Hey guys...
I regret that I'm going to have to miss my first bike board meeting tomorrow. I am in the middle of ripping off siding, insulating, and replacing OSB, housewrap, and siding on my house. I'm a little nervous about getting it weatherproof for the rain this weekend, so I'm going to dedicate my evenings this week to that. If I manage to get alot done tonight, maybe I'll make it, but I doubt it.
Frank,
Please discuss what I've expressed concerning the mapping with the rest of the …
[View More]bike board and decide what you guys would like to see and email me back ASAP. I've even seen messages on the bike board about not being 100% comfortable with the SLM's, etc. Are we all in agreement that they'll be placed on the road? Thanks.
~Derek
_________________________________________________________________
Want to do more with Windows Live? Learn “10 hidden secrets” from Jamie.
http://windowslive.com/connect/post/jamiethomson.spaces.live.com-Blog-cns!5…
[View Less]
Bicycle Board Members,
Thanks to Jim Rye for providing me Gayle Manchin's address and thanks to
Nick Hein for feedback on my first draft. The message that I sent is below.
Frank
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Bicycling
Date: Tue, 02 Sep 2008 22:28:49 -0400
From: Frank Gmeindl <fgmeindl(a)verizon.net>
To: FirstLady(a)WVGov.org
Dear First Lady Manchin,
I am sorry about your bicycle crash and hope your injuries are truly
minor and heal quickly. I don't know the …
[View More]details but I do know that in
many of these crashes the motorist says, "I didn't even see her!"
The League of American Bicyclists' Road I course teaches cyclists to
maximize their visibility and predictability. You can review the LAB
Bicycle Education program at http://www.bikeleague.org/programs/education/.
Would you allow me to teach you Road I? The LAB BikeEd program is the
only national bicyclist education program and I am one of West
Virginia's 3 instructors certified by the LAB to teach it. I am also
Chairman of the Morgantown Municipal Bicycle Board which advises the
Morgantown Traffic Commission, City Engineer and City Manager.
Of course, I have a personal agenda here. I'm hoping that once you
master Road I knowledge and skills, you'll share them with other
cyclists as well as motorists and help make West Virginia safer for
bicyclists.
I know that you already support the Safe Routes to Schools program.
Road I is the parent course for the LAB Kids I and Kids II courses that
are essential for children to ride safely to school.
I look forward to your response.
Ride safely,
Frank Gmeindl
491 Wilson Avenue
Morgantown, WV 26501
304-376-0446 (cell)
304-367-8395 (work)
340-284-8094 (home)
/Cyclists fare best when they act and are treated as drivers of vehicles./
[View Less]
Frank,
You might also mention that you recall when the "Safe Routes to School" federal money first came to WV the first lady expressed her strong support. I'm not sure how to work this in, but mention that the Road I and Kids I/II classes have typically resulted in an 80% reduction in crash rates. This means kids who take the course are that much less likely to have an accident like hers.
Thanks for taking this on,
Nick
---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: …
[View More]Jonathan Rosenbaum <freesource(a)cheat.org>
Date: Tue, 02 Sep 2008 14:40:14 -0400
>This message is being forwarded on Frank's behalf:
>
>Bicycle Board Members,
>
>Of course this is a ripe banana. Please give me your feedback on the
>message below that I want to sent the WV's first Lady. (How do you
>address WV's first Lady? Hey, Gayle!?)
>
>Please reply to fgmeindl(a)verizon.net <mailto:fgmeindl@verizon.net>. I
>will send out the letter tonight.
>
>Frank
>
>
>
>**************************************************************************
>
>
>
>Dear First Lady,
>
>
>I am sorry about your bicycle crash and hope your injuries are truly
>minor and heal quickly. I don't know the details but I do know that in
>many of these crashes the motorist says, "I didn't even see her!"
>
>
>The League of American Bicyclists' Road I course teaches cyclists to
>maximize their visibility and predictability. You can review the LAB
>Bicycle Education program at http://www.bikeleague.org/programs/education/.
>
>
>I would like to teach you the Road I course. The LAB BikeEd program is
>the only national bicyclist education program and I am one of West
>Virginia's 3 instructors certified by the LAB to teach it. I am also
>Chairman of the Morgantown Municipal Bicycle Board which advises the
>Morgantown Traffic Commission, City Engineer and City Manager.
>
>
>Of course, I have a personal agenda here. I'm hoping that once you
>master Road I knowledge and skills, you'll share them with other
>cyclists as well as motorists and help make West Virginia safer for
>cyclists to bicycle anywhere, anytime for any reason.
>
>
>Frank Gmeindl
>
>/Cyclists fare best when they act and are treated as drivers of vehicles/
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
--
Nick Hein
Director, Positive Spin
Morgantown, WV
ph 304-276-0213
--
[View Less]
This message is being forwarded on Frank's behalf:
Bicycle Board Members,
Of course this is a ripe banana. Please give me your feedback on the
message below that I want to sent the WV's first Lady. (How do you
address WV's first Lady? Hey, Gayle!?)
Please reply to fgmeindl(a)verizon.net <mailto:fgmeindl@verizon.net>. I
will send out the letter tonight.
Frank
**************************************************************************
Dear First Lady,
I am sorry about your …
[View More]bicycle crash and hope your injuries are truly
minor and heal quickly. I don't know the details but I do know that in
many of these crashes the motorist says, "I didn't even see her!"
The League of American Bicyclists' Road I course teaches cyclists to
maximize their visibility and predictability. You can review the LAB
Bicycle Education program at http://www.bikeleague.org/programs/education/.
I would like to teach you the Road I course. The LAB BikeEd program is
the only national bicyclist education program and I am one of West
Virginia's 3 instructors certified by the LAB to teach it. I am also
Chairman of the Morgantown Municipal Bicycle Board which advises the
Morgantown Traffic Commission, City Engineer and City Manager.
Of course, I have a personal agenda here. I'm hoping that once you
master Road I knowledge and skills, you'll share them with other
cyclists as well as motorists and help make West Virginia safer for
cyclists to bicycle anywhere, anytime for any reason.
Frank Gmeindl
/Cyclists fare best when they act and are treated as drivers of vehicles/
[View Less]
Does anybody know who is Carolyn Hampson and what is her power? Also,
is she talking about Nick's interview on WAJR when she says, "Last week,
the chevron plan hit the morning WAJR talk shows...and the response was
total outrage. I don';t think I have ever heard so many angry
voices."? Should we pay any attention to this?
Frank
/Bicyclists fare best when they act and are treated as drivers of vehicles/
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FW: Morgantown city council message
…
[View More]Date: Mon, 01 Sep 2008 01:05:11 -0400
From: Don Spencer <dspencer36(a)comcast.net>
To: Frank Gmeindl <fgmeindl(a)verizon.net>
Frank -- Here is a copy of the correspondence that I told you that I
would pass along to you. I hope that we can discuss the issue at our
meeting on Thursday.
See you soon!
Don
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Don Spencer [mailto:dspencer36@comcast.net]
*Sent:* Wednesday, August 27, 2008 4:00 PM
*To:* 'Hampson'; 'charliebyrer(a)gmail.com'; 'bill(a)byrnehedges.com'; 'Ron
Justice'; 'Jennifer Selin'; 'Bane, Ron'; 'jgaddis(a)gaddisconsulting.com';
'Linda Little'; 'Dan Boroff'
*Subject:* RE: Morgantown city council message
Hi, Carolyn -- Thank you for your email. I hope that you are doing well
these days -- other than the pollution impacts.
I assume by your #1 that you mean air pollution primarily. If so, what
we seem to need is more data, because right now, we do not seem to have
a handle to use in grappling with this issue.
On #2, I am sorry that I missed the talk show. I was not aware of it. It
is not bicycles "into the center traffic lanes", but it is a process to
educate the public that bicycle riders are like of the drivers of
vehicles: they do have a right to be traveling on roadways -- except
where specifically prohibited such as on an Interstate. And they, like
all vehicle operators -- are subject to all the rights and
responsibilities of traveling on a public road. I fear that the chevron
plan -- like the rail-trail at the beginning - is already misunderstood.
The Bicycle Board has its work cut out for them. As you know, change is
never easy.
Don
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Hampson [mailto:giselle@iolinc.net]
*Sent:* Tuesday, August 26, 2008 10:34 AM
*To:* D spencer; charliebyrer(a)gmail.com; bill(a)byrnehedges.com; Ron
Justice; Jennifer Selin; Bane, Ron; jgaddis(a)gaddisconsulting.com; Linda
Little; Dan Boroff
*Cc:* Dan Boroff
*Subject:* Morgantown city council message
There are two serious areas of public safety that do not appear on
tonight's COW agenda but that need to be addressed.
l. The increasingly lethal pollution in Morgantown.
There seems to be NO monitoring at construction sites. Added to tye
toxic mix from the power plants and the river are the fumes from coal,
"biafiora fill" trucksd and delivery trucks. in my neighborhood, there
is a stranghe epdiemic of pancreatitis, involving both people and animals.
2. Plans to integrate bicycles into the center of traffic lanes.
This may look wonderful on compuiter models---but, frankly, it is
insane, given all of the conditions on the ground here. The situation
on our roads is already deadly; if this plan is implementerd NOW, more
people are going to die.
Last week, the chevron plan hit the morning WAJR talk shows...and
the response was total outrage. I don';t think I have ever heard so
many angry voices.
I urge you to reconsider this plan.
Carolyn Hampson
[View Less]
Bicycle Board Members,
Please find attached a zip folder. The zip folder contains 5 files:
1. The agenda for this Thursday's (4-Sep) Bicycle Board meeting;
2. The minutes of our last meeting;
3. The current membership roster;
4. The chevrons letter from the woman complaining we're all going to DIE.
5. An Excel file with all the action items that we've processed to date.
Also, I had to send you the following link. Is it true gunnar & Betsy
have one of these at their …
[View More]house?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2008/08/14/VI20080814016…
Frank
[View Less]
Good morning,
An astute MonBikeClub reader sent me this story last nite, but I didn't get around to forwarding it until this morning. Other stories have indicated that the driver was NOT cited. None of the coverage has given details of the collision. Gayle Manchin has spoken publicly in favor of "Safe Routes to Schools" in the past so it sounds like she's an advocate. Frank, since you're the only LCI in the state for adults do you think you could offer to give her (and the motorist) a Road …
[View More]I class?
Nick Hein
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26486897/?GT1=43001
W.Va.'s first lady hit by car while riding bike Gayle Manchin sustained bruises in accident; governor wasn't hurt updated 3:03 p.m. MT, Sun., Aug. 31, 2008 function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' & n & window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,((''.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('633558134013830000');
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The first lady of West Virginia is recovering from bruises after she was struck by a car while riding a bicycle with her husband, Gov. Joe Manchin.
Gayle Manchin was taken to a hospital Sunday after the accident, but was OK and went home, a spokeswoman for the governor said.
The accident occurred during a bike ride near the state Capitol, when a vehicle pulling onto a road hit the first lady, spokeswoman Lara Ramsburg said.
The governor was not hit. He turned back to help his wife, who was also aided by their security detail.
Ramsburg said she doesn't know whether the driver was cited. Police did not immediately return a telephone message for comment.
--
Nick Hein
Director, Positive Spin
Morgantown, WV
ph 304-276-0213
--
[View Less]
Good evening,
This was in the washingtonpost. com 31 August 2008
Nick Hein
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ wp-dyn/content/ story/2008/ 08/30/ST20080830 00650.html? sid=ST2008083000 650&s_pos=list
For Bicyclists, a Widening Patchwork World
U.S. Lags Behind Two-Wheeled Boom
By Blaine Harden
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, August 31, 2008; Page A01
TACHIA, Taiwan -- Antony Lo is one happy biker. He is 60 but looks younger, with a body buffed by commuting 130 …
[View More]miles a week on his bike. He is also president of Taiwan-based Giant, the world's largest bicycle company, where sales are soaring, helped along by global anxiety over oil prices. With undisguised glee, Lo says: "High-priced gasoline is here to stay. I tell my people we are just at the beginning of a very big cycling boom."
Boom it is. The number of cyclists has doubled in a decade in cities as disparate as Berlin and Bogota . Global bicycle production has increased for six consecutive years, according to a report by the Earth Policy Institute. Sales at Giant have doubled since 2002 and continue to accelerate, up 24 percent in the first half of this year.
Yet when it comes to using a bike for everyday transportation, the boom appears to have bypassed many countries. While Northern Europe and Japan have figured out how to make bicycle commuting a safe, cheap alternative to driving, the United States , Canada , Australia and Britain have not. And the world's two most populous nations, China and India, are discarding bicycles in favor of cars. A rising middle class in both countries views cycling as an unhappy reminder of the recent past, when nearly everyone was poor.
Still, among the world's most developed countries, a reliable recipe has emerged for making cycling a mainstream means of getting to work.
Commuters in Northern Europe have been lured out of their cars by bike lanes, secure bike parking and easy access to mass transportation. At the same time, steep automobile taxes, congestion-zone fees and go-slow rules have made inner-city driving a costly pain in the neck. In the Netherlands , where such carrot-and-stick policies have been in place for decades, 27 percent of all trips are by bike.
"It is very clear how to do this," said John Pucher, a professor of urban planning at Rutgers University and lead author of a global study of strategies that promote cycling. "It is not rocket science."
In the United States , with the exception of a handful of cities, these strategies have been ignored. Car-centric transportation policies and suburban sprawl continue to make bicycle commuting rare, arduous and relatively dangerous. Although millions of Americans recreate on bikes, they ride them for just 0.4 percent of their trips to work, according to the U.S. Census.
Germans are 10 times more likely than Americans to ride a bike and three times less likely to get hurt while doing so. On any given workday, more commuters park their bikes at train and subway stations in Tokyo (704,000) than cycle to work in the entire United States (535,000), according to the Tokyo government and the U.S. Census.
In recent months, bike shops across much of the United States have been flooded with new customers fed up with high gasoline prices, said An Le, the Los Angeles-based global marketing director of Giant.
Yet without major changes in U.S. transportation policy and infrastructure, an earnest desire to save money on gas is not enough to turn American bike owners into everyday cyclists who ride to work, according to urban planners, transportation experts and bicycle company executives.
"In the United States , we simply have not figured out how to fit the pieces together for a coordinated package that puts people on bikes," Pucher said.
Britain Makes a Start
When cities do fit the pieces together, they often see an almost instantaneous surge in cycling.
In Britain , a country whose nationwide transportation system is nearly as inhospitable to cycling as that of the United States , London has emerged as Exhibit A for the quick infrastructure fix that gets commuters out of cars.
In 2003, the city imposed a steep "congestion charge" of about $16 for cars driving into the city center. Within a year, inner-city cycling had increased by about 25 percent. In the past eight years, there has been a 10-fold increase in city spending on bike lanes, bike parking and education programs. The effort has nearly doubled cycling throughout London .
There also seems to have been a fundamental change in the way Londoners think about cycling. It's become cool. Model Elle McPherson, Mick Jagger and Madonna have been spotted on bikes.
Angela Simoes, 55, sold her car seven months ago. When the mother of two needs groceries, three miles away, she cycles. When she visits the doctor, one mile away, she cycles. She is studying to become a teacher, and when she wants to let off steam, she cycles, sometimes for hours.
She rarely uses the subway, but when she does, she locks her bicycle to one of the many bike rails provided outside the station. She also has a folding bike, which she carries on the train like an oversize handbag.
The decision to ditch her car was easy, she said. Gas prices had shot up, she won the folding bike in a contest, and her car needed costly repairs.
She doesn't miss the car. "It's so much quicker to jump on the cycle and get a few things," she said. "There's no pollution and you're keeping fit."
As much as she can, she rides in London 's new bike lanes and uses bus lanes that have been opened to cyclists. But Britain still has a long way to go before it connects the cycling dots.
There is "no one long path we can call our own" in London , and roads outside the city are dangerous, she said. "A cyclist has to keep her eyes peeled."
Europe's Full Embrace
Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands have been connecting the dots for three decades. They started in the mid-1970s, in the wake of the world's first oil shock and after 25 years of American-style, car-centric traffic management that had coincided with a sharp decline in cycling.
There is now an integrated system of safe bicycling routes in most cities in all three countries. It allows cyclists to go almost everywhere on paths that are separated from automobiles and in "traffic-calmed" neighborhoods. Besides pampering cyclists, these countries punished drivers with fees and restrictions intended to make commuting by car expensive, slow and frustrating.
The policies have resulted in the developed world's highest per-capita rates of cycling and lowest rates of cycling accidents, the Rutgers study found.
In Berlin , biking now accounts for 12 percent of all transportation. The city has 3.4 million residents, and the city estimates that they use their bicycles a million times a day.
One of those cyclists is Michael Abraham, 35, an engineer at Berlin 's Technical University . He has been riding a bicycle to stay in shape most of his life, but in the past year, goaded by high gasoline prices, he started cycling to work. "It's simply cheaper with your bike," he said.
Abraham estimates that he now saves about $35 a week on gasoline. That's not the only benefit. Thanks to Berlin 's finely tuned cycling network, he also knows exactly how long his 7 1/2 mile commute will take -- 35 minutes. If he drives, the trip takes between 20 minutes and 1 1/2 hours, depending on traffic.
"With a car you can't reliably predict how long your commute will be, but you can with a bike," he said. "You are not affected by traffic jams -- you can just ride through them. It's a real advantage."
Build It and They'll Come
While the northern European model for promoting cycling certainly works, it is costly and requires lots of government intervention. There are other ways to get people on bikes. Japan does not pamper cyclists, but it does provide easy access to mass transit.
In greater Tokyo , where 35 million people live in the world's most populous metro area, there are almost no bike lanes. Guided by vague laws about what cyclists can and cannot do, police tend to ignore them -- except for confiscating illegally parked bikes.
Traffic chases most Tokyo cyclists onto sidewalks, where they periodically bump into pedestrians. Mothers are forbidden by law to carry more than one child on a bicycle, but tens of thousands of them do it every day.
"The manners of Tokyo cyclists are very poor and sometime suicidal," said Nobuyuki Tsuchiya, director general of public works in Edogawa, a Tokyo ward with 640,000 people, most of whom ride bikes. As for government transportation officials in Japan , Tsuchiya said it is difficult to find one who doesn't show some "negative thinking about bicycles. We are far behind our counterparts in Europe ."
Still, a bicycle is an essential component of life in Tokyo . Impossibly thin women in four-inch heels ride them, as do important-looking men in black suits. Cycling's chaotic ubiquity is a result of several factors: population density, the high cost of driving and arguably the world's best train and subway system.
Commuters ride bikes often but not for very long -- usually less than 15 minutes. Train stations are no more than 1 1/2 miles apart in most of the city. Compared with walking or taking a bus, riding a bike shaves precious minutes off the daily trip to and from a station.
The one bone that some municipal governments have thrown cyclists is bike parking near stations. This year in Edogawa, that bone went high-tech. The ward government spent $67 million to build a cluster of computerized bicycle parking towers that use robotic arms to snatch bikes away from subway-bound commuters.
Pickup is just as easy as drop-off. At the swipe of a magnetic card, the arm finds the bike and returns it to its home-bound owner. The wait is about 10 seconds.
"It is revolutionary, " said Minato Karube, 35, a secretary who had pedaled to the parking tower in high heels and a frilly black dress. "The bike comes back instantly."
Since April, when robots went to work parking bicycles at Edogawa's Kasai station, there has been a 20 percent spike in commuting by bike.
The build-it-and- they-will- come approach has also worked in Bogota , Colombia , where Dutch bicycle engineers were recently imported to build bike lanes and redesign traffic flows. In two years, bike use jumped tenfold, from 0.5 percent of all trips to 5 percent.
It also works in the United States . Rainy Portland , Ore. , offers compelling evidence that bike lanes can transform Americans into bike commuters.
A recent study by Portland State University found that while just 15 percent of Portland 's streets have bike lanes, they attract half of the city's bike travel. Since 1991, counts of cyclists in the city have jumped 400 percent. Portland now has the highest share of bike trips among major U.S. cities -- about 4 percent.
Asia's Bicycle Cycle
Rapid economic growth often generates a populist backlash against cycling.
In China and India , where middle-class aspirations have trumped concern about gas prices and climate change, cars continue to chase bicycles off the streets.
"People want cars, as it indicates development, progress and that you are more influential, " said Nalin Sinha, program director in New Delhi for a nonprofit transportation group. Sinha said that when he began riding a bicycle his friends thought that something had "gone wrong financially. "
Two decades ago in New Delhi , bicycles held a 60 percent share of traffic flow; now that figure is about 4 percent.
Bike lanes still run alongside many broad avenues in Beijing and other large cities in China , where 500 million bicycles remain on the road. But the bike fleet has declined in the past decade, from a peak of 670 million, while private car ownership has more than doubled, according to a report by the Earth Policy Institute.
Recent history, though, suggests that the cycling decline in China and India may be short-lived. A similar decline occurred here on the island of Taiwan about 30 years ago, when the export-based economy shifted into high gear. Many of the island's 23 million residents bought motorcycles and then cars, as bicycles disappeared from the commuting mix.
The Taiwan government began pushing about 17 years ago for a modest return to cycling. It built rural bike paths. Taipei , the largest city on the island, joined the campaign, building 155 miles of bike lanes along rivers and through parks. Abundant bike parking was provided at transit stations. A network of 5,000 rental bikes appeared.
In the past year, with better facilities for bikers, a doubling of gasoline prices and growing concern about global warming, cycling has continued its climb. In Taipei , about 3 percent of all commuters ride bicycles, a 35 percent increase in 18 months.
At the headquarters of Giant, the island-based bicycle maker, Antony Lo said that if gasoline prices remain high worldwide, government transportation policies will have to change. Then, he said, everyday cycling will sweep across the United States , and later China and India .
"People are waking up," he said. "This is a long-term trend, not a fad."
Correspondent Edward Cody in Beijing and special correspondents Karla Adam and Jill Colvin in London, Ayesha Manocha in New Delhi, Shannon Smiley in Berlin and Akiko Yamamoto in Tokyo contributed to this report.
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Nick Hein
Director, Positive Spin
Morgantown, WV
ph 304-276-0213
--
[View Less]
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [Bikeboard] Topics for Thursday
Date: Sun, 31 Aug 2008 10:58:10 -0700
From: Alice Vernon <vernon.mail(a)gmail.com>
To: Frank Gmeindl <fgmeindl(a)verizon.net>
References: <48B759FD.30005(a)verizon.net>
I will be oot for september's meeting. Thank you
Also my email is vernon.mail(a)gmail.com. Thank you
Alice
On 8/28/08, Frank Gmeindl <fgmeindl(a)verizon.net> wrote:
> Bicycle Board Members,
>
> Please send …
[View More]me any topics that you want on the agenda for next
> Thursday's 9/4 meeting. Attached is a rough draft agenda that I have so
> far.
>
> Frank
>
[View Less]
Bicycle Board Members,
Please send me any topics that you want on the agenda for next
Thursday's 9/4 meeting. Attached is a rough draft agenda that I have so
far.
Frank