CalBike
  • About
  • Advocacy
    • 2025 Legislative Watch
    • Restore $400M to the ATP
    • Support the Quick-Build Pilot
    • Keep Bike Highways Moving
    • Sign-On Letters
    • 2025 Bike Month
  • Resources
    • News
    • Report: Incomplete Streets
    • Bicycle Summit Virtual Sessions
    • California Bicycle Laws
    • E-Bike Resources
    • Map & Routes
    • Quick-Build Bikeway Design Guide
  • Support
    • Become a Member
    • Business Member
    • Shop
  • Bike Month
  • Search
  • Menu Menu
  • About
  • Advocacy
    • Legislative Watch
    • Invest/Divest
    • Sign-On Letters
    • Report: Incomplete Streets
    • Bike the Vote
  • Resources
    • News
    • California Bicycle Laws
    • E-Bike Resources
    • Map & Routes
    • Quick-Build Bikeway Design Guide
  • Support
    • Become a CalBike Member
    • Business Member
    • Shop

Killed by a Traffic Engineer: An Interview with Wes Marshall

August 29, 2024/by Laura McCamy

Published concurrently in Streetsblog California.

Wes Marshall’s new book, Killed by a Traffic Engineer, is a must-read for bike and walk advocates and anyone who cares about reforming our backward approach to road safety. At 370 pages, it’s a tome, but Marshall, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Colorado, fills it with enough humor and Simpsons references to make it an easy read. 

I spoke with Marshall recently to get his take on some of the issues California is grappling with, most specifically getting Caltrans to serve needs other than vehicle throughput. As CalBike prepares to issue a report analyzing how well Caltrans serves the safety needs of people biking, walking, and taking transit, Marshall’s ideas on what’s wrong with traffic engineering and how we can fix it are particularly relevant.

Here’s our conversation, edited for length and flow.

CalBike: You made what could be a very dry subject very interesting. I totally appreciate it. Love the Simpsons references. 

Wes Marshall: I am literally talking about kids dying. So, if there isn’t some levity in it, it would be a tough read.

CalBike: The thing that took a lot of mental space for me while I was reading was that I was relitigating every argument I’ve had with a civil engineer over the last 15 years.

Marshall: One of my goals was to give folks like you ammunition so the next time you’re having a discussion with someone like that, you have a little bit more insight into what they’re thinking, where they’re coming from, and where there’s leeway.

CalBike: As a total transportation nerd, this is my angry/happy place, reading your book.

Marshall: It gets a lot of people fired up.

CalBike: CalBike is running a bill, SB 961, for intelligent speed assist. It’s gotten the most angry responses from our list, as if people feel driving above the speed limit is their God-given right. But reading your book I thought, “Maybe that’s understandable based on road design.”

Marshall: It seems so un-American, right? The same goes for red light cameras and things like that. It devolves into “freedom” and “Big Brother.” It’s never really about safety. This is one of the things a lot of other countries do better than we do. They keep the focus of the discussion on safety. When you’re driving and you feel like you’re artificially driving lower than what the built environment is telling you to do, you feel restricted. You don’t feel the same when you’re in a place where the design matches the speed. I’m not against all the cities that are trying to just change the speed limits. You don’t get the full effect you hope but it’s heading in the right direction. At the same time, that’s not enough. You need changes in the built environment to go hand in hand with this. That’s where you’re going to get the real safety benefits.

CalBike: The other thing I wanted to ask you about is quick-build, which I think is similar to the tactical urbanism you mention in your book, testing things out. How do we get engineers to better solutions than just following the manual that isn’t very accurate? Can quick-build help?

Marshall: The way I try to teach my students when we’re talking about designing streets or anything is having the mantra that design is iterative. If you’re a mechanical engineer and you’re designing anything, you have all these prototypes. You’re testing everything and meandering towards your goal and you get closer and closer to it. For whatever reason, in transportation, we put out our final solution on the first day and just hope it works right. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, both financially or in terms of design and understanding that humans sometimes behave differently than we expect. It makes perfect sense to put something out there with cheaper materials and see how people react to it, learn from it. You might pull back in some places and double down in others, but treat it as an experiment almost. When we change an intersection, change signalization or something, you can test it. See what happens. See how people react. Traffic engineers need to go back to treating design as an iterative, incremental thing. It’s a mindset. 

“Instead of just assuming we need to accommodate X number of cars per day, figure out how many cars is the right number for this street and don’t provide capacity for more than that. There is nothing that says you have to design for the peak or for 20 years from now. It’s a choice we’re making.”

CalBike: I think the mindset is the trickiest thing. It’s part of why this problem with Caltrans is so intractable because people are very set in their ways.

Marshall: A lot of the reasons I think engineers want to seem more authoritarian, that they know everything, is that they are scared of liability. But if we treat design as iterative and you are actually measuring something and seeing if your design is improving that something, that also protects them from liability. I think their mentality is they can’t do testing because they’re scared of liability. But I would argue that would actually help the cause. If you are using the rational process I talk about in the book — testing things, seeing if it is helping the problem you’re setting out to solve, improving on it — that protects you from liability. If you know you have a problem, sticking your head in the sand is going to be the liability problem.

CalBike: Another issue you highlight in your book is how the ways we engineer the roads today exacerbate social inequities. 

Marshall: What always bothers me, when I’m doing any safety study, I need to control for things like income and race because it’s a known fact that low-income neighborhoods have worse crash outcomes. Instead of trying to figure out why, we just control for it and don’t look for what other factors might be causing the crashes. There’s a particular street here in Denver, Montague Boulevard. It goes from a really wealthy white neighborhood near the zoo and the science museum. And at that point, it’s a beautiful street with two lanes, bike lanes, sidewalks, giant street trees that cover the street. But you start heading towards Aurora, out of Denver, once you kind of hit that line, it becomes a four-lane. The sidewalks almost disappear, the bike lanes go away, and there are sharrows in the street. The neighborhood is more minority-focused, and you’re going to get worse safety outcomes on that street, regardless of what kind of cars people are driving. People can too easily fall into the trap of just blaming the people who live there as opposed to blaming the infrastructure. We forced highways through neighborhoods in a lot of places. Then you’re sort of forcing people into a car. You’re forcing people onto the high-injury network. We haven’t given them any other options. None of this is controlled for; we just treat it as a given. We’re narrowly focused on how to fix a particular intersection as opposed to how to fix the systematic street design and neighborhood community design.

CalBike: I feel like I got an education from your book. Things that I thought were true aren’t true. The systemic overview is a microcosm of what we do with all traffic problems; we look at very specific things and we don’t ask that “why” question you kept emphasizing.

Marshall: That speaks to crash data. We all want to have a data-driven approach to road safety and Vision Zero, but all the data is telling us we have a human error problem. So when somebody in a poor Black neighborhood jaywalks, it’s easy for the traffic engineers to look at the data and say, “We have a human error problem. We need to teach these folks not to jaywalk, or we need to put up barriers.” But when you zoom out and think about the situation we put them in, where’s the nearest crosswalk? It might be half a mile away. The sidewalks we provide in between where they are and the crosswalk are probably nonexistent. When you zoom out, maybe they did the rational thing. That’s where I’m trying to put the onus back on the traffic engineers, to think about all these things as a potential engineering solution, as opposed to just education and enforcement. You have to think about the crash data very differently than we do now.

CalBike: CalBike and other advocates have been working for years to try to change Caltrans. It’s like turning around a giant ocean liner. How do advocates do this? How do we change this culture?

Marshall: All our protocols are set up to design a road for not just the car capacity today but the car capacity 20 years in the future. They’re not designing for safety; they’re designing for this futuristic capacity. I’ve written 75 published academic papers, and I feel like those are chipping away the tip of the iceberg with the problems. The book was more meant to hit the foundation. Those protocols aren’t as steeped in science as any of us think. We need to go back to the drawing board. At some level, it’s a longer-term problem: engineers acknowledging that all of these protocols should not be set in stone. 

I feel like a lot of these things can change quickly. If you look at the evolution of bike lanes and bike facilities, what was the gold standard 10 years ago isn’t good anymore. If I started getting too specific, I felt like the book would age too quickly, so I tried to focus more on the fundamentals. 

CalBike: One of the things that hit me in your book was the concept of “Safety Third” at some DOTs, rather than safety first — and sometimes not even third. Looking at documents from Caltrans, it seems like they don’t think safety for people who bike and walk is even their job. I get the sense that being forced to build a bike lane is annoying to them. How do we get them to feel like people who bike and walk are their constituents?

Marshall: That’s why I titled the book Killed by a Traffic Engineer. A lot of engineers are angry with me, but you’re describing exactly what I’m saying. It’s easy for them to blame those crashes on human error, either the driver or that pedestrian or bicyclist. My point is, these are systematic crashes that are happening. If we can predict them, we should be able to fix them, and we’re not doing that. We can do better. We always can find money for a multimillion-dollar highway interchange, and we can never find money for a sidewalk or bike lane. You can no longer blame these on human error; we have to do something. If engineers can get over the hurdle and read the book, I think we’ll see some shifts.

CalBike: I’ve seen the shift in my town. The younger generation of engineers, probably like your students, have a more progressive attitude.

Marshall: I’ve seen the same thing here. There are designs out on the streets today that I would have considered a moonshot 10 years ago. It is shifting. It’s hard to be patient when you know what it could be like, but we are heading in the right direction. 

CalBike: Even though we don’t use level of service as a required standard in California, it still creeps into design discussions. Somehow, they manage to use vehicle miles traveled and come to the same conclusions as if they’d focused on level of service. What I’ve never seen considered is that 20 years from now, we expect 50% less driving and 100% more biking and transit use. Is that something we can expect from the traffic engineers of the future?

Marshall: I would hope so. I joke in the book that when we look at a bike lane that went from 10 bikes a day to 100, we never extrapolate that number the way we would with cars. If we did the same thing, you could say we’re going to have 10,000 bicyclists per day in the year 2050. But we don’t use the same growth factors. Towards the end of the book, I argue that we should be focused more on the vision for the community. Instead of just assuming we need to accommodate X number of cars per day, figure out how many cars is the right number for this street and don’t provide capacity for more than that. There is nothing that says you have to design for the peak or for 20 years from now. It’s a choice we’re making. I think a lot of engineers believe that safety is steeped into all those things, but it has nothing to do with safety. It’s just a thing we’re doing to fix congestion, and it doesn’t even do that well.

CalBike: I think what you’re getting at is the heart of why it’s so hard to change. There’s so much of a mindset of engineers knowing what they want to do and reverse engineering the process to do that.

Marshall: We can’t often use rational arguments against car-oriented designs and car-oriented places. It has to be ridicule. Make fun of the engineers who think induced demand is a myth as opposed to explaining the rational arguments to them. Sometimes, that can be a more effective way to shift mindset. 

CalBike: There are so many rational arguments against everything that they’re doing, and obviously it doesn’t matter. The question becomes, “How do you manifest that social shift?”

Marshall: All DOTs have to spend a certain amount on safety. It’s easiest to check that box with education, so they do PSAs that say, “Wear your seatbelt,” or “Don’t jaywalk.” We know those don’t work, so why are we wasting our money on that sort of stuff? That’s a pot of money that could be used for something more tangible instead of checking a box.

CalBike: We might have to define safety. One of the things I took away from your book is that what a traffic engineer thinks when they hear the word safety is not what I would think.

Marshall: They can define anything as safety. I give the example in the book of the Legacy Parkway in Utah, where they increased the speed limit to fix wrong-way driving. Or taking away crosswalks. If we gave the engineers all the money in the world, they’re not going to fix these problems because they’re not going to spend it like any normal human being would think it should be spent. What the book is trying to do is change those fundamentals. If we change what we’re actually measuring when it comes to safety, that’s a step in the right direction. If we are treating our crash data like there’s a potential engineering solution as opposed to just blaming human error, that’s a step in the right direction. Then, we can start looking at safety for what it is.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/marshall_wes-1-e1724966693690.jpg 1013 2000 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2024-08-29 14:28:132024-09-04 19:26:34Killed by a Traffic Engineer: An Interview with Wes Marshall

Speak Up for the Bill that Could Put Quick-Build Into the Spotlight in California

August 9, 2024/by Jared Sanchez

When the pandemic hit, the need for more bikeways and pedestrian-friendly streets became obvious. Many cities used quick-build techniques to create safe, high-visibility facilities to protect people who get around by active transportation. CalBike partnered with Alta Planning + Design to create a Quick-Build Guide, which we still offer as a free download. 

In our recent interview with Wes Marshall, author of the excellent book, Killed by a Traffic Engineer, he said that quick-build is ideal because it allows traffic engineers to do the kind of iterative design that engineers always do in other fields. Yet, too many traffic engineers are scared to try anything new, even if it will increase safety. They remain wedded to the MUTCD and other manuals with outdated, car-centric, and — as Marshall details in his book — often incorrect ideas about safe road design.

An excellent way to show California transportation planners that it’s okay to quickly add safety features for people riding bikes or walking is to have the state’s own engineers use quick-build design. That’s what the Quicker and Better Bikeways Bill, AB 2290, aims to do.

OmniBike Bill Part 2

Last year, Assemblymember Laura Friedman authored the Omnibike Bill, AB 1909, which made several changes to California’s Vehicle Code to make it more bike- and pedestrian-friendly. This year, CalBike is sponsoring Friedman’s Quicker and Better Bikeways Bill, which also makes multiple changes in state policy to better serve people using active transportation.

In addition to authorizing a quick-build pilot at Caltrans, AB 2290 limits state funding for Class III bikeways, except on streets with speed limits of 25 mph or less. Class III are shared lanes with bicycles and cars, often marked with sharrows or Share the Road signage. This bikeway type can be effective on low-speed streets, especially those designated as bike boulevards with traffic calming features or traffic diversion. However, they can become a design cop-out when road builders don’t want to take the time and effort to find space for a protected bikeway on fast or heavily trafficked streets.

The third provision of the Quicker and Better Bikeways Bill requires projects funded by the Road Maintenance and Rehabilitation Program to include bikeways planned for that roadway and included in an adopted bicycle or active transportation plan. In CalBike’s review of Caltrans planning documents, we find that the agency often notes planned bike routes or pedestrian safety improvements, sometimes with a high level of need, but still fails to include them in its projects.

Help us win quicker, better bikeways

The Quicker and Better Bikeways Bill has passed the Assembly. Before it can become law, it needs to get out of the Senate Appropriations Committee, pass the full Senate, and be signed by the governor. None of these steps is certain, but the Appropriations Committee may be the biggest risk. Good bills can easily get killed in this committee with little explanation or debate.

Help get this crucial bill over the finish line. Please email Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Anna Caballero today.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/People-Using-Streets-13.jpg 1080 1920 Jared Sanchez https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Jared Sanchez2024-08-09 16:36:372024-08-09 16:36:38Speak Up for the Bill that Could Put Quick-Build Into the Spotlight in California

National Youth Bike Summit Builds the Movement for Better Biking

August 7, 2024/by CalBike Staff

This post was created in collaboration with the National Youth Bike Council and Youth Bike Summit.

On June 14 through 16, more than 200 advocates attended the annual National Youth Bike Summit held at Muhlenberg College in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania. Youth attendees ranging in age from 13 to 24 years old participated in and presented at workshops and group rides. 

Two attendees, Zoe F, 23, from Boston, and Lot M, 21, from Philadelphia — both members of the National Youth Bike Council — shared their reflections on the experience. Their answers have been lightly edited.

NYBC members Lot (left) and Zoe (right).

What is the Youth Bike Summit to you?

    Lot: The technical answer is that the Youth Bike Summit is an annual three-day conference with a plethora of organizations collaborating to celebrate youth from all over the world. This is done through a variety of events such as presentations, workshops, bike rides, and game nights.

    However, the Youth Bike Summit to me is that and so much more. If I had to describe it in one word, I would say that it is an experience. It’s a chance to experience numerous people coming together as a community to celebrate youth and cycling. I’ve been to the Youth Bike Summit at least four times now, and I confidently say that I enjoyed myself each and every time. 


    Zoe: The YBS is a place where young people, regardless of the cycling experience they currently have, can meet up and talk about the issues they see in their communities. It allows people who wouldn’t communicate otherwise to come together to discuss ideas, successes, and resources. It is also just a time to have fun and grow the global cycling movement.

    Did the Youth Bike Summit offer you any “first” moments?

      Zoe: The first time I ever ran a workshop was at the 2019 YBS. Before that, the closest I had ever come to that were group presentations in school. Running a workshop did require a little more involvement, planning, and finding out ways to engage a crowd. I had also never spoken in front of so many adults before who were looking to me for knowledge, so that helped build a lot of confidence in me.  


      Lot: Yes! I had the opportunity to be on stage and talk on a youth panel for the first time ever. I don’t feel the most confident with public speaking since I don’t do it frequently enough. However, I was surrounded by other youth with stories to tell, and the speakers before I spoke empowered me to bring high energy as well. On a side note, I am pursuing a career of content creation, so I challenged myself to hype the crowd up, and I believe I was successful in my attempt. 

      Tell me about your favorite session at the Youth Bike Summit.

        Lot: My favorite session at the Youth Bike Summit was the session called “Bike n’ Boat.” 

        I had the pleasure of chaperoning Aritra, preferred name Ari, for this workshop. He was in attendance with a group called Phoenix Bikes based in Arlington, Virginia. The Bike n’ Boat workshop, as the name implies, involved cycling and canoeing. This was the second time I’ve ever been canoeing, and it was a great experience. 

        Lot (left) and Ari at the Bike n’ Boat.


        The participants first took a bus from the college to the site where the canoeing staff were. They explained to us the background history of the organization and the rules of the ride before we began riding. The trail we rode on was nice and chill, and the weather was decent, so the ride was overall enjoyable.

        Then we had the canoeing part. It took a moment for all of us to get into our canoes, and we had a brief grace period where we practiced canoeing. I was in a canoe with Ari as I was his chaperone during the workshop. I was definitely nervous every now and then during the canoe portion, since it was my second time canoeing and Ari’s first time ever canoeing. Though there were rocky moments and a few light crashes, we never went overboard. It was a great time overall — definitely my favorite session! Shoutout to Ari from Phoenix Bikes!


        Zoe: This year I got to see the Camp Spokes “Shred Into Tomorrow” workshop. I had heard of Camp Spokes and Groundwork RVA before from the National Bike Summit, so it was really exciting to see them here. They had a photo album that showed what the camp was like and what youth get to do there. It looked so fun and made me wish I had something like that when I was in high school!

        What was the most fun part of the Summit?

          Zoe: Definitely the big ride on the last day. I have never biked through a city like that (with so many people, roads shut down, escorts). It was super cool, and the weather was awesome. I really liked that we got to bike not only on city streets but also on the Delaware & Lehigh trail. We biked along the river and tracks, so the scenery was amazing. At some point, we were stuck at a rest stop waiting for part of the group to catch up, and some people put on a wheelie show to watch. It was just a really fun experience all around.


          Lot: The most fun part of the summit was interacting with other people from multiple organizations. It was amazing to see people of varying ages show up and show out. It always warms my heart to see people work together for a common cause.

          What role did you play in the Youth Bike Summit?

            Lot: As a member of the National Youth Bike Council, I was one of the leaders. I served as a presenter, youth panelist speaker, chaperone, and participant during the three days. 


            Zoe: I came as an attendee and ran one workshop with the National Youth Bike Council. I was mostly there to have fun, of course, but also to network and try to recruit people for the council. We are looking for more youth interested in advocacy to join (check us out if you’re interested!).  

            What would you like to see at future Youth Bike Summits — any and all wishes?

              Zoe: I loved everything about this summit. If there was one thing that could be improved in the future is more time for workshops! I got to see some of the ones I wanted to, but since there were so many per time slot, I just couldn’t make it to all of them. Honestly, every workshop sounded awesome, and if there could be a way for attendees to see all the workshops or recordings of them in the future, that would be great!


              Lot: What I would like to see is a more creative way for people to attend multiple workshops within the day. I was only able to attend one workshop and present on Saturday. There were plenty of workshops I wanted to visit, and I feel as if that could’ve been possible if the times of the workshops were different. Also, I would’ve liked to have more time to prepare for the Youth Panel. Furthermore, there were some technical difficulties that caused my presenting group to have to move rooms. The room we were told to move to was difficult to find, which was partially the reason we didn’t have as much traction for our presentation. Besides that, the Youth Bike Summit of 2024 was truly a wonderful experience! 

              Kudos to the National Youth Bike Council for organizing this fantastic event and for giving us a report back. Next year’s National Youth Bike Summit will be held in Boston, Massachusetts, May 30 to June 1, 2025. The Summit welcomes participants of all ages who want to support the youth bike movement.

              https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/IMG_0238-scaled.jpg 2560 2560 CalBike Staff https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png CalBike Staff2024-08-07 18:42:252024-08-07 18:42:27National Youth Bike Summit Builds the Movement for Better Biking

              Innovation on the Streets: Napa’s Pedal-Powered Bike Lane Sweeper

              August 5, 2024/by Andrew Wright

              Until 2024, Napa didn’t have any protected bikeways. The Napa County Bicycle Coalition (NCBC) had long advocated for them, but maintenance challenges kept projects in limbo. Local officials acknowledged the need for increased safety, yet the estimated $200,000 to buy a street sweeper designed to clean a protected bikeway was a significant hurdle. 

              Then, in January, Caltrans resurfaced West Imola Avenue (SR 121), a key east-west route in Napa. The project added new flex post barriers to existing painted bike lanes. While the new infrastructure is a win for bike safety, keeping the lanes clean is critical to creating a comfortable and inviting place to ride. Debris in bike lanes — including glass, gravel, and dirt — poses significant hazards to cyclists, forcing them into vehicular lanes and increasing the risk of collisions. But traditional street sweepers can’t fit into protected bikeways, and this issue nearly led Caltrans to remove the protective posts.

              Bicycle-powered bikeway sweeping

              Faced with this potential setback, the Napa County Bicycle Coalition offered to adopt and maintain the protected bikeways on West Imola, and Caltrans accepted, modifying the Adrop-A-Highway program specifically for this bike facility. A local bike coalition can’t afford the $200,000 price tag for a motorized, bike lane-sized sweeper, so, to keep the lane clear, NCBC invested in an innovative new street sweeper designed by California inventor Pierre Lermant.

              Napa Bike street sweeper in use2

              “Regular cleaning is the Achilles heel of protected bike lanes, as its budget is rarely factored in when the lanes are built,” says Lermant. “The Napa Valley initiative demonstrates how the Eco Sweeper devices can bridge budget shortcomings and leverage the community to help clean up bike lanes and promote bicycling, our shared ultimate goal.” 

              The sweeper, a battery-powered device that attaches to the rear wheel of a bicycle with a Burley bike trailer-style hitch, efficiently cleans bike lanes. And, at just $4,500, the cost is a fraction of a traditional sweeper.

              NCBC launched a GoFundMe campaign on May 21, 2024, to raise the money to buy the sweeper. Thanks to the generosity of 50 donors, including a significant contribution from coalition member Bill Tuikka, the campaign met its goal in just one day. 

              Efficient, effective, and economical bikeway cleaning

              During its first run on June 17, 2024, the sweeper collected nearly 36 gallons of debris, a hefty load for a compact, bicycle-pulled device. 

              “We appreciate Caltrans for partnering with us and for being willing to pilot changes to their Adopt-a-Highway program that allowed us to find a solution. Napa County’s first protected bike lanes are on our high-injury network, so preventing the removal of these improved lanes was critical for improving safety,” says Napa County Bicycle Coalition Executive Director Kara Vernor.

              The tow-behind bike lane sweeper is not just a practical solution for Napa; it represents an approach to urban planning and public safety that other cities can learn from. By steadfastly advocating for and embracing innovative solutions, Napa is setting a precedent for a safer, more bike-friendly future.

              https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Napa-bike-street-sweeper-e1722889440231.jpg 1472 1999 Andrew Wright https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Andrew Wright2024-08-05 13:29:262024-08-05 18:11:59Innovation on the Streets: Napa’s Pedal-Powered Bike Lane Sweeper

              Latest News

              • California State Capitol
                California’s Transportation Spending Has the Wrong PrioritiesMay 14, 2025 - 2:26 pm
              • CalBike Webinar: Improving our Communities with Slow StreetsMay 13, 2025 - 12:12 pm
              • e-bike
                E-Bike Purchase Incentives FAQsMay 9, 2025 - 3:12 pm
              Follow a manual added link

              Get Email Updates

              Follow a manual added link

              Join Calbike

              • Link to Facebook
              • Link to X
              • Link to LinkedIn
              • Link to Mail
              • Link to Instagram

              About Us

              Board
              Careers
              Contact Us
              Financials & Governance
              Local Partners
              Privacy Policy
              Staff
              State & National Allies
              Volunteer

              Advocacy

              California Bicycle Summit
              E-Bike
              Legislative Watch
              Past and Present Projects
              Report: Incomplete Streets
              Sign On Letters

              Resources

              Maps & Routes
              Crash Help and Legal Resources
              Quick-Build Bikeway Design Guide
              Report: Complete Streets
              All Resources

              Support

              Ways to give
              Become a Member
              Donor Advised Funds
              Donate a Car
              Business Member

              News

              Blog
              CalBike in the News
              Press Releases

              © California Bicycle Coalition 2025

              1017 L Street #288
              Sacramento, CA 95814
              © California Bicycle Coalition 2025

              Scroll to top