Advocacy

Bikemore 2015: A Year in Review

2015.jpg

This year was an incredibly important year for bikes in Baltimore. From memorializing the life of Tom Palermo to galvanizing people who bike to get to the polls through the launch of our I Bike, I Vote initiative, our members have turned out in ways that leave no doubt that we are growing as a movement--that bikes and Baltimore fit together a little better than the year before.  As 2015 comes to a close, let's look back on all that we've accomplished together! Want to help us grow and do bigger and better things in 2016? Consider a year end gift. Together, we are building a force for biking in Baltimore! 

And now our year in review...

 Memorial Ride for Tom Palermo 

2015 began on a somber note. On January 1st, hundreds of bicyclists gathered to pay tribute to Tom Palermo. His death was tragic, and he will be forever missed. But his passing also deepened the resolve of those in the bicycling community to work harder to ensure another family doesn't have to suffer the same immense loss. 

 
Hundreds of people on bikes gather to pay tribute to Tom Palermo. Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun

Hundreds of people on bikes gather to pay tribute to Tom Palermo. Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun

 

Baltimore City Adopts Bicycling Master Plan 

The long overdue update of our city's bicycle master plan solidified Baltimore City's commitment to growing a bicycle network. And while our work has just begun to ensure this is a plan that doesn't simply exist on paper--but is implemented--this was a critical first step in mapping out the city's future as one where all modes are considered on our roadways. 

Mayor Signs Executive Order Forming Bicycle Advisory Commission

The Mayor's Executive order breathed life into a dormant committee by drawing on talent from the private and public sector to ensure the Bike Master Plan comes to fruition. Bikemore has been a part of the commission since its creation in March, and has been able to see firsthand the dedication of these commission members as they work to ensure the city better coordinates agency efforts and allocates proper funding for future projects. 

Hired a New Executive Director    

After an extensive national search, Bikemore hired Liz Cornish to lead Bikemore in its next phase of growth. Cornish came to Bikemore after working on national advocacy issues at the League of American Bicyclists. 

 
 

Community Bike Rides 

We upped our game when it came to providing programs that brought people together to share in their love of bikes. We hosted five new community rides that hosted over 200 participants. We hosted rides with the 29th St. and North Barclay Green Community Centers that brought youth and adults together, we hosted women from D.C. as they rode the MARC bike train to explore Baltimore with other ladies who ride, we toured architectural sites by hosting a ride for Doors Open, and partnered with Brewer's Art to host the Future of Biking in Baltimore ride that explored all the places slated to get improvements in 2016-2017. We know that group rides are a great way to introduce folks to urban riding, and build community among existing riders. We look forward to planning more rides in 2016! 

Charles Street Complete Street 

Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun

Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun

October saw the long awaited completion of the Charles Street "complete street" construction. The project created much needed pedestrian improvements, traffic calming, and the addition of buffered bike lanes. Charles Street is now much safer for all road users, and we hope this public-private partnership to create livable streets can become a model that is replicated elsewhere in the city to spur safer street projects. 

I Bike, I Vote Kick Off 

On November 8th, 2015 we threw a party to share our platform for the 2016 election. Our goal was to get people stoked on connecting their transportation and recreation choice--biking to voting. The event exceeded our wildest expectations. We had 5 Mayoral Candidates, 16 Council Candidates and over 200 constituents attend our rally to get out the bike vote. In the coming year, we have more opportunities to engage in the upcoming election and educate voters about where each candidate stands on creating a more bikable, walkable Baltimore. 

Baltimore's First Annual Cranksgiving

We hosted over 80 riders, who went on a scavenger hunt to procure $1000s in groceries to donate to Moveable Feast. We had a ton of fun, and learned a lot about how to grow and strengthen this new bikey holiday tradition. Can't wait for next year to be even bigger and even better! 

 

Transform Baltimore 

Sometimes fighting for livable streets means getting a little wonky and organizing against policies that don't directly relate to biking, but facilitate a way of thinking about growth that undermines the creation of bikeable places. Our new zoning code has been awaiting City Council adoption for years. Just when we are getting close to the finally adopting a form based code that will ensure that all neighborhoods are developed in a way that considers things like walkability, historic preservation, and safety, the Council began voting on hundreds of amendments at a rapid pace. Thanks to your support, we were able to mobilize dozens of Bikemore members to send emails to the transportation and land use committee and ensure that the amendments most harmful to livable streets were opposed. 

Roland Avenue Cycletrack

Christmas came early with the installation of the Roland Avenue Cycletrack. This two mile stretch of parking protected bike lane taught us a lot of lessons.  First, in what took only 14 months from project concept to completion--it showed the value of local dollars in speeding up the implementation of new bike facilities. To our chagrin, it lapped the installation of the Maryland Avenue Cycletrack--which spent the entire year under State Highway review due to use of Federal funds. So while this facility had some challenges in design and community support, as Baltimore's first parking protected bike lane, we decided it was important to throw our support behind the project and ensure its installation. As the Roland Park community and city continue to work out the kinks in terms of parking compliance, maintenance, and signage, the result is a beautiful reminder of what a complete street in Baltimore can look like. Change is hard, and we knew wherever the first facility of this kind was installed we would face some opposition. But seeing BCDOT's commitment to the project despite some divisive community opposition gives us hope that whatever opposition future projects face, we have turned a corner in terms of the city leading on complete street issues. And that is cause for celebration. 

 

Thank you for helping us build a force for biking in Baltimore in 2015! 

 

Update: Transform Baltimore

Last Monday, December 14, the Land Use and Transportation Committee held four hours of amendment voting sessions. We had asked our constituents to take action on a series of amendments we believed to undermine the purpose of Transform Baltimore--to create a uniform zoning code that encourages sustainable growth and livable streets. 

The voting sessions got through all of the Title 14 amendments and the bulk of Title 15. In our email we had requested opposition to amendments in Title 10, 14, 15 and 16. Voting on the text amendments will continue after the holidays. 

Of the six Title 14 amendments we opposed all were either withdrawn or failed to pass. 

Withdrawn: T-487, T-488, T-496, T-628

Failed due to no motion to proceed: T-499, T-504

Failed due to lack of votes: T-511

It should be noted that prior to going to a vote, Councilwoman Clark had revised T-499--the amendment that blocked the adoption of neighborhood commercial by creating an elaborate finding of fact to get approved--so that the findings of fact were agreeable to our demands. However, at that point it seemed that no committee member wanted to even be associated with it to move it to a vote. 

Title 15 amendments that we opposed were revised to become more amenable to livable streets or withdrawn. 

Withdrawn: T-528

Passed with revisions: T-523. T-522

amendment revisions 

amendment revisions 

Bikemore didn't plan on becoming so engaged in the discussion on Transform Baltimore, but when it became clear that members of council and outside interests were introducing amendments harmful to the livable streets spirit of an improved form based code, it became important for us to take action. 

We will continue to monitor the amendment voting process that will likely stretch on for a few more months. We will continue to keep you apprised of opportunities for action, and ways you can communicate to our city's leaders how important vibrant, safe, bikeable and walkable places are to the future of Baltimore. 

Thank you for taking action. 

Take Action: Transform Baltimore Amendments

Today's blog post was written by Ben Groff and presented in partnership with Citizens Planning and Housing Association Ben is a transportation advocate with background in legal and policy issues. 

TAKE ACTION

The Transform Baltimore zoning code rewrite was launched nearly 10 years ago to modernize Baltimore’s zoning code and implement the vision of the city's last master plan, 2006's LIVE EARN PLAY LEARN.  

That vision included many goals that can only be furthered with livable streets, and a key strategy to accomplish this was to be the Transform Baltimore zoning code rewrite. 

The LIVE category, there were three overarching livability goals: 

  1. Strengthen neighborhoods, 
  2. Improve the design and quality of the built environment, and 
  3. Improve transportation access and choice for city residents. 

Other categories included livable streets goals, too.  

  • The EARN category called for improving transportation access to jobs. 
  • The PLAY category spoke to improving recreation for residents and visitors alike and emphasized open space.  It's the PLAY strategy that called for Baltimore to develop its Bicycle Master Plan and build out park/trail systems.  
  • The LEARN category called for safe and convenient transportation to educational facilities. 

The Transform Baltimore Legislation

In 2012, the Transform Baltimore legislation was finally unveiled as Council Bill 12-0152.  Over the years, CPHA and others have closely monitored progress on the bills which has been slow and painstaking.  

Earlier this year, 29 community organizations signed a letter calling for the code to be implemented as soon as possible, and making some general and specific recommendations to maintain the implementation of a livable streets-style vision.  CPHA's Gregory Friedman published an article in Greater Greater Washington urging the same. 

In about the last two months, City Council's Land Use and Transportation Committee has sprung into action, moving rapidly through hundreds of proposed amendments that have been accumulating since 2012. 

Some of these amendments jeopardize the livable streets vision that Transform Baltimore was meant to implement.

How the Code Promotes Livable Streets

At the highest level, the zoning code gives Baltimore a form-based code, instead of a code based on "Euclidean" segregation of uses and restrictive regulations.  It promotes livable streets by: 

  • removing development barriers to mixed-use, walkable neighborhoods, 
  • requiring designs to meet minimal standards related to quality place design
  • eliminating wasteful parking requirements, and
  • encouraging pedestrian, bike, and transit use 

In short, the code creates livable streets by enabling an attractive and diverse urban fabric throughout Baltimore, and removing last-century requirements that effectively force car ownership and subsidize or encourage access-adverse development. 

What's Happening Now

There are three types of amendments: 

  1. Amendments to the text of the bill itself (Council Bill 12-0152), 
  2. Amendments to the tables (that set forth in concise form things like parking requirements for different types of uses), and 
  3. Amendments to maps (the maps show, for the whole city, the zoning district of each property on adoption of the Code. 

This Monday, December 14, 2015 the Committee will work through some especially important amendments to Titles 14 and if time permits, 15 and 16.  As I understand it, the considered amendments are amendments to the bill text – the titles – only.

  • Title 14 contains provisions related to uses (including neighborhood commercial)
  • Title 15 contains provisions related to site development, (improvements made to an existing site)
  • Title 16 contains provisions related to parking. 

Additionally, amendments to the Title 10 provisions affecting parking in the C-5 (downtown) district will also be voted on with Title 16. 

How the Amendments Undermine Livable Streets

Amendments generally undermine the livable streets vision in the code when they:

  1. Reassert wasteful parking requirements that promote access-adverse development
  2. Restrict mixed-uses in favor of segregated uses
  3. Needlessly restrict residential density in favor of low-density, access-adverse development
  4. Undermine the central goal of enabling well-designed places for people instead of cars

The worst of the worst amendments include: 

Amendment T-545.  Section 16-601 contains exemptions to minimum parking requirements, and amendments were introduced to eliminate most of the exemptions, including T-545, T-633, T-699, T-546, and T-547.  In particular T-545 would reassert parking minimums in the C-1, C-1-E, C-5, R-MU, and D-MU districts, which under the present code are exempt from minimums.

Amendments T-374-380. Section 10-503(I) in Title 10 transforms parking and access in the C-5 downtown district.  This district is roughly bordered by the waterfront/Key Highway, MLK, President Street, and Franlkin Street.  10-503(I) currently bans new surface parking lots, requires active ground-floor uses, and bans new curb cuts on primary streets (Baltimore, Charles, Eutaw, Pratt, and Howard).  Amendments T-374 through T-380 would eliminate all of these requirements.

Amendments T-499 and T-628.  These amendments would seek to amend Title 14 to eliminate the Neighborhood Commercial use.  T-628 has been purportedly withdrawn.

Amendments T-542 and T-528.  This amendment to Title 16 removes the provision allowing for land banking of 25% of required parking (by setting aside open space) and fee-in-lieu parking, allowing developers to fund alternative transportation instead of providing all the required parking. 

Today, Bikemore and CPHA urge you to TAKE ACTION and OPPOSE HARMFUL ZONING CODE AMENDMENTS on this issue by emailing the members of the Land Use and Transportation Committee. We've created a form email you can send to all members of the committee by clicking this link

Below are tables detailing the amendments in Titles 14, 15, and 16 that would do the most damage to the livability goals of the Comprehensive Master Plan and the new Code. 

Table 1: Title 14 Amendments 

Table 2: Title 15 Amendments 

 

Table 3: Title 16 Amendments 

Table 4: Title 10 Amendments 


Audits Shine Light on DOT Inefficiencies

A bicyclists rides down Maryland Ave. Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun 

A bicyclists rides down Maryland Ave. Photo Credit: Baltimore Sun 

Baltimore City is undergoing a series of agency audits for the first time in thirty years. That it took thirty years to conjure the political will to conduct financial and performance audits is in and of itself infuriating. That the first audit released, a financial and performance review of Baltimore City’s Department of Transportation revealed that the agency "provided no evidence of policies, procedures, internal controls, or accountability" for its workers' performance in most categories is maddening, although not surprising. 

While Baltimore DOT has made some internal shifts toward promoting more bike and pedestrian friendly designs, we have yet to see a single project from this new line of thinking get installed. That the response to citizens waiting years for projects like the Maryland Avenue Cycletrack is  that it has been hampered in State Highway Administration (SHA) review is so far past adequate that one is left to wonder--how can we believe you anymore? And if it is true, where is the political will from our Mayor and City Council to deliver on promises to Baltimore citizens and hold SHA accountable? 

Since beginning my tenure as Bikemore Executive Director in May, I’ve been promised countless dates of when the Downtown Bicycle Network will go to bid. Going to bid before the end of the year is critical to ensure a March 2016 groundbreaking. This is a project that has been fully funded for years. How can we tell if the back and forth between SHA is a product of poor performance at DOT, SHA or both? The answer--we can’t. When you have no policy or procedure to measure performance or to hold an agency accountable to actually deliver on the projects it promises, the results are what we have today. Very little accomplished, very few projects even close to completion. And what incentive do employees have to actually follow through on their promises when they can rest assured knowing there will be zero consequences for failing to meet their self appointed deadlines? 

What’s more, specifically in relation to the Downtown Bicycle Network--which includes the plan for the Maryland Avenue Cycletrack--DOT as of today remains firm in their statement that they are waiting for SHA approval to be finalized. Meanwhile sources at SHA have confirmed that they have released the plans to the city--although we were not able to confirm a specific date the plans were released, and still other SHA employees in their communication to DOT today have stated that approval has not been finalized. That this level of inconclusiveness is considered status quo is unacceptable.  

This is just one small example of how poor performance from DOT has been allowed to remain “unchecked”. This is in no way an indictment of individual employees, who for the most part have exhibited a willingness to hear Bikemore’s concerns and help us find answers. But rather a system that forces well intentioned employees to patronize people who are merely seeking clarity--clarity that without strong systems of accountability and performance measurement seems outside their ability to provide. 

I hope those running for office this election cycle recognize there is a new crop of informed voters who want more than platitudes about job growth and crime reduction. We want candidates to bring forth actual plans to rid our city of the horrible abuses those with power have allowed to go on for too long. Abuses that are well documented across all agencies, not just the Department of Transportation. We want candidates that understand the nuances of operating a cash strapped independent city, and are realistic about our locus of control. Good government isn’t something that should be aspirational for Baltimore, it’s something as voters we should demand. 

 

Mythbusting: Roland Avenue Cycletrack

Two children bike in a cycletrack in Seattle. Soon children will be able to bike in a protected bike lane along Roland Avenue here in Baltimore. Photo Credit: Adam Coppola Photography

Two children bike in a cycletrack in Seattle. Soon children will be able to bike in a protected bike lane along Roland Avenue here in Baltimore. Photo Credit: Adam Coppola Photography

In case you missed it, according to at least one news source, there is a civil war going on in Roland Park. What is causing the divide is the inclusion of a parking protected bike lane (or cycletrack) on the recent road resurfacing project. While the project has the support of the Roland Park Civic League, Councilwoman Sharon Green Middleton, and the Roland Park Elementary and Middle School Principal, parents and faculty there is a vocal opposition comprised of Roland Park residents and business owners that want to delay the installation. 

Today Baltimore City of Department of Transportation issued a very reasoned response to concerns about the Roland Avenue Cycletrack. They state definitively that construction will go on as planned. We thank them for sticking to the City’s promise to design more complete streets that accommodate all modes. You can read the full letter from Director Johnson to Roland Park Stakeholders here. 

So knowing that the the cycletrack will move forward, we thought it still important as advocates to take time and dispel some myths both about this specific project and cycletracks in general. As more of the Bicycle Master Plan gets implemented, we will undoubtedly be forced to both come to the defense of DOT’s planned improvements, while maintaining a critical eye in hopes of getting the safest facilities possible for all road users. 

At the heart of the concerns of residents and business owners who oppose the project on Roland Avenue are two issues: 1.) a general feeling that they were not adequately informed of the project’s design and scope and 2.) that the cycletrack will do nothing to improve safety along Roland Avenue, and may in fact make it less safe by placing those exiting parked vehicles closer to traffic. 

Residents’ concerns came to a head at a recent Roland Park Civic League where the mood could be described as tense. There was yelling. There was cursing. There was a lot of throwing about flagrant lies both about the project and the process. All because of a change in the roadway design. 

We felt it was important that we lay out the facts of both this project and the cycletrack’s design to help those confused about the project’s goals gain some clarity. News reports have done little to clarify the project for readers, and in our opinion have only served to further sensationalize the project’s divisiveness. In the end you have neighbors on both sides deeply concerned about the safety of the major roadway in their neighborhood--and that’s a good thing. Neighbors should care about the safety of people where they live. But it’s become clear that the cycletrack has in some ways become a proxy for deeply entrenched feelings about public space--who gets priority, who’s entitled to use it, and what does the future of transportation planning look like in Baltimore City. 

Myth # 1

Baltimore City Department of Transportation did not properly notify residents and business owners of the new roadway design. 

The proposed cycle track has been part of the Roland Park Master Plan for five years. The scheduled resurfacing project provided an opportunity for the DOT to implement some requested improvements from the Master Plan. The first meeting to review the feasibility of including a cycletrack as part of the resurfacing project happened on September 9th, 2014. After it was determined that it was in fact feasible, DOT met with members of the Roland Park Civic League again on December 11, 2014 to review preliminary designs. These dates are important because they happened before Tom Palermo’s tragic death on December 27th, 2014. Palermo was killed while traveling in the unprotected bike lane just north of the proposed project by a drunk driver. These facts show that the cycletrack was not a reaction to the public outcry that followed Palermo’s death, but something that had been requested by the community long before, and given the timing of the resurfacing project had finally come to fruition. 

In January, the proposed plans were presented at a meeting of the Roland Park Civic League, where it was met with support. A DOT community meeting was then scheduled for April 29th, 2015 to present the full design. Due to the curfew imposed that week as a result of the Uprising, the meeting was rescheduled for June 11th, 2015. In between, the plan was presented at the annual Roland Park Civic League meeting on May 21st, 2015 with over 50 attendees. Again the project was met with support. 

Bikemore attended the June 11th DOT community meeting. It was here that of the 30 or so folks in attendance, a few were hearing of the project for the first time and were displeased with the design. Roland Park Civic League President Chris McSherry cited the multiple notices of the project in the Roland Park Civic League newsletter, that each resident of Roland Park receives. 

DOT’s follow up with the community was to then hold six additional meetings with stakeholders both opposed to and in support of the project. DOT met with business owners, school officials, and community groups. This also doesn’t account for the multiple written correspondence between DOT and stakeholders that further sought to clarify the project. 

While we can be critical of the DOT’s past track record of external communications on projects across this city, this particular project--the Roland Avenue Resurfacing and the subsequent upgrade in facilities to include a protected bike lane seems to have received an abundance of communication efforts. Whether or not one chooses to attend neighborhood meetings or read neighborhood communications is ultimately a choice, but if DOT cannot reasonably expect the official neighborhood group to effectively communicate the desires of the community, what other avenues should they pursue? At what expense? As a city agency they are required by the City’s adopted complete streets policy to assess all new road projects for the inclusion of multiple modes. They then assess the feasibility and community support to determine whether or not to move forward with a project. Those steps were taken. And one’s choice to remain ignorant to the details of a road project shouldn’t be used as the basis to call the communication inadequate. That responsibility lies with the neighborhood to assess how effective and inclusive their neighborhood group is, and if improvements can be made to ensure more voices are at the table, then steps should be made to work toward that. 

But in the end, while community input should be carefully considered, transportation projects that have the direct aim of improving safety of all road users on a public roadway should not be allowed to be derailed simply by public opposition of residents. The fact remains that this facility as designed is not an aberration, but actually quite common across the United States. And it has been reviewed by engineers at the local and state level that are required to certify the safety and effectiveness of proposed designs. The cynicism that was present at the meeting, that asserted that professional traffic engineers would bring something that would in fact make the road less safe is absurd and harmful. We have to move toward designs that do better at considering all users, and now that the DOT is beginning to do that more frequently, we can’t undercut that progress with unfounded fears. 

Myth # 2

The addition of a protected bike lane will do nothing to improve road safety or calm traffic. It will in fact make it a more dangerous road for pedestrians, residents utilizing public on street parking in front of their homes, patrons and delivery trucks accessing business along Roland Avenue, and emergency vehicles. Oh, and yes, even bicyclists. 

Because Roland Avenue is not the exact same width throughout the length of the project, the overall width of the cycletrack varies. At its narrowest the bike lane is 4 feet and the buffer between the parking lane is 2ft. It is true that this is below NACTO minimum desired width for one-way protected cycle tracks of 5 feet for the bicycle travel lane and a 3 foot buffer between parking lanes--and was the part of the project Bikemore criticized early in the design.  

The parking lane on the outside is 7 feet. Making the combined width of the parking lane and buffer 9 feet at it’s narrowest and 10 feet at its widest--still below the NACTO recommended guidelines of a combined 11 feet. So while this makes the design imperfect, it doesn’t necessarily mean it is designed to fail. Facilities of similar width were determined to be safe and viable in other communities where road width didn’t allow for NACTO minimum widths. And when you understand the politics of the neighborhood the design actually makes a lot of sense. The average daily traffic (ADT) and average vehicle speed present in the roadway demand a protected bicycle facility--meaning that the existing unprotected bike lane was inadequate. So when faced with a width issue there are a few alternatives to the proposed design all of which we believe would have faced too much cost and potential for community opposition to lead to installation: 

Widen the road: This alternative would be incredibly costly, and nullify any dollars saved by addressing this facility upgrade as part of a resurfacing project, and honestly put it fiscally out of reach. Additionally it would encroach on people’s private property. Something that I think we can safely assume would be off the table for garnering Roland Park resident support. 


Place the bike lane along the center median: See the costly argument above, but also you would have to contend with people who see the green grassy medians as part of the Olmsted vision and would not allow it to be modified (even though Olmstead’s vision most certainly included bicycle paths and not lines of parked cars). Not to mention the lengthy disruption caused by construction to the neighborhood. So while long term, Bikemore would support designs like this--it doesn’t seem feasible at this stage given available funding and the neighborhood’s willingness to endure even more construction. 


Remove street parking: One of the biggest contentions of the opposition to the cycletrack is that somehow the free public parking that fronts their property adds value. They are opposed to it being moved 6-8 feet from the curb as in the current design, and thus would most likely oppose its elimination. People must remember only 15 spaces are being removed along the project, and most of the on street parking is preserved at the request of residents. 


Eliminate one travel lane in each direction: While a road diet of this kind would certainly calm traffic, reduce traffic noise, and improve the safety of vulnerable users, that given current vehicle numbers traveling through on a daily basis, DOT did not see this solution as feasible. While idyllic, it doesn’t account for all the ways the road is used. 

The important thing to remember is that the installation of this design at this time, does not mean that the facility couldn’t be improved at a later date. As bike ridership increases, local money allocated for projects, and our overall competitiveness for state and local dollars will increase--leading for more options becoming fiscally viable in the future. 

We also see attitudes shifting. It was noticeable that the people in the room most enthusiastic about the project were families with school aged children, and the ones opposed were elderly residents with children no longer in the home. As communities’ desires shift, so does the political will present to put forward designs that go further to create transportation equity among all modes. 

Perhaps the most explosive part of the Roland Park Civic League meeting was when a mother leapt from her seat holding a sign depicting the roadway conditions in front of her home. Her concern was how safe would she be while loading and unloading her children while parked on the street.  This idea that the design pushed those exiting parked vehicles further into traffic and in harm's way is complicated. Yes, on street parking is no longer “protected” by the bicycle lane that was previously present on the outside of the parked cars. The bike lane as it was designed saw only light use--which is typical of unprotected lanes adjacent to traffic, so it’s presence really did create a safe buffer from which to exit the vehicle. So while parking along Roland Avenue will be different, it has not degraded to a standard of safety that warrants hysteria like the woman in the meeting exhibited. Like most on street parking in Baltimore City, you’ll have to look before exiting your vehicle and even maybe wait for cars to pass to exit safely. We believe it is always best to load and unload your children and elderly passengers on the side of the vehicle away from traffic. And the buffer between the parking lane and the bike lane will give plenty of room to leave a door open so you can use both hands to guide a car seat or an elderly passenger into the car. Additionally many properties that front Roland Avenue have alley access and parking pads available on their property. Many other residents report preferring to park one block away on the side street to avoid the moving traffic on Roland Avenue. While we do believe that the added facilities such as the cycle track, ADA and pedestrian accommodations at intersections, and lane narrowing will calm traffic to an extent, the reality remains this is a four lane road. And a side street or rear alley will provide a much calmer place to load and unload a vehicle of your most precious cargo. 

But we agree with residents who believe more can be done to calm traffic on Roland Avenue, including enforcement of posted speed limits and adjustments in traffic signal timing. And we will support and advocate for any resident who wants to see continued efforts to calm traffic along Roland Avenue. 

We know that protected bike lanes increase bike ridership. We know that increasing bike ridership is the number one way to improve the safety of people on bikes. We also know that in this particular project, given the enthusiasm from parents at Roland Park Elementary and Middle School (that has over 1200 students enrolled) that families are now more receptive to the idea of walking or biking with their children to school that just one generation before them. This means less cars in the drop off/pick up lane, less congestion on Roland Avenue during peak travel times, and happier, healthier families and kids. 

Myth #3

I’m an avid cyclists, and I will not use the cycletrack because it will mean biking slowly behind children/grandmas/families using those trailer thingys) therefore I oppose it. 

It’s true, for many cycling teams and amateur athletes alike, Roland Avenue provides excellent access out of the city and onto many roads that are perfect for training rides. But we have good news. You don’t have to use it. And before everyone whips out their Maryland law book--we know the law states that when a bicycle facility is present you have to use it, except in cases where it doesn’t make sense--like left hand turns. But we worked with DOT to ensure that protected facilities are classified differently. Protected bike lanes--meaning any bike lane with a permanent barrier are classified as bike paths. And therefore not subject to the same level of enforcement as a bike lane located in the roadway. Is this legal sleight of hand? Perhaps. But until Maryland takes meaningful steps to update it’s road laws to better accommodate people on bikes, we know the existing law is punitive. People on bikes should be able to use their judgement and ride where they will be most safe. As long as bicycles are classified as vehicles, on city streets--people on bikes should have the right to use the full lane. So if that is where you prefer to ride, you’re welcome to. Our number one goal as a bike advocacy organization is to increase bike ridership--not because we believe everyone should ride bikes (although we would love it if everyone at least tried) but because even a small shift in the percentage of people riding bikes to their everyday destinations has a tremendous positive effect. 

Last month, when the Pope visited D.C. many offices encouraged employees to stay home or telecommute. During peak times on the two key days of the Pope’s visit a 2 percent reduction in volume led to a 27 percent reduction in traffic congestion. Currently in Baltimore, bike ridership is at .7 percent of the overall mode share. So when we talk about getting more people on bikes, or building facilities that have proven time and time again to increase ridership, we aren’t declaring a war on cars. We aren’t suggesting that families that have complex transportation needs or physical limitations that preclude them from riding a bicycle for their everyday trips are inferior. As bike advocates we are trying to nudge the needle a little bit. Because that little bit can have significant impact on things that matter like getting to work on time, reducing chronic disease, improving air quality, and a increasing a family’s bottom line. Things that impact a person's quality of life. 

A year from now, there will be close to six miles of additional protected lanes constructed in this city. So while Roland Avenue may be the first, it will certainly not be the last. We are done allowing our funded projects to be delayed, we are done falling behind nearly every city in America that has chosen to start designing it’s public roads with more of the public good in mind. We are done with people peddling lies about what bicycling is or isn’t, or sensationalizing the struggle to get these sensible, tested facilities built. We are advocating for safer streets for all users, which is why we support the Roland Avenue Cycletrack.