Providence

On Being Outdoors in Winter

Providential Gardener - Wed, 01/21/2009 - 16:01
Yesterday, January 20, 2009, more than two million people spent the day in 20-degree weather and lived to tell the tale ~ and what a tale! What a day! What a sight, to see about twice the population...

Go to The Providential Gardener for links to the people and organizations that make up the "growing community" in Rhode Island.

Reminder: I-95 South Closures Upcoming

Greater City: Providence - Tue, 01/20/2009 - 22:10

As has been widely reported, I-95 will this week have the beginning of some intense work to remove overpasses. Downtown sections of the road will be closed to traffic during overnight hours. This will mostly be taking place the last two weeks of this month and the first week of February.

The first closures will take place overnight from 11 pm to 5 am this Thursday the 22nd. The construction area is between Exit 21 (Atwells Avenue/Broadway) and Exit 19 (Eddy Street). If this impact you, then I’d strongly recommend taking a look at the RIDOT website to review detours.

Photo from the RIDOT website

Detroit (Bob Lutz, at Least) Hints at Need for Gas Tax

Greater City: Providence - Tue, 01/20/2009 - 18:58


The blunt and effective Robert Lutz of General Motors, an executive who inspires both love (he’s a product genius and calls things as he sees them) and hate (he bluntly calls things as he sees them, even when unpopular, as when he ridiculed the idea of global warming), again seems to be suggesting what many analysts have been recommending for years - that a gas tax would be good for US automakers.

As gas prices have dropped, Americans have again rapidly forgotten about $4 per gallon gas and automotive fuel economy. Hybrid sales, for example, are down more than 50%, far more than the overall market drop of about 30%. The automakers, scolded just weeks ago by a Congress who said Detroit was out of step in not having enough fuel efficient vehicles, has rushed such products to market and is now getting killed in sales for having too many of them.

Lutz, understandably frustrated, uttered what had to be two of the best quotes of last week to the NY Times, essentially calling for a gas tax by not calling for one:

Far be it for me to be the first auto executive to call for a gas tax… But right now, it’s like fighting obesity by requiring clothing manufacturers to make nothing but small sizes… Every six months we get called stupid for having the wrong products.

Photo from Wired.com

Three Foot Rule

Bike Providence - Tue, 01/20/2009 - 14:30

If you’ve been following this blog for a while, then you’ve read about the work Lori DiBiasio has done in promoting Frank’s Law.  We just received word that the RI General Assembly now has official designated this H5074 for consideration.  In particular, it would require:

31-15-18. Keeping a three foot passing distance when passing a bicycle. — (a) A
person operating a motor vehicle, when approaching a bicyclist, shall insure the safety and
protection of the bicyclist by leaving a reasonable and prudent distance between the vehicle and the bicycle. A three foot (3′) passing distance between the motor vehicle and passing bicycle shall be deemed to be reasonable and prudent. When impossible to achieve the three foot (3′) passing distance, then the vehicle shall reduce its speed to ten (10) to twenty (20) miles per hour below the posted speed limit.

A failure to keep a three foot (3′) passing distance when passing a bicycle would carry an $85 fine.  While the fine is likely to be a marginal deterrent, hopefully, having a law on the books like this would allow for the RI Attorney General to prosecute cases where cyclists are struck by automobiles.

Now would be a good time to contact your reprentatives and suggest they support this bill.

Roller Races

Bike Providence - Tue, 01/20/2009 - 13:49
February 13, 20097:00 pm

Tired of the snow?  Tired of riding alone at home on your trainer?  Interested in helping out a local bicycle non-profit?  Then save the date of Feburary 13th.  Recycle-a-Bike is hosting a roller race.

Flickr Finds: e_pics

Greater City: Providence - Sun, 01/18/2009 - 21:14


Photo © e_pics from Flickr

e_pics submitted some not so old but drastically changed streetscape photos to our Flickr Group. View more of e_pics Flickr photos here.

If you’d like us to feature your Providence photos please submit them to our group on Flickr.

Hint, Hint…

Greater City: Providence - Sun, 01/18/2009 - 21:10


As has been widely reported, Team Obama is on their way to the inauguration via rail in what we all can hope will be symbolic of a greater mass transit push in the years ahead. One national newscast even described Joseph Biden as the “nation’s most famous, frequent Amtrak rider.”

While, for the purpose of message, I would have loved to see the Obamas take something more akin to an Acela than the throwback, heritage railcar they appropriated, I think we’ll all take what we can get…

Photo from the NY Daily News website

T.F. Green Intermodal Facility

Greater City: Providence - Sun, 01/18/2009 - 20:52


T.F. Green Intermodal Facility Rendering


T.F. Green Intermodal Facility Rendering

If you haven’t been to the airport lately, you may not realize that the Intermodal Facility at the airport is actually well underway. The project includes a new rail station across Post Road from the airport. The station is currently set to serve MBTA commuter rail trains between the airport and Providence & Boston. Also at the station will be rental car facilities relocated from the airport, a parking garage for the rental fleets and commuter rail passengers, a RIPTA bus station and room for interstate buses. All of this will be connected to the airport terminal with a 1,250 foot skybridge with moving sidewalks over Post Road.

This reader submitted photo (from mid-December) shows the path of the skywalk from the terminal across the parking lots toward Post Road:

MBTA commuter rail service from T.F. Green is scheduled to begin in late 2010. Initially, 8 of the 15 round trips per day that currently serve Providence will be extended south to Warwick.

See more progress photos below the jump:

Reader submitted photos from early-January 2009 show construction of the piers which will hold up the skybridge outside the airport terminal:

So why did school close?

Greater City: Providence - Fri, 01/16/2009 - 17:08

There’s a lot of head-scratching and finger pointing about schools being closed yesterday (and some today). There was a forecast for 2-4 inches of snow yesterday, but the storm ended up sailing south of us, with just a few flakes falling in the Providence area (the Cape on the other hand got up to half a foot of snow).

I’m not here to second guess the administrators, they had a forecast for extreme cold and moderate snowfall and did what they thought was right. Imagine the finger pointing if we did have 4 or more inches of snow in addition to the extreme cold yesterday and schools were open.

But one thing in the above report from Channel 12 did make me wonder. Part way into the report, Walt Buteau outlines, with a graphic, what criteria goes into school cancellations due to cold. Those criteria are if the forecast is for single digit temperatures or less, length of wait at the bus stop (if it is too cold, they don’t want kids waiting for the bus and getting frostbite), and are the sidewalks clear.

So here’s my question, taking point three into account, shouldn’t school have been cancelled since December 19th and still cancelled now? Because, the sidewalks aren’t clear in many areas.

Sale of Westminster St. Building

Greater City: Providence - Fri, 01/16/2009 - 16:30


View Larger Map

According to the Projo Blog the building at 380 Westminster St has been sold to UrbanAmerica LP, of New York.

The Projo article doesn’t mention if the current tenants (the IRS, bankruptcy court, Navy and Army recruiters office) are staying or being forced out. If the building is no longer going to be used for Federal offices, it raises some interesting questions.

So who is this buyer of such a prominent building? A quick Google search for UrbanAmerica LP brought me to their website, and from their site:

UrbanAmerica is a registered investment advisor with a distinctive vision for and specialized expertise in urban center real estate investment nationwide. The firm delivers value-added returns to investors, while also stimulating economic impact in its investment locales.

UrbanAmerica identifies, enhances and captures value by:

  • Maintaining a dynamic proprietary pipeline. Extensive industry, political and non-profit relationships keep UrbanAmerica abreast of high-potential opportunities.
  • Bringing an institutional owner/operator mindset and Class A development capacity to its markets, where traditionally these are lacking.
  • Partnering with national retailers to help execute their urban strategy.
  • Executing replicable growth strategies on behalf of leading institutional investors, including pension funds, banks, and insurance companies.

Further poking around on their website, I see they have a few examples of buildings they have purchased and what modifications they’ve made. Overall, it looks like they have a history of updating the buildings as needed, getting big tenants to occupy at least a portion of the space, and mixing the use to fill the remaining space.

I don’t know anything about the company beyond what they have on their website, but to speculate, if they can use some of their strength on the Westminster St building, that might extend the Westminster Renaissance further towards Empire St.

This particular building is set back from the street a bit, and the frontage is raised a few steps from the sidewalk creating a shadowy corridor. This dissuades pedestrians from walking along side the building, and generally might encourage you to ignore it all together. However, if a significant retail tenant occupied the first floor, added some signage and window displays, and encouraged pedestrians to actually approach the building, I see this as a potential win for Westminster and Providence.

Since this building houses multiple Federal offices, it’s unclear if the buildings appearance is due to necessary security concerns. If the current occupants are going to stay, and the new owners intend on adding retail, is there a way to mix a retail space with secure office space?

What do you think? Can we have first floor retail and secure federal offices above, or is that pushing mixed use too far?

This is how Boston gets it done

Greater City: Providence - Fri, 01/16/2009 - 15:20
Photo Wendy Maeda Boston Globe Staff

The Boston Globe reports today about Boston’s high-tech approach to enforcing snow removal laws.

Code inspectors have taken to the streets this winter with a new weapon, palm-size computers with touch screens that snap photographs of treacherous patches of ice, snow, and slush. Thumbnail images are stamped on tickets and printed instantly with a wireless 32-ounce printer slung over an officer’s shoulder like a purse.

Officials hope the immediacy of the photographs will act as a deterrent, reducing the number of slick sidewalks that twist ankles, flare tempers, and force some pedestrians to walk in the street, which can be dangerous. When property owners find a green envelope for a code violation stuffed under their doors, they are staring at evidence they will have to explain if they plan to appeal.

Read that second paragraph again. Officials hope this will reduce the number of slick sidewalks, injuries, and people forced to walk in the street. Not a crazy ranting blogger hopes, Officials hope. The government in Boston actually sees this is an issue that needs to be addressed. Who knew a city could be run like that?

Bike Valets for Inauguration Day– what a concept!

Bike Providence - Fri, 01/16/2009 - 01:35

Bike Valets for Inauguration Day By Bernie Becker

Driving doesn’t look like a great option. And while mass transit may be, Washington’s subway and bus system are expected to be packed.

Which, in spite of the expected frigid conditions, makes the idea of biking to President-elect Barack Obama’s inauguration all the more attractive. One question, though: Where do you stash your bike?

The Washington Area Bicyclist Association has come up with an answer – bike valets.

With the blessing and support of Washington’s Transportation Department, W.A.B.A. will be operating two valet stations near the National Mall – one to the south (at the Jefferson Memorial) and one to the north (just north of the White House on 16th Street).

“We’re trying to provide as many options as possible,” said Jim Sebastian, who manages bicycle programs for the Transportation Department. “If you live three, four, five miles away, that’s a long way to walk. But – weather permitting – it’s not far for a bike ride.”

Eric Gilliland, W.A.B.A.’s executive director, said he believed the valet stations will help funnel visitors toward the Mall more smoothly.

“Security zones were up in the air for a long time. You don’t know how security’s going to handle all these people,” Mr. Gilliland said. “This will be a safe place, with everything closely monitored.”

“When you focus the bikes in a couple of locations, instead of scattered all over, it helps the safety of the crowd and the bikes,” Mr. Sebastian added.

Estimates on the size of Tuesday’s crowds are still fluctuating. But if the response to the bike valets is any indication, it could get mighty crowded.

W.A.B.A. first expected up to 1,000 bikes on Inauguration Day, but it now seems that number could double. The non-profit had already received 1,300 RSVP’s by Wednesday afternoon, a full six days before the inauguration. And since RSVP’s are not even required, that number could grow much higher.

“We may have to play it by ear and adjust on the fly,” said Mr. Gilliland. “We can easily account for 2,000 or so. After that, we’ll have to be a little creative.”

Come Tuesday morning, cyclists can drop their bikes off at either location starting at 7 a.m. The cyclist will then receive half a claim ticket, while the other half is fastened to their bike.

The stations close at 5 p.m. Staff at the sites will collect cyclist’s phone numbers, so they can contact the owners of uncollected bikes as closing time approaches.

Unlike most valets for your motorized vehicles, this service will be free. Dero Bike Rack Company, which is based in Minnesota, will provide the racks free of charge, while America Bikes, a Washington-based coalition of cycling groups, is also lending financial support.

This will not be a completely new experience for W.A.B.A., which has supplied valets for other large events in Washington, including the Cherry Blossom Festival and the city’s July 4 celebration.

“We’ve never lost a bike yet,” said Mr. Gilliland.

But at those events, W.A.B.A. probably never handled more than 300 bikes, Mr. Gilliland said, less than a quarter of the numbers that have already RSVP’ed for Tuesday.

Now, with Inauguration Day quickly approaching, Mr. Gilliland is trying to tie up the last few loose ends. Though W.A.B.A. already has 70 volunteers lined up for Inauguration Day, Mr. Gilliland expects to need around 90. And he still has to secure coffee for those volunteers and maybe even line up a messenger service to shuttle back and forth between the two stations.

“A lot of it’s covered,” Mr. Gilliland said. “But we’re not quite ready yet.”

Hudson River plane crash

Greater City: Providence - Thu, 01/15/2009 - 23:08


Photo REUTERS/Brendan McDermid from Boston.com

Wow! Everyone made it out safe!

Reports indicate that the plane hit a flock of birds (NTSB will not confirm that ahead of an investigation), disabling it’s engines. The pilot was able to make a controlled landing in the Hudson River and everyone on board was able to escape with only minor injuries reported. Just amazing, someone get that pilot a medal!

I lived in NYC and was in Manhattan on September 11th and every time I hear something bad like this happen in the city, I panic a little. What a relief to know that this event has proved to not be a tragedy.

Related
Updates from the New York Times
Video coverage from MSNBC

Providence Geeks (01/21)

Greater City: Providence - Thu, 01/15/2009 - 22:49


Photo by bjepson on Flickr

Let’s get this new year kicked off right. Join us for the first Geek Dinner of 2009.

Providence-based Treanor Brothers Animation is one of the world’s leading 3d animation boutiques for the online and video game industries. Recent projects include the Speed Racer video game and an online environment for the movie Iron Man. At next week’s Geek Dinner, Todd Treanor, Paul Treanor, and Paul DiPierro will give an overview of their studio and show off some of their tools, techniques, and recent work. In the meantime, check out their 2007 reel.

Get Details and RSVP here

Wednesday, January 21, 2009, 5:30pm–9:00pm
AS220, 115 Empire Street, Providence, RI
FREE (buy your own food and drink – it’s cheap)

It’s the law: get on your bicycle

Bike Providence - Thu, 01/15/2009 - 21:29

Not in Providence, of course… but Jakarta.

Indonesian officials ride bicycles to combat global warming

Apparently you have to live in a nation comprised of islands, many low-lying, before your government takes global climate change seriously…

Rep.Blumenauer, Bicycle Evangelist

Bike Providence - Tue, 01/13/2009 - 12:59

A Bicycle Evangelist With the Wind Now at His Back

By CORNELIA DEAN

 

Published: January 12, 2009 PORTLAND, Ore. — For years, Earl Blumenauer has been on a mission, and now his work is paying off. He can tell by the way some things are deteriorating around here.

Stirling Elmendorf

Representative Earl Blumenauer of Oregon.

“People are flying through stop signs on bikes,” Mr. Blumenauer said. “We are seeing in Portland bike congestion. You’ll see people biking across the river on a pedestrian bridge. They are just chock-a-block.”

Mr. Blumenauer, a passionate advocate of cycling as a remedy for everything from climate change to obesity, represents most of Portland in Congress, where he is the founder and proprietor of the 180 (plus or minus)-member Congressional Bicycle Caucus. Long regarded in some quarters as quixotic, the caucus has come into its own as hard times, climate concerns, gyrating gas prices and worries about fitness turn people away from their cars and toward their bikes.

“We have been flogging this bicycle thing for 20 years,” said Mr. Blumenauer, a Democrat. “All of a sudden it’s hot.”

But Mr. Blumenauer’s goals are larger than putting Americans on two wheels. He seeks to create what he calls a more sustainable society, including wiser use of energy, farming that improves the land rather than degrades it, an end to taxpayer subsidies for unwise development — and a transportation infrastructure that looks beyond the car.

For him, the global financial collapse is “perhaps the best opportunity we will ever see” to build environmental sustainability into the nation’s infrastructure, with urban streetcar systems, bike and pedestrian paths, more efficient energy transmission and conversion of the federal government’s 600,000-vehicle fleet to use alternate fuels.

“These are things that three years ago were unimaginable,” he said. “And if they were imaginable, we could not afford them. Well, now when all the experts agree that we will be lucky if we stabilize the economy in a couple of years, when there is great concern about the consequences of the collapse of the domestic auto producers, gee, these are things that are actually reasonable and affordable.”

All this might still be pie-in-the-sky were it not for one of Mr. Blumenauer’s fellow biking enthusiasts, Representative James L. Oberstar, a Minnesota Democrat, avid cyclist and chairman of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, which has jurisdiction over surface transportation.

“He’s been wonderful,” Mr. Oberstar said of his Oregon colleague. And as support for cycling grows, he said, builders, the highway construction lobby and others have stopped regarding biking as a “nuisance” and started thinking about how they can do business.

With an eye on the potential stimulus package, cycling advocates “have compiled a list of $2 billion of projects that can be under construction in 90 days,” Mr. Oberstar said, adding that prospects are “bright.”

In addition, after many attempts, this fall Mr. Blumenauer saw Congress approve his proposal to extend the tax breaks offered for employee parking to employers who encourage biking. The measure, which Mr. Blumenauer called a matter of “bicycle parity,” was part of a bailout bill.

Mr. Blumenauer has spent a lot of time on another issue that ordinarily draws little attention: the federally subsidized flood insurance program. The program serves people who own property along coasts and rivers who otherwise would pay enormous premiums for private flood insurance, if they could obtain it at all.

The insurance “subsidized people to live in places where nature repeatedly showed they weren’t wanted,” he said. They might be better off if they did not live there, he said, but “it’s un-American to say, ‘Get out.’ ” Politicians who should confront the problem “are betting Nimto, not in my term of office,” he said. They hope that disasters will spare their districts or, if they strike, that the government will come to the rescue, Mr. Blumenauer said.

A Portland native, Mr. Blumenauer, 60, has spent his adult life in elective office. He graduated from Lewis and Clark College in 1970 (after organizing an unsuccessful 1969 campaign to lower the state’s voting age to 18) and worked until 1977 as assistant to the president of Portland State University. In 1972, he won a seat in the Oregon House of Representatives. He moved to the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners in 1978, and from there, in 1986, he won election to the Portland City Council. Though he lost a mayoral election in 1992, he easily won election to the United States House in 1996 and has not faced serious opposition since.

Mr. Blumenauer entered Congress just after Newt Gingrich, the Republican speaker, killed a stopgap spending measure, shutting down much of the government, out of pique over his treatment on Air Force One. “Partisan tensions were very raw,” Mr. Blumenauer said. The bicycle caucus was “a way to bring people together.”

Sherwood Boehlert, a Republican and fellow bicyclist who represented upstate New York in Congress until 2007, agreed. When “partisanship was at an all-time high and tolerance of another point of view was at a longtime low,” he wore the bike caucus’s plastic bicycle lapel pin. “Bicycling unites people regardless of party affiliation,” he said.

In addition to bicycles, Mr. Blumenauer is particularly interested in public broadcasting and the plight of pollinators like honeybees. He is a founder of a “livable communities task force” whose goal, he said, is to educate members of Congress and their staffs on the benefits of transportation alternatives, open space, sustainability, vibrant downtowns, affordable housing and transparency in government.

Initially, he said, these interests marked him as “kind of left coast.” Not anymore. “They are becoming very mainstream,” said Adam B. Schiff, a Democrat who represents in Congress the area around Pasadena, Calif., and who, with Mr. Blumenauer’s bicycle advice, now regularly rides to work from his home in Maryland. “He has been way out in front of the Congress,” Mr. Schiff said. “Now the rest of us are trying to catch up.”

When Mr. Blumenauer is in his Portland district, he usually gets around by bike, cycling about 20 miles in a typical day. He has three bikes in Washington and five here, and he cycles in all weather, even in the unusual snow Portland has had recently. “In falling snow you can get some traction,” he said.

But the surge of bicycling in Portland has not been free of incident. The Oregonian newspaper and bloggers have reported on “bike rage,” drunken biking, hit-and-run bicycle accidents and other problems. Drivers complain about bikers who ignore traffic rules or hog narrow roads, phenomena some irritated motorists attribute to feelings of entitlement or moral superiority.

Mr. Blumenauer brushes off this criticism. “They are burning calories, not fossil fuel, they are taking up much less space, they are seeing the world at 10 miles per hour instead of 20 or 30,” he said. “And even though there are occasionally cranky or rude cyclists, they are no greater a percentage than cranky or rude motorists.”

Plus, he added, “they have really fought for their place on the asphalt.”

Another reason to recognize bikes as transportation

Bike Providence - Sun, 01/11/2009 - 16:10
January 11, 2009 Editorial Men on Bicycles By LAWRENCE DOWNES

A well-worn landscape like Long Island’s yields few surprises to the driver’s gaze. Shops cluster by size and species: pizza with bagels and nail salons, Home Depot with Old Navy. But one roadside incongruity that always unnerves me is the sight of a person outside the shell of a car on purpose — like a man pedaling slowly beside a highway on a bicycle.

Bicyclists and suburbs are an uneasy fit. I don’t mean the racing bikers who swarm like neon-colored beetles, hogging the middle of the road. I’m talking about the guys without helmets, on beat-up mountain bikes: restaurant workers wearing windbreakers over white dress shirts and ties; men in sweatshirts and baseball caps riding home from the store, plastic shopping bags hanging awkwardly off the handlebars.

Such sights are evidence of a valiant adaptation to a hostile environment. For immigrant workers, as with so many of us in the suburbs, life boils down to the job, the bed and the travel between. But when you live in a landscape designed for cars, and you are poor, and it is too far to walk to work, and there’s no bus to take you there, the only option is two wheels. This is what is cheap and effective. It can also be deadly.

On Christmas Day, a car going at least 80 miles per hour on Route 111 in Central Islip hit a bicyclist, Hector Rapalo. The driver sped off. Mr. Rapalo, a 39-year-old Honduran immigrant who worked at a pizza shop, died. Police said that the collision may or may not have been an accident, but that the driver surely knew that he or she had struck someone.

Immigrants ask for little more than the opportunity to work so they can send money home. Their lives are quiet but precarious, in a place that accepts their labor but offers little warmth or welcome. An inveterate hostility sometimes sinks into brutality, as in the fatal stabbing in Patchogue last November of Marcelo Lucero, an Ecuadorean immigrant set upon by a gang of teenagers.

The accidents they suffer go unnoticed, except when carnage briefly makes the news: Santos Javier Ramos, 21, a bicyclist killed by a car in Selden; Enrique Aguilar-Gamez, 26, fatally struck by a minivan while bicycling in Copiague; Adolfo Reyes, 42, a day laborer badly injured by a hit-and-run driver while on foot in Holtsville. The police in that case suspected a hate crime, because there were no skid marks or evidence that the driver slowed down after Mr. Reyes flew into his windshield, fracturing his skull, collarbone and arm.

“Shovel-Ready” Projects

Bike Providence - Fri, 01/09/2009 - 14:38

I’m sure many of you are aware, their are hopes of some major federal stimulus funding for “shovel-ready” state infrastructure projects on the horizon.  Rhode Island, as I’m sure is true with every state, is scrambling to get their list of projects compiled and off to the federal government to be evaluated by Congress.  The Projo had frontpage article listing shovel ready projects, ready to go out bid, in this morning’s paper.  I was pleased to see the George Redman Linear Park at the top of this list.

The article cites RIDOT as the source for the information, but there is no guarantee that this list is in any way official.  If you would like to see some of the state’s federal funds put towards this project, which would provide an excellent link between the East Bay Bike Path and Providence, I’d encourage you to contact RIDOT and let them know.  Here is some contact information:

RIDOT Director ’s Office
401-222-2481
CustomerService@dot.ri.gov

Advoacy Meeting Minutes - 1.8.09

Bike Providence - Fri, 01/09/2009 - 02:34

Here is a copy of the minutes from the January 8, 2009 advocacy meeting.  Let me know if you have any additions or corrections.  For those in attendence, if you agreed to take on the lead role for one of our longer running projects, your name is listed in parenthesis.

Advocacy Meeting - January 8th

Bike Providence - Mon, 01/05/2009 - 16:39
January 8, 20096:00 pm

Welcome to 2009!  I hope the holidays were good to everyone and you are ready to help make 2009 the yaer of the bicycle in Providence.  Our next adocacy meeting is just around the corner.   We will be meeting @ 6pm, at the office of Red Five Sports Group (269 S Main St, Providence).  On the agenda for this meeting:

Continuing Business:

  • The Bike Providence T-shirt design
  • Public Service Announcement project update
  • Driver manual pamphlet update
  • Henderson and Washington bridge updates
  • NBW/GARI grant application
  • Bike to Work Day (B2WD)

New Business:

  • Discussion about what we can do to help DOT apply for grants to support bicycle infrastructure under the stimulus package.
  • Google Map displaying official city routes, recommended routes, points-of-interest, etc.

There will be time to discuss other topics after these items are discussed.

As always, we encourage anyone interested in bicycle advocacy to attend our meetings.  We want to hear from as many voices and willing volunteers as we can!

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