Bike Lanes get show and tell
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So February started off with a bang for cyclists. Well when one thinks of cycling you don’t think of February for an awe inspiring time. But it was. On February 1st the city released what it hopes Toronto will look like in 2010-2011.
The meeting was held at Metro Hall, you know the ugly one down on John Street where no one knows where it is. The meeting was well attended with interested cyclists wanting to know what was what. Of course I arrived late thinking that it was just another one of those wander around and look at the pictures on the wall. Well it was, but it seemed that there was a lot of talking and asking of questions first.
What I heard was questions on Bloor Street, the fact that there is going to be a study done about bike lanes on Bloor Street that will not be finished until 2011. That would mean that any kind of painting on Bloor will not happen until probably 2015. There was an interesting question about how many people took canbike and when was the city going to force everyone to take a course.
The highlight of the night was when Hamish Wilson took the city to task of why there will be no bike lane through the Yorkville area and it would only be sharrows. My first thought was because Holt Renfrew bought the block with their $20 million dollar donation and there was no way in heck they were going to allow dirty post and rings let alone a bike lane to go through their block.
After the talking was done, I wondered around and marvelled at the maps with their crayola coloured lines. To me it looked like there was going to be a bike lane on every street. The highlights was connecting the Harbord Street bike lane from Spadina to Bathurst as well as the gap that exists on the College Street bike lane west of Manning Street.
Was all of this for real, could this be happening? Well it could be because a lot of its easy and there are huge holes in the plan. At first what I thought were markings designating Queen and others to have bike lanes were actually sharrows. The proposed bike lane on University ends at Adelaide, just a few hundred feet of linking up with a bike lane on York, the extension of the College Street bike lane were also Sharrows.
It is to early to say exactly what is going on with the whole plan. I only had a cursory look at things and the whole plan should be on the city’s website tomorrow. I still think there is room on College for a bike lane, but according to city cycling officials the TTC will never allow it to happen.
What Councillor Joe Mihevc said at the end of the question period is true, that if we want this stuff we are going to have to fight and fight hard. This is going to be a tough political year for everyone, especially with people like Rocco Rossi running for Mayor.
What’s so hard about peace, love and car free?
Stolen from the Internet from the Guardian Online
A quarter of households in Britain – more in the larger cities, and a majority in some inner cities – live without a car. Imagine how quality of life would improve for cyclists and everyone else if traffic were removed from areas where people could practically choose to live without cars. Does this sound unrealistic, utopian? Did you know many European cities are already doing it?
Vauban in Germany is one of the largest car-free neighbourhoods in Europe, home to more than 5,000 people. If you live in the district, you are required to confirm once a year that you do not own a car – or, if you do own one, you must buy a space in a multi-storey car park on the edge of the district. One space was initially provided for every two households, but car ownership has fallen over time, and many of these spaces are now empty.
Vehicles are allowed down the residential streets at walking pace to pick up and deliver, but not to park. In practice, vehicles are rarely seen moving here. It has been taken over by kids as young as four or five, playing, skating and unicycling without direct supervision. The adults, too, tend to socialise outdoors far more than they would on conventional streets open to traffic (behaviour that's echoed in the UK, too).
Most of the European car-free areas are smaller and "purer" than Vauban: vehicles are physically prevented from entering the streets where people live. Exceptions are made for emergency vehicles and removals vans but not for normal deliveries, which are made on foot, trolley or cycle trailer. A few peripheral parking spaces are available to buy (usually around one space for every five homes) and a few are reserved for car club vehicles. In all the examples I have studied, cycling is a vital means of transport.
Car-free areas of this kind, with anything from a couple of hundred to more than a thousand residents, exist in Amsterdam, Vienna, Cologne, Hamburg and Nuremberg, among others. There is even a small one in Edinburgh.
There is another form of car-free development, so familiar we have until recently overlooked its potential. Most pedestrianised city or neighbourhood centres in Britain are almost entirely commercial. But a few farsighted councils, such as Exeter, have brought back housing and residents, without cars or allocated parking, into city centres that would otherwise be deserted after 6pm.
Groningen, the Netherlands' capital of cycling, has the largest car-free centre in Europe: half-pedestrianised, entirely closed to through traffic, with 16,500 residents, three-quarters of whom have no car in the household. Forty percent of all journeys within the city are made by bicycle.
Carfree UK, which I coordinate, was set up to promote European-style car-free development in this country. We are not anti-car, we are pro-choice. We have recently run public meetings in London to set up a new car-free association for London, which is beginning to look at areas of the city from which traffic could be removed. We know considerable potential demand exists for traffic-free housing in London, and probably in a number of other major cities. Where else do you think might be suitable?
• Steve Melia is coordinator of Carfree UK and a researcher at the University of the West of England
Caught in the bike lane
Undercover cop reading a book caught in the bike lane
So i was toiling away in yeah olde bike store on Friday, when I glanced outside and noticed a car parked in the bike lane. I thought nothing of it. A lot of times cars park for a couple of minutes to answer a phone call or pick up a son or daughter from the local high school. I have learned in the past that by the time I get out there to tell them to move, they have already moved on. I usually give them a couple of minutes before I ask them to move on.
Well this feller was taking his good old time getting the heck out of the lane so i decided to take action. I have also learned from past experience that getting angry with people never works, so I put on my best pleasant face, the one that I keep behind the counter for bike lane parkers and went to have a chat.
He rolled down and looked at me with disinterest. The first thing that I noticed was that he was reading a book so I knew that he was going to be there for a while.
"Hi, you're parked in a bike lane, would you be able to move."
"No"
"Do you really have to park here?"
"I am working," he said. It was then that it donned on me that he was an undercover cop.
"What you working at?" I asked.
He wrestled around in his seat until he was able to liberate his wallet from his pants and flipped me his badge.
"Well do you have to park here?" I asked, knowing full well he could park anywhere he wanted.
"I'm working."
So I left it at that. I walked back into the shop with visions of me pounding his head off his steering wheel, screaming, "Fucking pig fucking pig!!!" over and over again. I have no idea what he was working on except getting through the next chapter of his book.
So I could only do what anyone could do on these occasions. I got my camera and took a couple of pictures. If you notice the second picture has a cop car in the background. For a few seconds I thought about calling him over, but I knew he would be just as disinterested as the first cop.
Infuriating is not the word that I could describe at how I was feeling, but I did get some satisfaction of knowing that I could at least put his car on the Interweb and hopefully some kids who might be busted for smoking weed would see him first and get away.
The worst part of this is that it was two days after the Police Service Board considered Allen Heisey's deputation to enforce the bike lanes more as well as double the fines for parking in the bike lane.
Fucking pigs.
Harbord bike lanes retouch
New blobs of paint that somewhat resemble bicycles have been showing up on Harbord St. It appears that the city was trying to repaint the lanes but soon gave up when Huey realized that the wind was to high. Congrats to the city for repainting the lanes just in time for winter.
Cyclist killed on bike path
Police request assistance with bicycle-on-bicycle collision
Broadcast time: 17:35
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Traffic Services
416-808-1900
On Tuesday, October 20, 2009, at 11:43 p.m., police responded to a call for a bicycle-on-bicycle collision, in the Bayview Avenue/Pottery Road area. It is reported that:
- an 84-year-old man was riding southbound on a bicycle path, just south of Pottery Road, adjacent to Bayview Avenue,
- the man was descending a hill when his shoulder struck the shoulder of a 61-year-old man riding his bike,
- the 84-year-old man, who was wearing a helmet, fell to the ground and struck his head,
He was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries and later died.
Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 416-808-1900,
Crime Stoppers
anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477), online at www.222tips.com, or text
TOR and your
message to CRIMES (274637).
Constable Isabelle Cotton, Public Information, for Constable Hugh
Smith, Traffic Services

