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Date: 28 Feb 2007 22:04:19
From: Kristian M Zoerhoff
Subject: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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...is to show up to village board meetings on your bike. For the last 2 months or so, village board meetings have coincided with my wife's night class, so I've been attending them to keep myself entertained. Naturally, this is a perfect excuse to ride: short distance, light traffic (meetings don't start until 19:30). However, we don't have racks in town, except at parks and playgrounds, so I've been locking up to the railings on the front steps of village hall. The first week, one of the trustees saw this, and we got to chatting. Turns out he rides (in fair weather, anyway), and he immediately said we should install a rack at each village building. I agreed, but then let that piece of info slide to the back of my brain during the following week. At the next meeting, during the administrator's report, he reported that this particular trustee had brought this to his attention, and that racks would be ordered and installed as soon as the ground thawed. Rock! And all because I showed up on my bike. Now to get myself hooked into the new village transportation plan... -- __o Kristian Zoerhoff _'\(,_ kristian.zoerhoff@gmail.com (_)/ (_)
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 14:10:56
From: victor.kan@gmail.com
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On 1, 4:26 pm, Kristian M Zoerhoff <kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com > wrote: > If you need a model, Naperville, IL has one: > > <http://www.sterlingcodifiers.com/IL/Naperville/08009000000009000.htm> > > Bike parking is generally provided at 5% of vehicle parking spaces, > but there are exceptions listed. This isn't about the ordinance I mentioned before, but it's related, from the other end of the issue (i.e. removing existing bicycle unfriendliness vs. adding bicycle friendliness): http://www.humantransport.org/bicycledriving/library/parking/nobicycles.htm
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 10:16:51
From: victor.kan@gmail.com
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On 1, 10:26 am, "Qui si parla Campagnolo" <p...@vecchios.com > wrote: > Nope, the fastest way in the US is contribute a buttload of $ to their > re-election fund. Everywhere else it's called a bribe, in the US is > called a 'contribution'. This reminds me of this past Election Day (or rather the Saturday when I did early voting). I rode my bike to the community center and since it was my recumbent "stick bike" (i.e. monotube, no frame triangulation), I used a pair of MasterLock "Street Cuffs" to secure it to the stair railing. A couple of candidates for judgeships and maybe a campaign worker for a sheriff saw me do this and veled at my massive set of cuffs (more like leg irons in size than hand cuffs). Somebody cracked a joke about borrowing them (in a law enforcement capacity, I'm sure :-).
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 09:54:45
From: victor.kan@gmail.com
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On Feb 28, 6:14 pm, Kristian M Zoerhoff <kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com > wrote: > Did the ordinance allow for exceptions? Sounds like he was just another > "bikes are for kids" bigot, but any bike parking rules should allow for > /some/ flexibility. A 30-minute oil change shop probably wouldn't need > one, for example. I don't recall if it allowed for exceptions, but I'm thinking that for stuff like the oil change shop, their parking lot probably isn't big enough to go beyond the threshold. The proposal was intended mainly for making strip malls more bike friendly, I think. The superket where we do much of our grocery shopping has a tiny bike rack right next to their fire door and it's not secured to anything, such that a couple of guys in a pick up truck could take the whole thing and any bikes attached to it in like five seconds. I lock my bike up to their cart return corral instead. A large mall in the area has a large bike rack (too big to steal unless you have a U-haul or something) near one of its main entrances, but it isn't secured to anything. The public library downtown has a single-sided bike rack chained to a chain-link fence along their driveway, but it is installed backwards (to avoid extending out into the driveway, I suppose) at a bizarre slope such that it is unusable for anything but maybe a little 20" wheeled BMX bike. As you'd expect, nobody uses it. Fortunately the new library has some decent bike parking in a covered area, and it sees lots of use.
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 07:54:46
From: AustinMN
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On 1, 9:26 am, "Qui si parla Campagnolo" <p...@vecchios.com > wrote: > On Feb 28, 3:04 pm, Kristian M Zoerhoff <kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > > ...is to show up to village board meetings on your bike. > > > For the last 2 months or so, village board meetings have coincided > > with my wife's night class, so I've been attending them to keep > > myself entertained. Naturally, this is a perfect excuse to ride: > > short distance, light traffic (meetings don't start until 19:30). > > However, we don't have racks in town, except at parks and playgrounds, > > so I've been locking up to the railings on the front steps of village > > hall. > > > The first week, one of the trustees saw this, and we got to chatting. > > Turns out he rides (in fair weather, anyway), and he immediately said > > we should install a rack at each village building. I agreed, but then > > let that piece of info slide to the back of my brain during the > > following week. At the next meeting, during the administrator's report, > > he reported that this particular trustee had brought this to his > > attention, and that racks would be ordered and installed as soon as > > the ground thawed. > > > Rock! > > > And all because I showed up on my bike. > > > Now to get myself hooked into the new village transportation plan... > > > -- > > > __o Kristian Zoerhoff > > _'\(,_ kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com > > (_)/ (_) > > Nope, the fastest way in the US is contribute a buttload of $ to their > re-election fund. Everywhere else it's called a bribe, in the US is > called a 'contribution'. While I agree with this, I feel it's incomplete to not point out that we in the U.S. only have to bribe, er, contribute to the ones running for election. In many other countries, you have to um, contribute, to everyone else, too. Austin
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 07:26:15
From: Qui si parla Campagnolo
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On Feb 28, 3:04 pm, Kristian M Zoerhoff <kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com > wrote: > ...is to show up to village board meetings on your bike. > > For the last 2 months or so, village board meetings have coincided > with my wife's night class, so I've been attending them to keep > myself entertained. Naturally, this is a perfect excuse to ride: > short distance, light traffic (meetings don't start until 19:30). > However, we don't have racks in town, except at parks and playgrounds, > so I've been locking up to the railings on the front steps of village > hall. > > The first week, one of the trustees saw this, and we got to chatting. > Turns out he rides (in fair weather, anyway), and he immediately said > we should install a rack at each village building. I agreed, but then > let that piece of info slide to the back of my brain during the > following week. At the next meeting, during the administrator's report, > he reported that this particular trustee had brought this to his > attention, and that racks would be ordered and installed as soon as > the ground thawed. > > Rock! > > And all because I showed up on my bike. > > Now to get myself hooked into the new village transportation plan... > > -- > > __o Kristian Zoerhoff > _'\(,_ kristian.zoerh...@gmail.com > (_)/ (_) Nope, the fastest way in the US is contribute a buttload of $ to their re-election fund. Everywhere else it's called a bribe, in the US is called a 'contribution'.
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Date: 28 Feb 2007 15:38:21
From: Ben Pfaff
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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"victor.kan@gmail.com" <victor.kan@gmail.com > writes: > I haven't done anything so proactive, but for the past few years I've > been riding to my polling places by bike (either because I was riding > to work anyway that Tuesday, or if it was an "early voting" day, > during a sunny weekend), [...] I usually bicycle to the polls, and then I stick the "I Voted!" sticker they give me on my bike. It has a few of 'em on it now. -- Ben Pfaff blp@cs.stanford.edu http://benpfaff.org
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Date: 28 Feb 2007 15:06:52
From: victor.kan@gmail.com
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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> And all because I showed up on my bike. > > Now to get myself hooked into the new village transportation plan... I haven't done anything so proactive, but for the past few years I've been riding to my polling places by bike (either because I was riding to work anyway that Tuesday, or if it was an "early voting" day, during a sunny weekend), and would either chain up to a railing if there was one, or I'd bring my bike inside with me. I didn't do anything like write-in a referendum on bike racks, but just did some conspicuous demonstration of "I cycle and I vote" kinda of thing to the politicians doing their campaigning outside. The next town over also had a discussion about a proposal to mandate the placement of bike racks in all new, commercially zoned developments that included parking lots (needless to say for automobiles) over some size threshold. I sent the town council an e- mail in support of it, telling them I'd choose to do more of my shopping, etc. in their town if it was more convenient for cycling there. I got one response back from a town council member ridiculing the proposal as an undue burden on businesses, e.g. how much sense does it make to force a funeral home to install a bike rack outside their facility (whether any funeral home would actually fall under the proposed regulation notwithstanding). That guy probably didn't care too much about the LAB giving his town a Bicycle Friendly Community designation the year before.
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 15:56:06
From: Matt O'Toole
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On Wed, 28 Feb 2007 15:06:52 -0800, victor.kan@gmail.com wrote: > I haven't done anything so proactive, but for the past few years I've > been riding to my polling places by bike (either because I was riding to > work anyway that Tuesday, or if it was an "early voting" day, during a > sunny weekend), and would either chain up to a railing if there was one, > or I'd bring my bike inside with me. I didn't do anything like write-in > a referendum on bike racks, but just did some conspicuous demonstration > of "I cycle and I vote" kinda of thing to the politicians doing their > campaigning outside. I have a bunch of those stickers on my bike too! Next election I'm going to encourage our bike club members to ride to the polls. Our politicians are one thing, but we really need to show the rest of the voting public how many of us there are. > The next town over also had a discussion about a proposal to mandate the > placement of bike racks in all new, commercially zoned developments that > included parking lots (needless to say for automobiles) over some size > threshold. I sent the town council an e- mail in support of it, telling > them I'd choose to do more of my shopping, etc. in their town if it was > more convenient for cycling there. I'd like to know where this is, because I'd like to introduce a similar ordinance here. I need a model. Is this based on square footage like car parking spaces, or what? > I got one response back from a town council member ridiculing the > proposal as an undue burden on businesses, e.g. how much sense does it > make to force a funeral home to install a bike rack outside their > facility (whether any funeral home would actually fall under the > proposed regulation notwithstanding). That guy probably didn't care too > much about the LAB giving his town a Bicycle Friendly Community > designation the year before. Show him how his math is wrong (preferably at a televised public comment session at a Town Council meeting). Find out what a parking space is worth in your town ($20k-plus is not uncommon), plus the other costs associated with motor vehicles. Compare this to the few hundred dollars it costs to install a bike rack. Ask him how a few hundred dollars could possibly be a burden on a strip center worth several hundred thousand to millions of dollars, with at least tens of thousands of dollars a month in rents coming in. All with wit and humor, of course. You'll always have one or two of these cranks, and they usually have a few like minded constituents (or they wouldn't be there). But use them as an opportunity to really make your point, and to get the buzz going in your direction. Your audience is not the cranky councilman, it's the rest of the public who may be watching. Ultimately, working on the public, not the politicians, is most effective. I've found that local politicians will go along with anything that appears to have widespread public support. Matt O.
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Date: 01 Mar 2007 21:26:19
From: Kristian M Zoerhoff
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On 2007-03-01, Matt O'Toole <mattotoole@letterboxes.org > wrote: > > I'd like to know where this is, because I'd like to introduce a similar > ordinance here. I need a model. Is this based on square footage like car > parking spaces, or what? If you need a model, Naperville, IL has one: <http://www.sterlingcodifiers.com/IL/Naperville/08009000000009000.htm > Bike parking is generally provided at 5% of vehicle parking spaces, but there are exceptions listed. -- __o Kristian Zoerhoff _'\(,_ kristian.zoerhoff@gmail.com (_)/ (_)
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Date: 28 Feb 2007 23:14:21
From: Kristian M Zoerhoff
Subject: Re: The fastest way to get your village to install bike racks...
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On 2007-02-28, victor.kan@gmail.com <victor.kan@gmail.com > wrote: >> And all because I showed up on my bike. >> >> Now to get myself hooked into the new village transportation plan... > > I haven't done anything so proactive, but for the past few years I've > been riding to my polling places by bike (either because I was riding > to work anyway that Tuesday, or if it was an "early voting" day, > during a sunny weekend), and would either chain up to a railing if > there was one, or I'd bring my bike inside with me. I didn't do > anything like write-in a referendum on bike racks, but just did some > conspicuous demonstration of "I cycle and I vote" kinda of thing to > the politicians doing their campaigning outside. I do the same thing. The first time I did it, the election judges looked at me like I'd sprouted a second head. The second time, I was "that guy on a bike". We'll see what they say on April 27th. > The next town over also had a discussion about a proposal to mandate > the placement of bike racks in all new, commercially zoned > developments that included parking lots (needless to say for > automobiles) over some size threshold. I sent the town council an e- > mail in support of it, telling them I'd choose to do more of my > shopping, etc. in their town if it was more convenient for cycling > there. This is somewhere else I'd like our village to go (I'm seeing various plans at bike parking equal to 5% of auto parking, which is pretty darned reasonable), but I'm going to take my time weaeling into this process. Change doesn't happen overnight. > I got one response back from a town council member ridiculing the > proposal as an undue burden on businesses, e.g. how much sense does it > make to force a funeral home to install a bike rack outside their > facility (whether any funeral home would actually fall under the > proposed regulation notwithstanding). That guy probably didn't care > too much about the LAB giving his town a Bicycle Friendly Community > designation the year before. Did the ordinance allow for exceptions? Sounds like he was just another "bikes are for kids" bigot, but any bike parking rules should allow for /some/ flexibility. A 30-minute oil change shop probably wouldn't need one, for example. -- __o Kristian Zoerhoff _'\(,_ kristian.zoerhoff@gmail.com (_)/ (_)
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