undervoted in” as Denton.  The one bike-lane question asked of the candidates was reframed by the moderator as a TCEQ air quality question, which completely dominated the answers.  I will say I was quite disappointed that Amy Manuel is opposed to any on-road bike lanes and only in favor of physically separated paths.

I think my point to this post is this:  Denton has a long way to go before cycling is recognized as the amazing opportunity that it is.  Portland/Copenhagen/Austin this ain’t.  I also ain’t going to quit advocating for cycling in Denton.  I choose not to shut up.

Without further ado, here’s the ignored BikeDenton.org voter questionnaire which was sent to the council candidates.

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Denton Neighborhood Alliance candidate forum, TONIGHT 7PM

Denton Neighborhood Alliance Forum
April 23, 2009
7:00 p.m.
City Council Chambers
City Hall
215 E. McKinney

I urge as many Denton residents as possible to go to these candidate forums and participate.  Show up 15 minutes early, fill out cards with questions, and wait for answers from the city council candidates.  This is a prime time to see who supports biking and pedestrian infrastructure improvements.  Don’t forget, frustration with bicycle and pedestrian paths is the #3 complaint from the recent citizen survey.

I hope to see you there, but don’t shake my hand, because I’m sneezing with a cold…

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