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Tag Archive for: California Bicycle Summit

Cycling for Sustainable Cities Symposium Provides Inspiration from Around the World

November 1, 2021/by Laura McCamy

On October 12, over 125 people joined CalBike for our first Advance Symposium ahead of the California Bicycle Summit. Authors and researchers John Pucher and Ralph Buehler shared a presentation based on their indispensable book, Cycling for Sustainable Cities. The webinar included data on cycling rates in different cities, including inspiring examples of cities that vastly increased their cycling mode share through concerted and forward-thinking planning.

Just a few of the interesting details from the session:

  • From 1990 to 2017, San Francisco more than tripled it’s cycling mode share. That still only took it from 1% to 3.3%.
  • Portland, Oregon, started at 1% bike mode share and, by building a connected bike network over a span of 20 years, saw 7% of trips by bike.
  • Seville, Spain, achieved a leap from 1% to 6% of trips by bike in just four years, showing what is possible if a city throws its muscle into better bike infrastructure.
Cycling for sustainable cities mode share chart

If this kind of cycling data makes your heart beat faster (it does for us!), watch the video below and then pick up a copy of the book.

The Advance Symposia are free sessions offered on zoom. We will hold two more: Lessons from Latin America on December 7, 2021, and California Advocacy Success Stories on February 22, 2022. Our in-person California Bicycle Summit will take place in Oakland on April 6-9, 2022. You can register for the Symposia and get a special early-bird rate for the Summit (until November 30, 2021) at calbike.org/summit.

Watch Cycling for Sustainable Cities:

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Rue-de-Rivoli.png 1536 2048 Laura McCamy https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Laura McCamy2021-11-01 17:11:522022-01-28 19:08:50Cycling for Sustainable Cities Symposium Provides Inspiration from Around the World

California Bicycle Summit to Begin with Cycling for Sustainable Cities Symposium

September 29, 2021/by Kevin Claxton

As the pandemic has broken many of our everyday routines, it has also provided opportunities to improve on the past. That’s the case with the California Bicycle Summit, which will be preceded by three advance symposia: free, online sessions with thought leaders in bicycle advocacy from around California and the world. The first symposium will take place on October 12, 2021, on Zoom.

Register now.

Cycling for Sustainable Cities Summit Symposium

A new way to Summit

Every two years, CalBike convenes the California Bicycle Summit, a gathering of urban planners, government officials, and bike advocates to discuss the future of biking in California. Because of COVID concerns, the in-person event that we would have ordinarily scheduled for October 2021 will happen April 6-8, 2022. 

Leading up to that joyous reconvening of the California bicycle advocacy community, we have scheduled three advance symposia. Each will be held on Zoom and is free of charge, but advance registration is required.

Advance Symposium #1: Cycling for Sustainable Cities

Cycling for Sustainable Cities

One of the advantages of Zoom is that we can pull in leading voices from across geographies. We’re excited to have Ralph Buehler and John Pucher present on Cycling for Sustainable Cities. The two scholars are the editors of Cycling for Sustainable Cities, a must-have anthology for bike advocates.

Cycling should be feasible for as many people as possible and not limited to especially athletic, daring, well-trained cyclists riding expensive bicycles. Their presentation will explore how cities can make city cycling safe, practical, and convenient for a broad spectrum of ages, genders, and abilities. 

Buehler and Pucher will discuss the latest cycling trends and policies around the world and consider specific aspects of cycling. Based on data from 2019-2020 from cities worldwide, this session will also review the impacts of COVID-19 on cycling levels, plus government policies to promote cycling. 

The presentation will show how the successful promotion of cycling depends on a coordinated package of mutually supportive infrastructure, programs, and policies. After the presentation, there will be breakout sessions to discuss how California cities can turn these ideas into action.

We hope you can join us. Registration is free.

California Bicycle Summit Advance Schedule

Here’s the full schedule for the Advance Symposia

Symposium 1: Tuesday, October 12, 2021 | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm – Cycling for Sustainable Cities

Symposium 2: Tuesday, December 7, 2021 | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm – Lessons from Latin America

Symposium 3: Tuesday, February 22, 2022 | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm – Inspiration for 2022: California Advocacy Success Stories

We look forward to meeting in person at the California Bicycle Summit, April 6-8, 2022, in Oakland, California.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Cycling-for-Sustainable-Cities-cropped.jpeg 473 687 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2021-09-29 16:20:382023-11-28 12:12:24California Bicycle Summit to Begin with Cycling for Sustainable Cities Symposium

Reflections on the 2019 California Bicycle Summit

November 15, 2019/by Kevin Claxton

The 2019 California Bicycle Summit delivered on its theme: Intersections.

CalBike held its 2019 California Bicycle Summit at the Center for Healthy Communities in Los Angeles in October 15-17. Participants in dozens of panels, workshops, plenaries, and keynotes grappled with the many ways that bicycling intersects with other key issues like housing and the climate crisis. 

The connection between transportation policy and the housing and climate crises were woven through the Summit. Topics such as racial and economic inequality, discrimination towards women and marginalized gender indenties, and the colonial history of gentrification and displacement were lifted up as well. The great work of our steering committee, speakers, panelists, and activity leaders was key to bringing a diversity of viewpoints into the room. 

In order to bring to light the intersections that are vital to effective bicycle advocacy, the Summit also was the most inclusive ever. The steering committee’s outreach brought in many more people on scholarships and representatives from grassroots organizations. The Summit included participants whose voices aren’t always heard in discussions about bicycle safety and infrastructure planning.

There were many moments of enlightenment and connection. Here are some of the highlights for CalBike staff members at the Summit.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Jared Sanchez, CalBike Senior Policy Advocate

One of my key takeaways from the 2019 Summit was the tremendous potential to develop new ideas and forge new connections. This was possible because of the conflicting ideas and perspectives of the diverse attendees. The great conversations and interactions that resulted have inspired me to do more work through conflict-informed collaboration. I have seen how this mode of interaction can help CalBike fulfill its mission to bring prosperity, equity, joy, and health to all Californians with the aid of the bicycle.

A great example of the fruitful clash of ideas and viewpoints happened during a panel titled The Intersection of Bicycle Advocacy and Housing Policy. This workshop was well-attended and well-received because Senator Scott Wiener’s SB 50 was such a hot policy and planning topic this last year. The panel showcased the diversity of positions on the proposal to tie housing density to transit. The panelists spoke from different backgrounds and expertise. For example, Senator Wiener’s legislative staff spoke of their ongoing collaboration with Los Angeles justice groups, members of which were also on the panel.

The discussion about the intersection of housing equity and transportation justice didn’t shy away from the real conflicts that have arisen between stakeholders the last couple years as the legislation appeared likely to pass. This panel brought key conflict-informed collaborations into a public light specifically within a bicycle advocacy framework, so our members and supporters could engage as key stakeholders themselves. This would not have been possible if we hadn’t brought together a diversity of backgrounds and viewpoints for this panel. The workshop may not have resolved years of ongoing negotiations between the varying positions on this issue, but it did offer an accessible entry point where a variety of opinions and facts came into focus at once. We hope that thought-provoking Summit conversations like these contribute to the larger, and more exclusive, policy and planning decisions being made.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Forest Barnes, CalBike Active Transportation Planner, Central Valley

This was my first time at the Summit and I was blown away by the workshops and attendees, especially the Green New Deal panel and work session afterward. I was really inspired by folks thinking about the bike and bike culture as a very real and scalable climate solution that can be put into place quickly. I was also really struck by how great it was to see folks from the Bay Area getting to learn lessons from folks in SoCal and vice versa. Everyone had amazing energy and it was super inspiring. It was really helpful for my work in the Central Valley. I also loved the session about biking as a form of community culture and the benefits it brings, the at a  lunch plenary. It brought home to me how bike culture is a tool for communities to use to alleviate racist institutional caps on their mobility.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Jenn Guitart, CalBike Development Director

I was inspired by our workshop on Bicycling and the Climate Crisis, which included five themed breakout discussions where experts in the fields of housing, funding, and sustainable transportation led participants in brainstorming about local and state strategies for collaborating to avoid the worst impacts of the climate crisis. So many great ideas in the room: Let’s build a culture of glamorizing bicycling the way we have done with cars (Beyoncé in a bike commercial!). Let’s eliminate single family zoning to get more infill housing built. Let’s reform how curb space is used. Let’s be less polite to our lawmakers, and demand more change. Let’s get funders and advocates together so that big foundations stop focusing so much on electric vehicles, and start funding bicycle and transit advocacy. 

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Linda Khamoushian, CalBike Policy Director

This year’s Bike Summit was full of energy and inspiration. It was a particularly sensitive time for me right after the Governor’s veto of SB 127, but sharing the disappointment with the committed and passionate participants was healing. More importantly, we had space to plan how to move forward effectively and bring the change we need in our communities for a healthier and safer environment for biking and walking in California. Meeting and sharing space with other advocates and the various professionals who lent their time and expertise to the Summit left me with hope and inspiration to carry the work forward.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Dave Snyder, CalBike Executive Director

What was most thrilling to me was the diversity of perspectives presented. As an organization, we are simultaneously a single-issue organization and an intersectional social change organization that deals with an incredibly broad range of concerns. In other words, in order to win on behalf of the issue we focus on, we can’t focus on just that issue. It’s an interesting tension to hold, and I think the Summit was a very effective expression of how we navigate that tension to make social change. There were workshops on something as bike-specific as the aesthetic details of the worlds’ most beautiful bikeways and on something as fundamental to social justice in the U.S. as the role of racism in policing, and many topics in between. We had some of the state’s most elite institutional leaders and some of the state’s most heroic grassroots leaders. I wanted the Summit to strengthen our movement by bringing these diverse perspectives together. While we  still have work to do to bring the full diversity of Californians who care about the intersection of bicycling and social justice into the room, this gathering definitely succeeded in strengthening our movement.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

All in all, the 2019 Summit was a space where participants could share experiences and knowledge and develop common understandings across diverse constituencies. If participants walked away feeling inspired and energized, but also challenged with new perspectives, we succeeded in what we set out to do.

Thank you to everyone who came to the 2019 Summit! We admire your commitment to the work. Thank you to The California Endowment and its staff for hosting us in their beautiful space. Thank you to the most excellent Michelle Barrionuevo-Mazzini, the event’s main coordinator, who made sure everything went smoothly. We couldn’t have done it without her. If you didn’t make it this year, we’ll hold our next Summit in fall of 2021—keep your eyes peeled for details.

All photos courtesy of Evan Dudley.

2019 California Bicycle Summit

Photos by Evan Dudley.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/evanbdudley-CABIKE19LA-0070-scaled.jpg 1707 2560 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2019-11-15 16:12:232019-12-11 14:11:19Reflections on the 2019 California Bicycle Summit

#CABikeSummit: the View from Twitter

October 23, 2019/by Kevin Claxton

On October 15-17, 300 bicycle advocates, government officials, and planners gathered for the 2019 California Bicycle Summit. Participants recorded their reactions to the workshops, plenaries, and tours on Twitter. These #CABikeSummit tweets are a good way to view a cross-section of the Summit.

Here are the top baker’s dozen of tweets and Twitter threads from the California Bicycle Summit.

#1: The most liked tweet was an appropriately angry comment by Bike East Bay’s Robert Prinz in response to the very first speaker our Board Chair Cynthia Rose introduced. Its thread included a shout out to a later speaker, Assembly Member Laura Friedman, who said, “Caltrans needs an awakening if they think that moving Amazon packages is somehow more important than moving children safely through our streets.”

Caltrans D7 director at #CAbikeSummit welcome plenary just got up & basically said “Sorry not sorry about #SB127. Freight is important, how many of you use Amazon? Gotta have that Prime!”

Fuck. All. The. Way. Off. Times. ♾

— Robert Prinz (@prinzrob) October 15, 2019

 

#2: Here’s John Jones III ruminating on his experience at the Summit.

Reflections on the day. Thanks @lacbc @CalBike @LosRyderzBC #realrydazbc @sahrasulaiman @StreetsblogLA #calbikesummit #cabikesummit #teamesr #unitedriders #movingforward pic.twitter.com/YdUMLVhmkj

— eastsideriders (@EASTSIDERIDERS) October 17, 2019

 

#3: It wouldn’t be a true California Bicycle Summit without an ear to the south, where we hear BiciActiva Radio telling us about bicycle advocacy in Colombia.

Latin American perspectives at #CABikeSummit
Lorena Romero of @BiciactivaRadio explains that the bicycle movement in Bogotá is now much more than Ciclovia. pic.twitter.com/WmlIKMqQ8T

— California Bicycle Coalition (@CalBike) October 16, 2019

 

#4: “If you bike, you should run for office.”

"If you bike, you should run [for office.]" says cyclist Meghan Sahli-Wells, Mayor of Culver City. #CABikeSummit@M_Sahli_Wells pic.twitter.com/ZUDRlQcJiz

— California Bicycle Coalition (@CalBike) October 15, 2019

 

#5: BikeLA, keeping it real.

Has @MayorOfLA's office ever backed advocates on safe streets? He wants help but offers no support. #CABikeSummit

Spring St green lanes? ❌
Transit signal priority? ❌#Fig4All? ❌#HyperionBridge? ❌
Central Ave? ❌
Playa del Rey? ❌
Trashed bike lanes? ❌#JusticeForWoon? ❌ https://t.co/BZammQRUtw

— BikeLA (@Bike_LA) October 15, 2019

 

#6: How bikes fit into the Green New Deal was a popular session.

Had a blast presenting on biking's role in #California's climate strategy and effective #advocacy strategies. Thanks for inviting me @CalBike!#CABikeSummit #GreenNewDeal #GND #Climate #Climatecrisis #publichealth #CAPolitics https://t.co/3Yby9woj67

— Chris Chavez (@el_chaveezy) October 16, 2019

 

#7: We LOVED the bike rides, especially the LA River Tour. Thanks LACBC and Alta for sharing your love of and knowledge about the river and what it can do for Angelenos.

LA River bike tour, showing access points for the gap closure project and parks on or near the river. #CaBikeSummit #bikeLA pic.twitter.com/JuXM4WEX5u

— Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition (@lacbc) October 17, 2019

 

#8: And the walking tour, too!

Finished up a walking tour to wrap up my time at #CaBikeSummit angels flight, parklets and bike infrastructure, oh my! pic.twitter.com/DT5fK7HgOk

— Esther (@EstherRiv27) October 17, 2019

 

#9: Yes we do, Bryn. Yes, we do.

The sharp @TamikaButler re. govrmnt-advocate relationship– When's it time 2 stop calling in 4 favors from friends on the inside & 2 start calling ppl out? We need to turn up the heat sometimes & tell ppl's bosses (our elected officials), but listen & talk w empathy#CaBikeSummit pic.twitter.com/LF9ZcBOj23

— Bryn Lindblad (@Bryn_Lindblad) October 15, 2019

 

#10: Thinking big.

By Brooke Dubose of @tooledesign:

A bike lane network needs to be treated as ONE project. Not numerous projects that will fracture implementation.

Community feedback isn’t about asking for permission. It’s about figuring out how to make it work.

??

@CalBike #CABikeSummit pic.twitter.com/LSEgpJ1XlU

— Have A Go ⚡️???? (@HaveAGo) October 16, 2019

 

#11: Perhaps the most beautiful bikeways in the world.

Sam Corbett of @altaplanning shows us Auckland’s beautiful bikeways #CaBikeSummit pic.twitter.com/iTZJ0pxWqV

— California Bicycle Coalition (@CalBike) October 16, 2019

 

#12: The last plenary was all love as Sahra Sulaiman of StreetsblogLA facilitated a conversation among South Los Angeles bike club leaders. We all agree, they are heroes.

a thread on our #CaBikeSummit session [p.s. yes, they are truly heroes] https://t.co/UPaD6Ue5j1

— sahra (@sahrasulaiman) October 17, 2019

 

#13: Art Ramirez invited the summit goers to his birthday party so our Executive Director took him up on the offer, joining them for a ride from South LA to downtown taking over the streets and protected bike lanes with gorgeous bikes and joyful faces.

My first ride in the #myfig protected bike lanes is a sweet one with ⁦@LosRyderzBC⁩ ⁦@EASTSIDERIDERS⁩. Thanks for inviting us at the #cabikesummit Art Ramirez. Happy birthday! pic.twitter.com/rIbjsrJFDe

— Dave Snyder (@dave_bikes) October 19, 2019

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Summit-bike-tour.jpg 1440 2028 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2019-10-23 16:41:072019-10-23 16:41:07#CABikeSummit: the View from Twitter

These City DOT Leaders Get It. What’s Standing in Their Way?

September 16, 2019/by Kevin Claxton

Many city leaders have come to realize that making their streets and sidewalks more walkable and bikeable is key to a better city: more prosperous, more equitable, more healthy. They have appointed changemakers to be city DOT leaders, in charge of their streets: people with careers dedicated to advancing that transformation. 

The Opening Plenary of this year’s California Bicycle Summit, held October 15-17 in Los Angeles, features three such leaders. Seleta Reynolds is the General Manager of LADOT. Before that, she was in charge of bike and pedestrian programs in the Liveable Streets section of the SFMTA. Ryan Russo moved from a position as Deputy Commissioner working on bike projects for NYCDOT to become the first director of the newly-formed Oakland DOT.  Kome Ajise is the Executive Director of the Southern California Association of Governments. Before that, he was a Chief Deputy Director at Caltrans, where he was a strong ally to our work to make projects bicycle- and pedestrian-friendly. 

A History of Cutting-Edge City DOT Bikeway Projects

Russo’s tenure at NYCDOT saw a huge expansion of public space, with the addition of pedestrian plazas at several locations, including Madison Square and innovative projects such as protected center bike lanes to help bicyclists ride onto the Manhattan Bridge.

As a result of bold, innovative projects like these, the number of bike riders in New York City tripled between 2003 and 2018. The city now has 330 miles of bike lanes, including 82 miles of protected bikeways.  

Since Russo became head of OakDOT in 2017, Oakland has developed a new bike plan that proposes adding 219 miles of bike lanes to the existing 164. The city has opened a two-way protected bikeway by Lake Merritt that might be the best urban protected bikeway in California. 

Reynolds moved to LADOT in 2014 and presided over the opening of LA’s first two-way protected bikeway on Spring Street this year. Under her watch, the My Figueroa project proposes to add three miles of a bikeways to a reconfigured Figueroa Street that also includes safety upgrades for pedestrians. 

City DOT Progress Denied

Despite these improvements, a 2018 article in Bicycling Magazine called Los Angeles the “worst bicycling city in America,” pointing to a rampant car culture and organized opposition to bike infrastructure. Opposition led by the City Councillor forced the city to scale back the My Figueroa project. Entitled motorists got so enraged about delays caused by a safety project on Vista del Mar in Playa del Rey that in 2018 they attempted to recall the City Councillor who supported it. That effort failed and Mark Bonin remains in office and an ally, though somewhat scarred. Vista del Mar, unfortunately, saw its traffic lanes restored and safety improvements eliminated.

Oakland has avoided the reversal of a bike lane project but not the delay of one. A planned extension of Oakland’s wildly successful Telegraph Avenue parking-protected bike lanes was only recently approved after more than a year of delay. Still, there is constant pressure to reject additional expansions, according to officials. 

How Do We Speed Up the Process for City DOT Leaders?

The exact right people are in the exact right positions to make change in Oakland and Los Angeles, yet progress is slow and pushback remains a strong force against safer streets. How do these leaders overcome resistance from entrenched interests, both inside and outside of government? How can bicycle advocates support their work? And, since Reynolds and Russo are working to achieve statewide goals, is there a role for the regional or statewide agency that Kome Ajise leads? What incentives, rewards, and punishments can Caltrans or a regional agency administer to get the result we’re seeking? 

Moderated by the California-focused leader at the National Association of City Transportation Officials, this session at the California Bicycle Summit will help us learn from allies in positions of power what they need to be more successful. Register for the California Bicycle Summit: Intersections to join the conversation.

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/redondobikelane.jpg 387 600 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2019-09-16 14:09:532019-09-16 17:50:34These City DOT Leaders Get It. What’s Standing in Their Way?

Summit Plenary to Examine the New Urban Mobility

August 27, 2019/by Kevin Claxton

The “new urban mobility” — shared and networked cars and bikes and scooters and whatever’s next — promises to eliminate the need for private cars and bring about a more sustainable transportation future. But the reality is far from that promise. Thanks to heavy subsidies by their venture capital owners, Lyft and Uber’s cheap car trips have poached passengers from public transit while adding to congestion. Their drivers endanger people on bikes who have to dodge their cars in the bike lanes and along the curb. People who can’t afford Lyft and Uber — and in our racialized economy, that means disproportionately people of color — are stuck with worse options than before. Typical.

Bike- and scooter-share systems are a better option. Where they exist, their users more closely reflect the population of their community than those who hail Lyft and Uber cars. But those systems can be expensive (except where they are subsidized in rich communities like the Bay Area). These systems will get more expensive as the companies are pressured to show profitability. In addition, they’re not integrated with public transit, they are poorly regulated, and scooters can block sidewalks dangerously impeding people with disabilities. Because they must eventually turn a profit, these shared mobility options are exclusive to privileged communities where the companies can make money. This leaves large but disadvantaged cities in California’s Central Valley completely abandoned. Again… typical.

It doesn’t have to be this way. We at CalBike see great potential in this new mobility paradigm. Integrated with public transit and supported by public funds, shared bikes and scooters could replace most short car trips. A user should be able to transfer from a bus or scooter with their transit pass without paying an extra fare. Fares should be progressive across the whole system, with discounts for low-income people just as there are discounts for seniors and youth on many transit systems. Bikes and scooters should be deployed where they’re needed, not just where they are profitable. Thinking even bigger, trips in shared cars could complement public transit if deployed strategically and integrated in this same manner.

This public-centered vision does not have to shut out the private companies like Lyft, Uber, Bird, Spin, Lime, etc. Properly regulated, these companies could make a reasonable profit while providing good jobs at good wages and equitable transportation service that emphasizes efficient and healthy mobility, i.e. biking and walking. 

What would these regulations be? Are rule-breaking startups even interested? If these companies are compelled to emphasize biking and walking, will they — and their customers — become allies in our struggle to reclaim street space for bikes, scooters, and walking? Why did Lyft and Uber buy bike share companies? What does Uber do with the fact that, in central Sacramento, they saw more trips on their Jump bikes than in their Uber cars?!

These are the questions we’ll address at the California Bicycle Summit this October in our Wednesday morning plenary, The New Urban Mobility. 

The plenary will feature representatives from the companies providing this service including Lyft and Uber and the community organizations dealing with the impacts. 

Registration is open for the Summit. Register today to join the discussion.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/44006449071_58830a130d_z.jpg 427 640 Kevin Claxton https://www.calbike.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/calbike-logo.png Kevin Claxton2019-08-27 08:00:392019-08-27 14:04:40Summit Plenary to Examine the New Urban Mobility
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