Historic Active Transportation Slate Poised to Make it to the Governor’s Desk
Sacramento, Calif – As we head into the final stretch for legislation in 2022, a slate of excellent active transportation bills has been voted on in the Senate and Assembly. Almost all of the bills we supported are already on the governor’s desk, including at least two that have been signed into law. Of the 18 active transportation bills that made it to the end of the session, one was withdrawn by the author (the Bicycle Safety Stop), and only one remains to be voted on. The other 14 bills have passed both houses and are on their way to Governor Newsom’s desk, if they aren’t there already.
CalBike applauds the California legislature for recognizing the critical role that biking, walking, and public transit will play in our response to climate change and our efforts to create healthier communities.
Jared Sanchez, senior policy advocate at CalBike, said, “We’re encouraged by the overwhelming support for most of the bills we have been following in 2022. The success of this legislation shows that our elected officials take the climate crisis seriously and are prepared to address it. Active transportation helps reduce the climate impacts of California’s transportation system, and it’s frankly, the healthy and fun way to get around town!”
Here is an update of the active transportation bills CalBike supports that are still in play in Sacramento:
Requires cities to ensure that a modified circulation element additionally includes bicycle and pedestrian plans and traffic calming plans. Enrolled and presented to the governor
AB 2438 Friedman – Aligning transportation funding with climate goals
Requires all transportation projects funded at the local or state level to align with the California Transportation Plan and the Climate Action Plan for Transportation Infrastructure adopted by the Transportation Agency Enrolled and presented to the governor
SB 457 Portantino and Wilk – Car-Free Tax Credit
Creates a rebate program for each person without a car in a household
Authorizes cities to use sound-activated enforcement devices to capture vehicle noise levels that exceed the legal limits. Enrolled and presented to the governor
Allows the Great Redwood Trail agency further authority to build out the Great Redwood Trail, a 320-mile, world-class, multi-use rail-to-trail project connecting California’s San Francisco and Humboldt Bays. Enrolled and presented to the governor
SB 1230 Limon – Zero-emission and near-zero emission vehicle incentive programs
Extends environmental review exemptions for transit and active transportation infrastructure improvements. Forbids auto capacity increases. Enrolled and presented to the governor
AB 1919 Holden – Free Student Transit Passes
Develops Youth Transit Pass Pilot Program that will allow transit agencies to provide free youth transit passes to all persons 25 years of age.
Requires Caltrans and cities to update all pedestrian control signals to operate giving a pedestrian a head start between 3 to 7 seconds to enter an intersection with a corresponding circular green signal Enrolled and presented to the governor
SB 1107 Dodd – Protect California Drivers Act of 2022
Would modernize California’s outdated minimum auto financial responsibility limits (known as liability insurance) and would change our underinsured motorist law so that drivers get the full value of the policy they paid for. Enrolled and presented to governor
AB 2174 Chen – Treat bikes and scooters as vehicles for purposes of towing regulations.
AB 2028 Davies – School instruction for bike and scooter safety
Expands permitted school bicycle safety education partnerships from law enforcement agencies in elementary and middle schools to any agency or organization at any public school. Approved by the governor and chaptered
WITHDRAWN
AB 1713 Boerner Horvath – The Safety Stop
Requires adults on bikes to yield at stop sign-controlled intersections instead of stop unless stopping is necessary for safety. Withdrawn by author
Earlier this month, CalBike’s long-time executive director, Dave Snyder, left to join People for Bikes. CalBike’s Board of Directors has now opened its search for CalBike’s next executive director. Please share with your networks! And please visit our careers page to see the listing for our other job opening, part-time individual giving manager.
Executive Director job description
The California Bicycle Coalition (CalBike) is seeking an executive director to continue its record of successful active transportation advocacy and lead the organization as it continues to expand its reach and impact in generating an equitable and sustainable transportation system. The executive director will guide the strategic direction of the organization and build new programs to support that vision.
CalBike’s director will share our members’ passion for better biking and be enthusiastic about our mission to advocate for equitable, inclusive, and prosperous communities where bicycling helps enable all Californians to lead healthy and joyful lives. The incoming executive director must have a thorough understanding of bicycle and active transportation advocacy work. They must be able to engage strategically with partners and understand relevant policy impacts in intersecting and interconnected issue areas such as policing and traffic enforcement; housing, gentrification, and displacement; transit advocacy; climate change and sustainability; and disability mobility.
The executive director is the chief executive officer of the California Bicycle Coalition, a 501(c)(4), and the California Mobility Fund, a 501(c)(3). The executive director reports to the board of directors and is responsible for ensuring the organization consistently achieves its mission and financial objectives.
The executive director will be supported by our small, tight-knit team, which works remotely and collaboratively.
About CalBike
CalBike is California’s state-level bicycling advocacy organization. We advocate for pro-bicycle and equitable mobility legislation in Sacramento and work closely with state agencies to secure funding for infrastructure and programs that make our streets and communities safer and more welcoming to people who walk and bike. CalBike also represents California transportation positions and initiatives at the national level and works to ensure continued funding and focus from federal programs to support California’s active and accessible transportation goals.
Compensation
CalBike offers a competitive compensation package with a salary ranging from $130,000-$150,000, commensurate with the candidate’s qualifications. CalBike also provides employer-paid medical, dental, and vision insurance, a bike commuter benefit, cell phone and internet reimbursement, ergonomic office stipend, a 3% employer match to a SIMPLE IRA retirement plan, and a generous paid leave policy.
Location
The executive director must be based in California. Most work will be remote. Preference for Sacramento, the Bay Area, or a location where you can easily travel to Sacramento as needed to meet with legislators and agency personnel.
Responsibilities of the Executive Director include:
In collaboration with staff, board, and stakeholders, develop and execute an inspiring, ambitious, and achievable vision for CalBike
Act as the principal spokesperson for the organization and our campaigns, including representing CalBike in California legislative hearings and sessions, as well as building relationships with elected and government officials
Support policy work by planning and working in collaboration with staff to develop effective communications strategies for policy and advocacy initiatives
Represent California in national bicycling and transportation discussions and act as the key subject matter expert on developing partnerships with federal government funding to support California state active transportation initiatives
Develop and steward relationships with donors, funders, and movement allies
Actively participate in fundraising activities to solicit contributions from major donors, grantmakers, and corporate partners
With the program team, develop and support external partnerships to grow CalBike’s coalition of support and advance our leadership and reputation across California and nationally
Work with finance and operations staff to ensure compliance with state and federal requirements, develop and monitor the annual budget, provide timely internal reporting and forecasting, and ensure that adequate funds are available to permit CalBike to carry out its work
Lead, grow, and manage an effective and enthusiastic team
Maintain and advance a healthy, diverse, inclusive, and positive workplace with a climate of trust and openness
Facilitate a strong board of directors, engaging members around strategic planning, fundraising, and long-term programmatic and organizational goals
What we’re looking for:
Our executive director will have most or all of these qualifications:
A minimum of 10 years of relevant experience, including at least 5 years in a senior leadership position with strategic planning, budget, and management responsibilities.
Professional and/or personal experience working in and with broad and diverse communities, including but not limited to BIPOC communities, communities negatively impacted by environmental injustice, and other underserved and historically marginalized groups
A thorough understanding of issues related to racial justice and equity, a clear vision that will enable the advancement of diversity, equity, justice, and inclusion, internally and externally, and a track record of implementing those same principles
Experience as a coalition builder, strategist, and team leader who is passionate about bicycling and its various intersections
A track record of successful nonprofit fundraising, including experience with public and private sector funding, cultivating high net worth donors, and soliciting and closing major gifts
An inclusive leader who can strengthen and build upon CalBike’s value of supporting people marginalized by racism, sexism, and other forms of oppression to grow and advance their careers
Experience developing partnerships among nonprofits, community-based organizations, private sector entities, and social justice organizations
An innovative thinker and skilled collaborator who can work effectively and deepen relationships with a diverse staff, board members, and external stakeholders
Confidence representing CalBike and presenting ideas to a range of audiences, including internal and external stakeholders
Sets clear goals and expectations, thoughtfully gives and receives feedback, encourages a healthy work-life balance, and promotes both personal and professional growth.
How to apply:
Please send a resume or CV with a cover letter as a single PDF document, with a subject line including the job title and your full name, to cbc@calbike.org.
Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. All applications and candidates will be kept confidential.
CalBike provides equal employment opportunities without regard to age, ancestry, color, creed, mental or physical disability, marital status, medical condition, national origin, race, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, veteran status, or any other consideration made unlawful by federal, state, or local laws.
We strongly encourage people from all backgrounds to apply, especially people of color, women, immigrants, people of all abilities, and members of the LGBTQ+ community. Top applicants might not have expertise related to every qualification listed above, but will bring experience in at least two, plus a willingness to learn and excel at the others. A core qualification for this position is that you must advocate for and deeply value equity and inclusion.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/thumb-1.jpg640480Kevin Claxtonhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngKevin Claxton2022-08-31 13:16:492022-08-31 13:18:12CalBike Announces Executive Director Search
On August 24, 200 people showed up for a Work Group Meeting for the Electric Bicycle Incentives Project held by the California Air Resources Board. It was a big turnout for a meeting held during the workday on a Wednesday afternoon. But it’s not surprising considering the tremendous interest in the program (CalBike’s interest list for the program has more than 6,600 people — scroll down to sign up).
The meeting included a lot of great feedback and some breaking news: the announcement of the program administrator. Here’s what happened and what’s next for the e-bike incentives program.
CalBike supporters make a strong showing
CalBike had little notice of this meeting, and it became clear that CARB isn’t used to its programs receiving so much interest and input from the public. The facilitators were overwhelmed by the number of comments and questions; at one point, 50 people were waiting to speak.
A big thank you to everyone who could participate in a meeting during the workday with little advance notice. We must keep the pressure on CARB to be more transparent and take more public input. Many commenters mentioned CalBike, which strengthens our position to negotiate on your behalf to create a robust and successful program.
There will be a follow-up to the August 24 meeting because there wasn’t time to take everyone’s comments. Even if you registered to attend that meeting, you won’t automatically get notified about the follow-up and future meetings. Please subscribe to CARB’s e-bike mailing list to learn about e-bike work group meetings. And sign CalBike’s e-bike list to get the latest updates and learn how you can get involved.
Program basics revealed
At the meeting, the outlines of the program became clear, though it’s not clear whether public input could change some of the details.
CARB’s current program specs:
To qualify for the incentive program, participants’ household income is capped at 400% of the federal poverty level (FPL). That’s $51,000 for a single person and $106,000 for a family of four.
Vouchers will be up to $750 for a regular e-bike and up to $1,500 for a cargo or adaptive e-bike. People whose income is under 225% FPL or who live in disadvantaged communities qualify for additional incentives.
The program will support the purchase of Class 1 (up to 20 mph, pedal assist only) and Class 2 (up to 20 mph, pedal assist and throttle) e-bikes. Class 3 (up to 28 mph, pedal assist only) will be excluded.
Participants must purchase a bike from a California bike shop or online from a company with a business location in California.
The program will launch in the first quarter of 2023. The law creating the program specified a start date of July 1, 2022, but, as a CARB administrator explained at the meeting, one to two years is the minimum needed to launch a brand new program at a state agency.
Most of the discussion at the meeting centered on the income caps. In California, 55% of the population (about 21 million people) makes less than 400% of the FPL and would qualify for e-bike incentives under the current program. The income caps match those of other clean vehicle programs administered by the Air Resources Board (Clean Vehicle Rebate Project and Clean Cars for All).
The program has $10 million in funding, which may cover an estimated 7,000 e-bike vouchers at the proposed funding levels. For perspective, CalBike’s interest list for the program currently has more than 6,600 people on it — almost enough to fill the whole program if everyone qualified.
Several people on the call expressed interest in getting help to buy an e-bike but said they wouldn’t qualify under the proposed income caps. Commenters were divided between wanting the incentives to go only to low-income households and advocating for some portion of the money to be made available to higher-income people.
E-Bike incentives administrator named
The standalone e-bike incentive program will be administered by a third party, with a single application process for all Californians. That will make the program easier to access.
E-bike vouchers through the Clean Cars for All program, which CalBike helped pass, took a long time to roll out (partly due to pandemic delays) and aren’t uniformly available. Regional air resources boards were tasked with adding e-bike vouchers to their program; some regions have the program up and running while others don’t.
CARB was considering three nonprofits to administer the program and announced during the work group meeting that it has chosen Pedal Ahead, based in San Diego. Pedal Ahead has run a local e-bike program in San Diego since 2020. Streetsblog’s article about the meeting has more background on the chosen administrator.
Next steps: second meeting, CalBike follow-up
CARB has posted a recording of the August 24 work group meeting (see below). It had already planned another work group meeting for later in the fall but will add another meeting because there was too little time to get to the public comment at the August meeting. If you can’t attend a meeting or weren’t able to comment at the last meeting, you can email feedback to the CARB at CleanTransportationIncentives@arb.ca.gov.
CalBike is following up on the meeting with a technical letter to CARB to advocate for a robust program, and we will meet with CARB staff in the coming months to help guide the program launch. Our main goal is for this first year to be an instant success, showing Sacramento that the $10 million allocated for the pilot is just a start and that e-bike subsidies should be an annual budget item. In future years, we hope to see most of the funds set aside for low-income Californians but some help provided for middle-income residents.
We’ll need your help to keep up the pressure.
Video of the August 24, 2002 CARB Electric Bicycle Incentives Project Work Group Meeting
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/mom-and-kids-on-bike.jpeg8651305Laura McCamyhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngLaura McCamy2022-08-26 18:14:072024-08-06 13:28:15CalBike Supporters Make Big Impression at CARB E-Bike Work Group Meeting
Before Jenn Guitart joined CalBike in 2014, initially as director of development and communications, she worked for an organization that promoted comprehensive sex education. “I like to joke that I’m more passionate about bikes than I am about sex,” she says. “When I started working at CalBike, I realized that it was exactly what I was looking for. I said, ‘Wow, this is my dream job.’”
Now Guitart is leaving her post for another dream job. Starting in September, she’ll be leading TransForm, a nonprofit that advocates on issues of transportation, housing, and equity. “I’m really excited that my work as executive director of TransForm is going to be building on a lot of the things CalBike is working toward. It’s broader, though, with a focus on land use and housing as well as transportation,” she says. “But as with CalBike, the goal is to build a more equitable California.”
A force for growth at CalBike
As CalBike’s director of advancement, Jenn Guitart has transformed CalBike. The budget more than tripled since she took on development responsibilities. And her work on CalBike’s communications has helped CalBike reach more Californians. She spearheaded CalBike’s rebranding and website development.
Guitart appreciates that CalBike gave her the freedom to exercise leadership and expand her skillset. “I feel so incredibly lucky to have spent the last eight years doing this amazing work alongside these incredible people,” she says. “One of the things I’m most proud of is that I was part of the hiring decision for most of our team.”
Strengthening alliances
TransForm and CalBike have been allies in the past, frequently supporting the same causes. CalBike will miss Guitart’s creativity, energy, and enthusiasm. But we are excited to be seeding the advocacy world with another passionate bike advocate.
“Working at CalBike has been such an enormous pleasure,” she says. “I feel confident and excited for CalBike’s future. I’m so pleased to be leaving CalBike in such a good place.”
There is no single way to advocate for more bikeable communities, and bike advocacy has evolved over the years. Recently, we noticed a set of new advocates jumping in to push for things like closing JFK Drive in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park and closing streets in Los Angeles’s Griffith Park. So we decided to talk to some of them about what motivated them to step up, how their approaches are different from some of the more established bike coalitions, and how newer and more seasoned advocates work together. We also spoke to advocates from more established bike coalitions about their expanding approaches to advocacy, which center on equity and often take a community-focused approach to safer streets.
This article is in no way meant to be a comprehensive survey of all the innovative approaches that bike advocates are taking around California. Consider this a small sampling of the diverse tapestry of bicycle-powered change throughout our state.
Reinventing the wheel: Groups springing up to fill gaps in bike advocacy is not new
The seed for this research was a new generation of activists springing up to create advocacy organizations. But the phenomenon of the next generation forging its own path is not new.
In fact, CalBike’s outgoing executive director, Dave Snyder, was part of a renegade movement in the early 1990s as a co-founder of the Thunderhead Alliance, which later became the Alliance for Biking and Walking.
At the time, Snyder was ED of the nascent San Francisco Bicycle Coalition. “We were dissatisfied with the national organization’s ability to organize the local groups that were sprouting up all over the country,” he says.
He recalls the impact of getting together with leaders from several dozen other local and state bicycle coalitions around the U.S. for a retreat in Wyoming (the group was named after the Thunderhead Ranch, where the retreat took place). Most were ragtag operations with tiny budgets and just a couple of paid staff, if that.
“It was one of the most powerful long weekends of my life,” Snyder says. “Most of them hadn’t met each other before, and it was powerful to be surrounded by other people doing the same kind of work. It was mind-boggling. It was inspiring.”
While the Alliance ceased to exist in 2016 (handing over its archives to the League of American Bicyclists), it served an important purpose of solidifying the movement for better biking in cities around the country, giving local advocates a forum for sharing information and resources.
Using data to create an evidence-based argument for street safety
Stephen Braitsch started Transpo Maps with Marcel Moran in 2019 because, he says, “The traditional organizations are not getting the job done.”
Moran is a researcher and student at UC Berkeley, and Braitsch is an engineer and graphic designer. Combining their skills, they create maps to visualize data such as the distribution of car ownership in San Francisco, which shows the percentage of San Franciscans who are car-free in each census tract.
“The person who’s loudest in the room wins [in public policy debates], and that’s not fair. When you bring data into the equation, it helps lift up the quieter voices,” Braitsch says. “We see our work as another arrow in the quiver.”
His focus is on data and direct action. “We’re not going to get where we need to go by waving signs at city hall or signing petitions,” he says. One example is the “Just a Minute” protest that stopped vehicular traffic every time a car pulled into a bike lane on Valencia Street. Braitsch’s video of the action has over 100,000 views on Twitter.
One of Moran and Braitsch’s newest projects is to put faces on the San Franciscans killed by car violence. It’s a massive undertaking for a group that relies on volunteer time and donations. But Braitsch feels strongly that politicians should be required to publicly address traffic violence and sees the fatalities map as a path to more public discussion of this issue.
“The biggest issue is political accountability,” Braitsch says, “and I wish more people who care about safe streets saw it that way.”
A child-centered approach to Slow Streets
Robin Pam is a volunteer organizer with Kid Safe SF and was one of the group’s founding members. In March 2021, “when it became clear there was going to be an organized effort to put cars back” on San Francisco’s pandemic Slow Streets, Pam says, “We gathered friends and people we had known in the advocacy community” to advocate for more kid-friendly spaces on San Francisco streets.
Slow streets allowed kids to run around without holding someone’s hand. “That didn’t exist in San Francisco before the pandemic,” Pam says. “A lot of us felt like this was the best thing that San Francisco had done for families since we moved to the city.”
Kid Safe SF was an underdog: an all-volunteer group with many members who were new to safe streets advocacy up against experienced political operatives with deep pockets (the museums in the park). “When we started a year ago, I don’t think any of us expected we would win that fight,” Pam says.
After the JFK Drive win, Kid Safe SF has new goals. Pam says they want to make the Great Walkway (formerly the Great Highway along Ocean Beach) permanent and protect and expand the Slow Streets program into more neighborhoods. “Our goal is that every kid in the city should have a safe way to walk or bike to school, to the playground, to the library,” she says.
Now that the Kid Safe SF organizers are seasoned by their first big campaign with more knowledge of how SF politics works, they are ready to push for more. “Because it really is just a few special interests that are standing in the way of having truly safe streets,” Pam says.
It’s not just about bikes
Another new advocacy group (founded in 2019) that was formed to bridge a gap in active transportation advocacy is Streets for All. “Streets for All is LA’s first and only political action committee around transportation. We can endorse candidates, we can support candidates, and we can tell people who to vote for if they care about these issues,” says Michael Schneider, one of the group’s founders. The group was instrumental in working with Senator Portantino to craft SB 932, the Plan for the Future Bill, which CalBike is cosponsoring, and the group is supporting a total of 19 bills in the 2022 legislative session. And it helped push an initiative that would require Los Angeles to move beyond planning and implement Complete Streets improvements, which is headed for the ballot.
“I’m born and raised in LA and, like most people who grow up here, it was embedded in my DNA that you need a car to get around,” Schneider says. He used to be the kind of person who would drive three blocks to the store and complain that there wasn’t enough parking.
But, nine years ago, he got rid of his car and challenged himself to get around by bike for a week. “By day two or three, I realized I was having fun,” he recalls. “It almost felt illegal: I’m an adult, I shouldn’t be having fun getting around.” He adds, “I felt like I had hacked my city. I was never in traffic, and I never had to look for parking.”
Getting around differently changed Schneider’s relationship with his city, and that led him to educate himself about the process of making changes. He discovered that the 15 Los Angeles city council members have absolute control over the streets in their districts. “I realized if I wanted to change the streets, I needed to change the city council,” he says. He helped found Streets for All to bring political change because the other local bike organizations were all 501(c)3 nonprofits that aren’t allowed to do electioneering.
Bubba Fish, a legislative advocate with the all-volunteer Streets for All and a member of Bike Culver City (which works under the umbrella of LACBC), turned to active transportation after a traumatic crash.
“I was in a really terrible car accident in 2014. If anyone had been in the back seat, they would have died,” Fish says. “That sealed the deal. I sold my car.” He started looking for other ways to get around but was distressed by how dangerous LA streets were for people biking and walking. After Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed the Complete Streets Bill, he says, “I was angry and wanted to organize. I yelled into the void, and Streets for All found me.”
While bike advocacy often skews older, “most of the people I’m working with at Streets for All are in their late 20s to late 30s,” Fish says. He speculates that “we might attract a younger crowd because we are broader in focus,” with a mission to create safer streets for all users, no matter what transportation mode they choose. “I think younger folks want a broader umbrella because they want to address some of the adjacent issues,” he says, including racial justice and mobility for people with disabilities.
Fish feels that there’s a stigma on bicycle advocacy because a lot of people in LA will never feel comfortable getting around by bike. “We’re trying to make the umbrella a little bigger so we’re not seen as the bike people all the time,” he says.
Schneider agrees. “When you say the word bike in your name, you’re essentially alienating people,” he says. “The reason I got started with advocacy is because I really care about biking,” but he soon saw that the changes he sought were intersectional.
Established bicycle coalitions embrace new models of advocacy
New active transportation advocacy groups vs. traditional bicycle coalitions isn’t the right frame for looking for new models of bicycle advocacy. In fact, there may be no such thing as a “traditional” bicycle coalition (thanks to Streetsblog California editor Melanie Curry for pointing this out).
California’s bike advocacy groups continue to evolve, grow, and find better ways to serve their communities, including partnering with other active transportation and community groups. We spoke with advocates from three bike coalitions about the methods, new and old, that they use to push for safer streets and build community.
A hub and spoke model of bicycle advocacy
The Silicon Valley Bicycle Coalition covers 35 cities and towns across two counties. In 2019, says Sandhya Laddha, SVBC advocacy and policy director, “We changed our work plan for how advocacy should be at SVBC from a top-down approach. We will focus all our energy on empowering members so that they can work on campaigns and initiatives.”
With an advocacy team of three, SVBC couldn’t be as effective without its local teams (nine so far and counting). “We wanted to be involved everywhere, but we couldn’t do it with just three people,” Laddha says.
SVBC is not the only countywide bicycle coalition to foster local subgroups. Coalitions, including Bike East Bay and Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition, have city-specific groups under their umbrella. Laddha and some SVBC local team leaders presented the local teams model at the California Bicycle Summit in April, which has inspired more bike coalitions to initiate a similar approach.
“We’re able to be more proactive than reactive” with the new model, Laddha says. Before changing its advocacy model, SVBC ran about three to five campaigns at a time. Now, each team has three to five campaigns, vastly increasing the organizing power of the group.
Community first: Building relationships and budding advocates
Santa Ana Active Streets operates on a different model from most bicycle advocacy groups. Its approach to advocacy is intensely intersectional and community-focused.
“A Santa Ana resident has a lot of concerns,” says Kris Fortin, SAAS project director. People are contending with issues including housing insecurity, environmental injustice, as well as mobility injustice.
The group doesn’t just work on bike lanes because “there’s a lot of different reasons why people move the way they do,” he says. That has led SAAS to host bike rides featuring topics of local interest, such as a toxic tour or a cooking demonstration with ingredients sourced from local gardens.
While SAAS started as a coalition, it has grown into a horizontal model that supports individuals and their ideas. “We have really worked hard to emphasize the individual bicyclist, the individual pedestrian,” Fortin says. “How we handle things is in a very slow way.” The group’s campaigns seek to empower bike riders and pedestrians but also to let them know that they are seen and encourage them to take up space and understand that they have a right to be on the streets too.
Maria Ceja, a volunteer with the SAAS advocate subcommittee and an advocate for Tenants United Santa Ana, notes that Santa Ana has the highest poverty rate in Orange County. “I really admire the recognition of that intersectional class struggle,” she says of Santa Ana Active Streets. “They don’t expect the community to come to them – they go to the community.”
Irene Cabañas, president of the Willard Neighborhood Association as well as a SAAS volunteer, has fostered collaboration between both groups to write grants and bring programs to her neighborhood. “One thing that SAAS does that’s innovative is really put the volunteer first,” she says. “That full 360 volunteer experience I think is what makes SAAS strong and different from other groups that I’ve seen.”
You might call the SAAS model “slow advocacy.” “I like to think how we try to do it is knowing our limitations but also challenging ourselves to not rush the nature of partnership building or relationship building,” Fortin says. SAAS seeks partnerships with other community organizations to bridge language barriers and build solidarity.
Bringing neighborhoods together: Established and startup activist groups work together
Dave Campbell knows firsthand that seasoned bicycle advocates can be jaded and battle-scarred after losing many fights. The Bike East Bay advocacy director started as a volunteer with the group in 1996 and joined the staff in 2011. He notes that new groups that don’t have those experiences might push harder for things that don’t seem possible to advocates who have been around longer.
He cites the example of getting student bus passes paid for through Measure BB, an Alameda County transportation sales tax, saying, “That took someone not taking no for an answer.”
For Bike East Bay, transportation justice and neighborhood support are two critical elements of any project. “We don’t try to outnumber the businesses with supportive people who walk and bike,” Campbell says. Instead, the group works with businesses to build a base of support. That might take longer, but it leads to projects that have broad consensus and are less likely to be undermined by angry stakeholders.
“You have to redesign the whole street, and it’s not just about adding a bike lane. We have to be transit advocates. We have to be pedestrian advocates,” Campbell says. “I don’t ever want to see another bike plan. I just want to see complete streets multimodal plans.”
Campbell sees partnerships between seasoned advocates and newer advocacy groups as fruitful. Bike East Bay has the experience and connections, and the new groups bring fresh energy and a sense of expanded possibilities. A recent example is a plan to transform several blocks of Telegraph Avenue just south of the UC Berkeley Campus into a pedestrian zone, which Bike East Bay is working on. When UC students formed Telegraph for People and got involved halfway through the project, they advocated for adding several car-free blocks to the project and that’s now being studied.
Many hands make lighter work for safe streets advocates
One theme that ran through conversations with all the advocates is partnerships. Brand new advocacy groups and established coalitions bring different strengths and, by working together, increase the chances of securing safe streets. People with a broad range of interests are joining the fight for safer streets, and that gives bike and pedestrian advocates more routes to victory.
There are many more diverse, creative, and innovative approaches to active transportation advocacy across California. If we left out a group or a project that you’re excited about or impressed with, please share that story with us on Twitter or Facebook.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Kid-Safe-SF-protest.jpeg17371303Laura McCamyhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngLaura McCamy2022-08-12 15:14:032022-08-15 17:31:27New Models of Bicycle Advocacy
Unless Fixed, AB 371 Could Kill Bike-Sharing in California
Sacramento, Calif. – The California State Senate is considering a bill that will endanger bike and scooter sharing in California.
The Kill Bike-Share Bill (AB 371) would require providers of shared bikes and scooters (whether a private company or a transit agency) to carry insurance to pay for injuries caused through no fault of their own, including by the rider’s own negligence. It’s unprecedented and will drive up the costs of bike and scooter sharing so severely that many programs will have to be canceled. AB 371 could end hopes of expanding these programs into low-income communities.
CalBike opposes AB 371 unless it is amended to remove the insurance mandate. The bill must leave the Senate Appropriations Committee by August 11th.
“California should drastically expand bike-share, not hobble it with prohibitively expensive requirements,” said Jared Sanchez, senior policy advocate, CalBike. “AB 371 punishes shared scooters and shared bikes, while strangely boosting mopeds masquerading as e-bikes. Reducing active transportation options will cause increased driving and worse pollution in already burdened neighborhoods. This bill will also reduce economic security for low-income people who rely on these low-cost shared mobility options to get to jobs, school, and recreational activities.”
The Kill Bike-Share Bill was amended in June 2022 to reduce the amount of the insurance requirement. However, AB 371 in its current form will still have a devastating impact on equitable mobility in California. The bill demands a type of policy that isn’t available on the insurance market.
AB 371 also mandates bodily injury coverage out of proportion to the potential that low-speed, human-powered and electric vehicles have to cause damage or injury.
The Kill Bike-Share Bill will undermine California policies designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by penalizing active transportation. Indeed, many bike-sharing programs funded with state grants will be forced to close if this bill becomes law. California will fall behind other states instead of being a leader in providing low- and no-carbon transportation alternatives.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/44006449071_58830a130d_z.jpg427640Jared Sanchezhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngJared Sanchez2022-08-05 11:20:572022-08-31 13:19:57California Bike-Sharing in Danger
SB 932 Is a Plan for the Future that California Must Embrace
Sacramento, Calif. – The California Bicycle Coalition (CalBike) supports Senator Portantino’sPlan for the Future Bill (SB 932) to prioritize pedestrian and cyclist safety and fix the most deadly roads in our cities. The bill will be heard in Assembly Appropriations Committee on Wednesday, August 3.
SB 932 would require a county or city to identify high-injury streets and intersections in its General Plan and prioritize safety improvements to reduce traffic collisions. SB 932 would also create an annual grant program to award funding to help cities implement timely and effective short-term efforts to mitigate bicycle, pedestrian, and other active transportation.
The bill will also help reduce harmful greenhouse gas emissions and create safer and healthier streets for active transportation in communities statewide.
“By putting active transportation safety and access at the center of local planning, SB 932 will create more livable communities in all parts of California,” says Jared Sanchez, CalBike Senior Policy Advocate. “And the Plan for the Future Bill is essential to meeting California’s emissions reduction goals. We need strong legislation like this if we want to have any hope of avoiding the worst impacts of climate change.
Specifically, SB 932 would:
Require cities and counties to update the circulation element of their general plans by 2024 to include “a balanced, multimodal transportation network … and to ensure that the plan includes bicycle and pedestrian plans and traffic calming plans for any urbanized area[.]”
Mandate that cities and counties begin to implement those plans within two years after the adoption of the new circulation element.
Establish a grant program to help cities build Complete Streets.
Background
Americans have recently seen a significant rise in traffic fatalities. In 2021, 42,915 people died in motor vehicle traffic crashes last year, a 10.5% increase from 2020 and the highest number of fatalities since 2005.
California has taken a lead nationally in creating safer streets. We know what works.
Many cities lack data on how to address deaths caused by accidents and serious injuries to pedestrians, cyclists, and other human-powered-transit users. In many cities where the most dangerous streets and corridors have been identified, no plans exist to remedy these deadly situations. Even in cities that have developed safety plans, meaningful changes that would actually save lives have yet to be implemented.
Also, many safety plans on paper never make it to the street, which is why the grant program is critical to this legislation’s success. By using data-driven plans to improve street safety, we can save lives and encourage more people to walk and bike to their destinations. SB 932 will mitigate injuries and fatalities and will yield positive change for our communities.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/LosAngelesStOpening316Jun16-scaled.jpg15252560Jared Sanchezhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngJared Sanchez2022-08-02 10:30:282022-08-02 10:30:30SB 932 Is a Plan for the Future that California Must Embrace
The Plan for the Future Bill (SB 932) could change the shape of California communities for the better. That is if it survives its trip through the Assembly and eludes the governor’s veto. The bill, authored by Senator Anthony Portantino (SD 25) and sponsored by Streets for All and CalBike, will require regional and city general plan circulation elements to make streets safer for people biking, walking, using scooters, and taking public transit. And it includes deadlines for starting and finishing construction of the new facilities, so cities have to build what they plan.
This groundbreaking legislation might never have happened if not for a global pandemic that got a lot more people, including one California senator, out riding bikes.
Senator Portantino makes a (literal) left turn during the pandemic
During the pandemic, Senator Portantino had to drive back and forth to his district in Southern California instead of flying, so he spent longer stints in Sacramento. He had started walking six miles a day for exercise, but all that walking was taking a toll. So, over one Thanksgiving week in the capital, he tried a bike ride.
“I had an old 10-speed Schwinn that was probably 40 years old,” he says. His first ride was five miles roundtrip, and he told his wife she might have to come to pick him up.
Portantino made it home from that first ride under his own power. Sacramento’s flat terrain allowed him to build his bike legs without pain.
During his years in the Assembly and Senate, Portantino had always left his Sacramento residence and turned right to head toward downtown. “I never made a left for six years,” he says. Once he got on a bike, he turned left and discovered the bike trail along the Sacramento River.
Soon he started riding farther. “Five miles turned into seven miles, seven miles turned into 12,” and even farther, he says. “It was a whole new world.” He went on wine country rides and rode to the Rose Bowl. “I started taking on more hills and harder rides,” Portantino says. “It’s been a great experience. I ride every day.”
In the process, Portantino lost 160 pounds and started to see the cityscapes he inhabits differently. “Every day, I learn more about intersections,” he says. “The most dangerous intersection was the one by my house” in Southern California. It took him months to figure out the safest way home on his bike, an experience many bike riders can identify with.
“The more I ride, the more I see issues,” Portantino says. He’s been nearly clipped many times, though his only spill was rider error (he went down after riding into a crack in the roadway).
So, when Streets for All asked to talk with him about a housing bill, he was ready for a conversation about safe streets, too.
A tough conversation turns into a collaboration
“When Streets for All came to talk to me, originally they came to talk about an issue where we disagreed,” Portantino says. His staff asked if he wanted to have the conversation because they knew the advocates would take him to task, but he invited the input. “That led to finding common ground on other things,” he says.
“Streets for All is honored and excited to be sponsoring no less than four pivotal bills with Senator Portantino and his office this session,” says Bubba Fish, Streets for All legislative advocate. “With his partnership, we are on the cusp of requiring the planning and implementation of traffic calming measures on dangerous corridors, addressing noise pollution from illegally modified mufflers, and creating a tax credit for having fewer cars than adults in your household. We have found an incredible partner in Senator Portantino, and we look forward to expanding on the progress we have already made in the years to follow.”
“The key is for all of us not to be shy. There’s a role for the activists to play,” says Portantino. “Out of that conversation with them, I left saying this is a great group to collaborate with.”
The senator was interested in drafting something comprehensive for bikes, and he reached out to other advocates from the Los Angeles bike scene to brainstorm. From that seed, the Plan for the Future Bill was born.
The Plan for the Future Bill: A path to more sustainable cities
As Portantino rides more, he’s become aware of how many people ride to work or take kids to school by bike. “I hadn’t noticed that before. Now I see them all the time,” he says. SB 932 prioritizes bike and pedestrian infrastructure and sends a message that it’s time to take safe streets for everyone seriously.
The Plan for the Future bill is not without controversy. The mandate to move beyond planning to implementation has some city officials worried about the cost.
But Portantino comes from a background in local government, so he understands that many cities have neither the resources nor the activist base to apply the pressure needed to get bike infrastructure built. The bill’s time frame and mandate ensure that even communities without an existing bike culture to advocate for better infrastructure will get the resources they need to create one.
And the measure includes funding provisions. Portantino says, “We want to make sure we fund this as well. This is not just about having a piece of paper.”
A final push for the future
The Plan for the Future Bill has passed the Senate and is now in the Assembly Appropriations Committee. Appropriations is where many bills die in both houses (Portantino is chair of Senate Appropriations, so SB 932 was safe there). The next week could be make-or-break for this groundbreaking bill. You can help by sending an email to your assemblymember (even if they’re not on the Appropriations Committee) and asking them to speak up for the Plan for the Future Bill.
Portantino notes that the pandemic gave people the one thing they didn’t have: time. “Our challenge is to keep that healthy, slow pace as we go back to the new normal,” he says. Californians are moving from being a car culture (though Portantino notes that he still loves cars and going to car shows) to working from home and creating urban transit corridors. “We should have policies that are forward-looking and recognize that shift,” he says. The Plan for the Future Bill does just that.
https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/695AC498-7157-428B-AB8D-8C81F2C42397.jpeg640480Laura McCamyhttps://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.pngLaura McCamy2022-08-01 20:05:292022-08-15 12:27:44SB 932: How a California Senator and a Group of Activists Hatched an Ambitious Plan for the Future