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Complete Streets Clears an Important Milestone

April 26, 2019/by Laura McCamy

The Complete Streets for Active Living Bill is moving forward after a long and contentious hearing in the Senate Transportation Committee. Thanks to unwavering commitment by our team and the bill’s author, Senator Scott Wiener, SB 127 the bill passed on a 9-3 vote and will move to the Senate floor in May with its strongest provisions intact.

SB 127 addresses the safety problems on major streets in cities across California that are owned and controlled by Caltrans. They are considered state highways, but they are very different from separated freeways. They run through residential and commercial districts, past parks and schools. Yet Caltrans manages these streets with the priority of moving cars fast, not the safety or livability for the people in the community.

“This is a very big victory for us,” says CalBike senior policy advocate Linda Khamoushian. “Now, we’re in full forward movement.”

Pacific Coast Highway blocks bikes from beach access

The Pacific Coast Highway is a lovely route along the beach in many Southern California cities. But, since it’s controlled by Caltrans, sections like the bridge over Anaheim Bay give provide bike facilities that are poorly designed and dangerous to ride.

Rock Miller is a bikeway designer who designed some of the first Class IV protected bike lanes in California. When he was tasked with making the bridge more friendly to bike riders, he rode it himself.

“The bridge has bike lanes on it, but the traffic travels at 65 mph+. The bike lanes are very narrow,” Miller says. “It’s about as scared as I’ve ever been bike riding.” Given the constraints of the project, a solution has been elusive.

Miller sees outmoded Caltrans standards as part of the problem. “They still aren’t comfortable with a lane as narrow as a city would implement,” he says. He adds that, while Caltrans is part of groups setting state policies about Complete Streets, “they’re not applying them to their own facilities.”

The Complete Streets for Active Living Bill will fix that.

The goal of the Complete Streets for Active Living Bill

Caltrans’ own policy has long required the department to “consider” including accommodations for bike and pedestrian access. Unfortunately, Caltrans planners routinely consider, and then quickly dismiss, such upgrades. Because there’s no transparency in Caltrans’ planning process, advocates can’t see and respond to the agency’s objections to creating Complete Streets.

SB 127 will bring accountability and transparency to the Caltrans planning and implementation process for the parts of state highways that actually serve as local streets. This important bill will force Caltrans to expand its focus beyond auto and truck traffic at a faster rate than is currently underway. It expands the definition of safety safety to include protection for the most vulnerable road users: pedestrians and bicyclists. It also allows for more stakeholder engagement on each SHOPP project in order to ensure the community’s input is sufficiently accounted for from project scoping and design to implementation.

What’s next for the Complete Streets bill?

“We were able to preserve the strength of the bill through the intensive Policy Committee process,” Khamoushian says. “It’s still uphill. It’s like getting to base camp – now we have to climb the hill.”

As the bill moves on to the Senate Appropriations Committee where the fiscal impact will be assessed, and then onto the Senate Floor for a full Senate vote, CalBike is working with legislators and our advocacy partners, California Walks, Safe Routes to School National Partnership, and the American Heart Association on next steps.

What you can do to support Complete Streets

Getting SB 127 out of committee was an important first step, but there is much more work to do to bring Complete Streets to all city streets. Here’s how you can help:

  • Call your state senator and ask them to support SB 127. Explain why this bill is important to you. You can find your state representatives here.
  • Your experiences help us tell the story of why SB 127 is so crucial. What is it like to ride the state route or routes that run through your city? What changes are needed? How would those changes benefit your city? Send your stories to policy@calbike.org.
  • Sign our petition to support Complete Streets.

Find out more about CalBike’s Complete Streets initiative and read the text of SB 127.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/CompleteStreets-v4-1030x666.jpg 189 1001 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2019-04-26 18:34:322019-05-01 15:30:02Complete Streets Clears an Important Milestone

E-Bike Vouchers Advance in the Senate

April 26, 2019/by Laura McCamy

California residents are one step closer to being able to trade in their old polluting car for a brand new electric bicycle, thanks to the advancement of SB 400 in the California Senate.

The E-Bikes for Mobility Bill, SB 400 (Umberg), expands the definition of ‘mobility options’ in the Clean Vehicles for All program which provides vouchers to low income residents who trade in inefficient cars. The vouchers, issued by a number of regional Air Districts across the state, are good for electric, hybrid, and plug-in cars and “mobility options” like car-sharing memberships or transit passes. The new definition of mobility options will include bike sharing and electric bicycle purchases.

Assistant Director of UC Institute of Transportation Studies Laura Podolsky gave expert testimony at Tuesday’s hearing to the power of e-bikes to get people to switch from car to bike travel. A recent UC Davis policy brief reported on the effectiveness of European e-bike purchase incentive programs. As many as 50% of trips by electric bicycle would have been car trips, if the rider hadn’t had access to a pedal assist bike.

This bill, authored by Senator Tom Umberg (D-Santa Ana), has passed the Environmental Quality Committee and was just voted out of the Transportation Committee on a unanimous vote. This amendment to the Health and Safety code still has several steps to go before it becomes law, but given the early enthusiasm and support,  we are optimistic about its chances in this legislative session.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/YUBA_Spicy-Curry_Bosch_09_lores.jpg 246 329 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2019-04-26 18:07:212019-05-01 15:31:25E-Bike Vouchers Advance in the Senate

Opposition from Powerful Motorists’ Lobby Stalls Bicycle Lane Positioning Bill For Now; CalBike and Allies Plan Education Campaign

April 5, 2019/by Kevin Claxton

Last week, we pulled our bill to simplify the rules in California Vehicle Code governing where bicyclists must ride in the traffic lane. The goal was to emphasize the right or people riding bicycles to use a full traffic lane when necessary for safety. Riding too far to the right, next to parked cars, or near the curb, exposes people on bikes to dangerous and far-too-often fatal road conditions.

Unfortunately, opposition from the powerful Automobile Club of Southern California and their allies forced us to take a step back. While all were in agreement that the law exempts cyclists from the requirement to ride “as far to the right as practicable” in lanes that are “too narrow to share,” there was no support for changing the wording of the law to focus on that exemption as we desired: giving people on bikes the right to the lane unless it’s wide enough to share. Our original proposal reflected changes adopted in several other states as recommended by the Rules of the Road Committee National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices.

The sense of entitlement to safety and to the streets shared by automobile drivers and the industries that serve them is palpably present in Sacramento. Motorists’ lobbyists have made it clear that it’s more important that people on bikes think they have to be out of the way of cars than they understand their right to position themselves safely in the travel lane.

CalBike Continues to Lobby for Bike Lane Changes

With the support of our author Assemblymember Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), CalBike is working to educate policymakers and lobbyists about how dangerous that attitude is. Throughout 2019, we will hold meetings and conferences to gain support for clarification of the law. Ting wants to address this issue as part of a comprehensive review of Vehicle Code provisions as they relate to operation of bicycles and propose a slate of changes based on best practices from around the country.

CalBike and our advocate partners are looking forward to working with Assemblymember Ting and other policy makers as we work to update California’s Vehicle Code to better promote safety for all road users.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/dream_ride_2018-2464-L.jpg 450 800 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2019-04-05 10:57:462019-05-24 11:30:28Opposition from Powerful Motorists’ Lobby Stalls Bicycle Lane Positioning Bill For Now; CalBike and Allies Plan Education Campaign

Latest News

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    California’s Budget Prioritizes Freeway Expansion Over Safe StreetsJune 9, 2025 - 5:00 pm
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