Updated: 3/5/2020: spurred in part by an e-list discussion about seniors needing walkable and bikeable communities, and recent Washington Post coverage and subsequent e-list discussion about biking as a tool of gentrification and a racist plot ("D.C. Council proposal to move 9th Street bike lane forward stalls over questions of race and gentrification").
New items #4 focuses on bike training for children and youth, with a focus on transportational cycling as they age, while #6 and #7s discuss systematic approaches to fostering cycling take up by demographics (age; gender; race; household type).
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The reality is that even though more than 60% of trips in the US are less than 6 miles, and more than 20% less than one mile, most people don't take biking seriously as a transportation mode. They see bikes as toys. And toys aren't transportation.
Larry Littlefield followed up his recent post on the bubble in the US real estate market with a piece on e-biking as an alternative to the car as a way to enable housing affordability in transit "deserts", ("Expanding Livability, Workability, Affordability: A Small Example").
The problem is that most people aren't so logical. They find it hard to buck prevailing attitudes and preferences favoring automobility, even with e-bikes.
But yes, e-bikes are great in terms of helping people deal with hills, time, longer distances than they might otherwise be comfortable traveling by traditional pedal bicycles, and age ("(Still) tired of mis-understanding of the potential for e-bikes").
Riide is an e-bike firm in DC. They've ended up focusing on renting bikes to firms for something like $80/mo. One woman I talked to was a professional dog walker and she used the bike to get from client to client.
The past entry, "Eight "mutual assistance programs" that can build support for biking as transportation on the part of low income communities," discussed 8 different programs.
But in replying to Larry's post, I realized that the post didn't include one program that I thought I had included, and it ought to be updated anyway.
The original post has all the preliminary discussion.
1. Creating "sustainable mobility stores" as primary points of contact to assist people in making the transition to biking as transportation. This is discussed in the 2018 post "LimeBike and "scooter lifestyle stores" as an example of forward marketing for sustainable mobility" although I've recommended that Arlington's CommuterStores include such capabilities for more than a decade.
This is about marketing. Cars are marketed, heavily. Biking and transit needs to be promoted similarly.
Many transit organizations sponsor, like what Arlington County calls "Commuter Stores," retail stores focused on non-automobile transportation, although they tend to be focused on transit and the sales and distribution of commuter passes.
The Velocity Bicycle Cooperative has space on Mount Vernon Avenue in the Del Ray neighborhood of Alexandria, which is awesome, but probably relatively expensive.
2. Cycle Borrowing programs. Many UK cities have either free or low cost programs where people can borrow a bike with helmet and lock, for periods of up to a month or more, to test out switching to biking as transportation.
One such program is in the Lambeth borough of London, where people can get "kitted up" for £20 for a regular bike, £50 for an e-bike, and £100 for a cargo bike.
According to an evaluation report commissioned by the London Cyclist Campaign (Urban Cycle Loan schemes):
• 81% of participants are still cycling 3 months after finishing the programmeThe Iowa City Bicycle Library loans out bikes for up to 6 months, although a hefty deposit is required and the bikes they offer tend to be more suited for recreation.
• The majority are using their bikes to commute, for leisure and everyday trips
• 78% have encouraged a friend or member of their family to start cycling
• 82% of participants have seen an improvement in their health and well-being
• People tend to use their cars and the bus less after completing the scheme
3. Cycling training. Bicycle borrowing programs need to be complemented by cycle training programs, like Hounslow borough's, Cycle training for adults and children, which last year won national acknowledgement. From "Hounslow scoops award for cycling success":
Hounslow Council has picked up the 2019 London Road Safety Award for their pioneering cycle training scheme that has raised the profile of adult cycle training in the borough while increasing participation.Bike organizations across the US hold training programs to help people start biking for transportation. But these programs aren't paired with a program where people can borrow bikes to try bike commuting without having to spend hundreds of dollars on a bike and gear before they even start.
The scheme has seen a significant increase in the number of participants on their adult cycle training sessions over the last three years.
In 2016 the council changed the way people accessed the training, which helped not only to increase participation but more importantly, its reach to communities that are underrepresented in cycling. Adult participation numbers went from just under 100 adults in 2016/17 to 1,686 in 2018/19.
4. Bike safety training for children AND YOUTH. While many communities have bike safety training for children, usually it's focused on elementary aged children, and more for recreation. Such training should be repeated at the junior and senior high school levels, and focused towards cycling for transportation.
5. Integrating cycling promotion programs into public recreation centers. I don't have any good examples of this "in real life" but I suggested doing so in the draft bike and pedestrian plan I wrote for Baltimore County, Maryland.
There are two kinds of community bike promotion programs that are top of mind, bike co-ops and youth bike programs, that ought to be integrated into public recreation and community centers as a matter of course, especially in lower income areas,
Instead of forcing community bike programs to come up with space and the money to keep it going, why not integrate such programs into community recreation centers, which would also make their services more widely available and provide a lot more visibility for biking.
Bike House co-op at the Bloomingdale Farmers Market in 2011. Photo from the A Bikeable Feast blog.
In the DC area, bike co-ops include The Bike House in Petworth, the Mt. Rainier Bike Co-op just over the DC border in Maryland, and the VĂ©loCity Bicycle Cooperative in the Del Ray neighborhood of Alexandria, Virginia. Bike co-ops usually help people fix bikes, teach basic bike repair, and may hold community rides.
Youth bike programs generally use biking as a way to teach life skills.
Some programs that come to mind are Gearin' Up Bicycles in DC, Phoenix Bikes in Arlington County, Virginia, Recycle-A-Bicycle in New York City (in the past, they've sponsored a national Youth Bike Summit), and Neighborhood Bike Works in Philadelphia ("Well Being: Ride of Dreams takes them far" Philadelphia Inquirer). NBW is now an independent organization but originally it was a program of the Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia.
A program I find particularly impressive is the Ghisallo Bicycle Initiative in Austin, Texas. It's definitely a model of national best practice. One of their programs sets up "Bike Club" after-school programs at specific schools, but they have many more equally awesome programs, for all age levels.
Other examples include Sun Youth Organization in Montreal, Wish for Wheels in Colorado, Dallas Earn-a-bike, and the Community Bicycle Center in Biddeford, Maine. While the Community Cycles Earn-a-Bike program in Boulder offers bikes to youths 16 and older, it is equally focused on adults.
Another example focused on African-American youth are the Major Taylor Bicycle Clubs. Major Taylor was an African-American bicycle racer. One active club is in Seattle (Young people find cycling gets the wheels turning", Seattle Times). Another is in Minneapolis ("Meet the Minnesotan who's the biking 'ambassador' to the black community," Minneapolis Star-Tribune).
6. Other demographic focused cycling initiatives. The previous item mentions youth oriented biking programs. My problem with most bike plans is that they tend to be idiosyncratic when it comes to the systematic promotion of cycling take up for all demographics (age, gender, race, household type). Rather than promote one specific race- or age- or gender- specific initiative, I think they should all be supported in a systematic fashion ("For Bike Equity, Look Past Infrastructure," CityLab; Understanding Barriers to Bicycling in Low-Income Communities of Color, Community Cycling Center of Portland).
For example, Toronto has programs supporting introducing cycling to immigrants ("A Toronto program uses two wheels to connect newcomers to the city," Canadian Immigrant). The Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals sponsors the Women Cycling Project, and there is the Latino women's biking group in LA, which was featured in the documentary "Ovarian Psycos | Film About Women of Color Bike Brigade." A community health initiative in Fort Collins, Colorado offers cycle training in Spanish ("Program promotes biking for Latinos," Coloradoan).
There is the Black Women Bike program, which started in DC. Kidical Mass promotes family biking. Etc.
7. Senior cycling promotion programs. While it's better to promote biking at an earlier age, so that as they age into the senior demographic people continue to bike, I have come across some senior oriented bike programs, although they are more recreationally oriented.
I talked to these people outside a Starbucks. The man said he started cycling in earnest after he retired. It took him a while to figure out that he was excluding his wife by doing so on his own, so they got a tandem bike and ride everywhere, to the grocery store, the recreation center for swimming, etc.
For example, retirees in the Blue Bell community in Greater Philadelphia created the "Old Spokes" club which holds rides every couple weeks in area parks ("Freewheelers The Old Spokes, members of a bicycling club, venture from their retirement community to cruise the region's byways," Philadelphia Inquirer).
Image from "This 90-year-old on a tricycle is a total badass," Grist.
Why not refocus such programs towards transportational cycling, including adult three-wheel bikes and tandems?
8. Bikes as tools for improving access to jobs. So many times I read articles about the difficulty people have getting to and from work when they don't own a car and they rely on transit, and I wonder "why don't they get a bike?"
The Community Cycling Center of Portland has a program that outfits low income residents with bikes and all the requisite support equipment and training, so that they can cycle safely to work.
According to the Richmond Times-Dispatch ("Notable Gifts: Capital One donates 20 bikes, gear"), Capital One is supporting a similar program there. From the article:
Twenty bicycles donated by Capital One will provide greater access to jobs for participants in the Workforce Pipeline Program at Richmond’s Center for Workforce Innovation. Capital One volunteers assembled the bicycles with assistance from RideRichmond. Capital One donations also provided safety gear such as helmets for the riders and lights and locks for the bikes.
... A regional study found that nearly 1,000 additional businesses and 18,000 additional jobs are located within 1.5 miles of the end of the bus line, Manion said. “We have had several participants that have lost jobs or been unable to get jobs because of this short distance."9. Bike sharing programs ought to be an obvious opportunity for promoting cycling take up. Bike sharing programs were the big thing between 2007 and 2015.
Where there is high station density, it's a great way to bike and you offload storage, parking, fear of theft, and maintenance.
When station density is low and you have to walk long distances between stations and your origin and destination points, or your destination is outside of the system footprint, it's not convenient.
(Which is why this post mostly focuses on having your own bike.)
In Europe, and a couple US cities systems have experienced high ridership. But across the US, even in large cities, bike sharing hasn't been particularly successful and many programs failed.
Other systems, such as DC's, have stagnated in terms of membership growth.
Other than offering occasional discounts, many of the programs are poorly marketed, don't have on-going promotion, and don't do a lot of active marketing and support. E.g., why isn't there a bike share promotion booth at major community festivals?
Most of the programs don't offer orientation classes and training for people new to cycling. Although some programs, like Divvy in Chicago, and London's program are much more active when it comes to promotion.
It's not enough to put the bikes out there. To be used and useful, people need to be introduced to the program, encouraged to cycle, and helped if needed.
I suppose this shouldn't be a surprise because government agencies tend to be not great at marketing (cf. "social marketing," "nonprofit marketing" and "sustainable behavior" approaches).
(Note that expansion of bike sharing systems is often supported by the FTA Job Access and Reverse Commute program.)
10. Discounted bike sharing memberships on a means-tested basis. More bike sharing programs provide discounted memberships for low income residents. the second least expensive program is Boston's which charges $5, as does Divvy in Chicago, but Montgomery County Maryland goes further with their MC Liberty program, which provides free membership (for a limited number of participants, who qualify).
11. Cycle access programs on college campuses and by large employers. At some colleges, rather than deploying technologically complicated and expensive sharing systems (although many colleges have bike sharing programs), instead they assign a student a bike for a semester for a small fee (or even free), along with a lock and helmet, and usually repair services are included. Programs are supported by an on-campus repair shop.
At UCLA they call it the Bike Library ("Bikes all rented out at UCLA Bike Library," Daily Bruin), same at UC Santa Cruz, while at North Central College in Illinois, use of a "rental" Cardinal Red Bike is free, but they have a small number of bikes.
I haven't heard of large business sites that do long term bike loans, but there is no reason why they couldn't.
12. Campus specific bike share programs. A variant is college or worksite bike share programs. Many colleges offer this and so do some large employer campuses, like Google.
Some of the college programs will include off-campus stations, and may allow local residents not affiliated with the college to participate.
In community bike sharing programs, often students get a membership discount, and some universities--Harvard is the only one I know of--have paid for the installation of stations serving their campus.
13. Employer and college-assisted buying programs. Many colleges have bike shops that offer discounted purchase programs. The Fuji bicycle group has a program to do this, called Fuji University. Working with a local bike shop, the University of Utah even encourages units of the university to purchase e-bikes for use in conducting daily business.
The UK Cycle to Work Scheme enables bike purchases through a payroll deduction scheme. Ireland has created a similar program.
The League of American Bicyclists Bicycle Friendly Business program does ask questions concerning provision of purchase assistance and other benefits around bicycles and equipment.
Fuji should extend their program to large employers.
14. Credit union loans to buy bikes. Banks, financing companies, and credit unions are known for providing loans to buy cars. More recently, some credit unions have begun programs providing loans for buying bikes. For example, at Virginia Credit Union, they will provide a loan of as little as $100 to buy a bike, and they will include the cost of a lock, helmet, and other accessories.
This kind of program could be rolled into "banking the unbanked" initiatives, like DC's Bank on DC program.
Programs like this have a kind of microcredit/microfinance element and can be an inducement to set up a bank account.
15. Bike donations for children. The Austin American-Statesman ("Build-A-Bike lunches at ABGB: Eat, drink, donate bikes to kids") reports on an interesting holiday fundraiser for the Ghisallo Bicycle Initiative. From the article:
16. Bike bundling programs in public housing. I've suggested this to a couple of public housing organizations but never got a response. The idea would be to develop programs similar to bike library programs at colleges as described above.
Bike parking at the La Visitation public housing building in Sacramento. Photo from the "How to: Bike Parking" guide by David Baker Architects.
The idea is that public housing residents could get bike access in a similar way, and it could be bundled into the cost of renting an apartment.
Of course, there would need to be protected and very secure bike parking installed as part of the program.
17. Donating abandoned and unclaimed bikes to programs serving low income populations. Another way to expand access is to direct donated bikes to people of limited means.
The City of Boston does this through their Roll It Forward program, and Philadelphia has done so as well ("City crews collect 73 abandoned bikes," Philadelphia Inquirer) but not as systematically.
18. Short term on-site bicycle provision. Some office buildings (Active Transportation and Real Estate: The Next Frontier, Urban Land Institute) and hotels ("Hip hotels are rolling out high-style bicycles for guests," Dallas Morning News; "Hotels Offer Bikes, Cars and Sometimes Boats to Its Guests," New York Times) have bikes that workers can use during the day or guests can use during their stay.
And at least one homeless shelter ("New bike share program gives One80 Place's homeless a way around the city," WCIV-TV) in Charleston, SC.
Austin Beer Garden Brewing Co., or ABGB, is teaming with the Ghisallo Cycling Initiative to host Build-A-Bike holiday lunches during the first three weeks of December. Groups can purchase one or two bikes for donation.
Party goers show up for pizza and beer, and mechanics from Ghisallo help them assemble bikes that will be given to children at Perez Elementary School, which serves families hard hit by the latest round of flooding on Onion Creek. The bikes, SE Soda Pop models, will cost the group the discounted price of $170 each and Ghisallo will provide a helmet, bell, lights and lock for each one. Party goers pay for their own food and drink.What a great program!
16. Bike bundling programs in public housing. I've suggested this to a couple of public housing organizations but never got a response. The idea would be to develop programs similar to bike library programs at colleges as described above.
Bike parking at the La Visitation public housing building in Sacramento. Photo from the "How to: Bike Parking" guide by David Baker Architects.
The idea is that public housing residents could get bike access in a similar way, and it could be bundled into the cost of renting an apartment.
Of course, there would need to be protected and very secure bike parking installed as part of the program.
The City of Boston does this through their Roll It Forward program, and Philadelphia has done so as well ("City crews collect 73 abandoned bikes," Philadelphia Inquirer) but not as systematically.
18. Short term on-site bicycle provision. Some office buildings (Active Transportation and Real Estate: The Next Frontier, Urban Land Institute) and hotels ("Hip hotels are rolling out high-style bicycles for guests," Dallas Morning News; "Hotels Offer Bikes, Cars and Sometimes Boats to Its Guests," New York Times) have bikes that workers can use during the day or guests can use during their stay.
And at least one homeless shelter ("New bike share program gives One80 Place's homeless a way around the city," WCIV-TV) in Charleston, SC.
Suggests that quality e-bikes could replace a second car.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-15/lighter-and-faster-e-bikes-may-start-replacing-second-family-car
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/may/17/i-can-just-glide-through-traffic-how-e-bikes-could-answer-our-commuting-problems
ReplyDeletecycling affinity groups as a way to get people riding? Not necessarily a "gateway" to transportational cycling, but maybe.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2020/08/15/cycling-was-never-about-fun-for-me-until-i-found-a-club-where-as-a-black-woman-i-felt-at-home.html
https://www.masstransitmag.com/alt-mobility/shared-mobility/bicycle-scooter-sharing/press-release/21224038/los-angeles-county-metropolitan-transportation-authority-metro-la-metro-launches-new-adoptabike-program-to-improve-mobility-of-those-in-need
ReplyDeleteProject Bicycle Love, Ventura County, California, gives bikes to youths.
ReplyDeleteEsperanza Bicycle Safety Education Center, Albuquerque, NM
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cabq.gov/parksandrecreation/recreation/bike/esperanza-bicycle-safety-education-center
They have an earn a bike program for low income people.
https://www.cabq.gov/parksandrecreation/recreation/bike/bike-rodeo
Some recreation departments have some bike programming, often it might be LAB skills courses. Maybe bike rodeo programming for children/
ReplyDeleteThe Park City Utah Recreation Department probably has the most extensive set of programming on biking, although it's focused on mountain biking, which is big in the area. They have guided rides as part of it, and a "Kids on Bikes" program, not solely focused on mountain biking.
The city also has a bunch of pump tracks/bike parks.
https://www.post-gazette.com/life/goodness/2022/04/03/red-lantern-bike-shop-braddock-parts-repair-nonprofit-refurbish-children-volunteers-transportation-john-fetterman/stories/202203160104
ReplyDelete"'Tis the season for Red Lantern Bike Shop, where, 'at the end of the day, our hands are always dirty'"
According to Mr. Sink, it gives away about 200 small children's bikes for free a year. With free bikes, refurbished bikes and repairs, it has touched about 10,000 people with a small group of volunteers since 2013.
"The first six years, we only did bike giveaways for kids out of our Braddock shipping container," said Mr. Sink, who lives in Wilkins. "In 2020, we expanded and started operating at our Turtle Creek location.
https://www.post-gazette.com/life/goodness/2022/04/03/beaver-county-based-ommunicyle-ministry-is-on-a-roll-with-fixing-providing-bikes/stories/202203040128
"Beaver County-based Communicycle is on a roll with fixing and providing bikes"
Repairs are performed at no cost. People can learn how to repair their own bikes, or receive a bike by volunteering in their community. Last year, Communicyle distributed 1,800 to 2,000 bikes.
Washington County, Oregon bike giveaway programs.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cyclingutah.com/columns/metal-cowboy/its-always-been-about-the-bike-washco-bikes-gives-bicycles-to-those-in-need/
"It’s Always Been About the Bike – WashCo Bikes Gives Bicycles to Those in Need"
5/9/22
- WashCo Bikes sponsors a week long bike camp for kids, 9 weeks.
https://washcobikes.org/programs/saddle_up_bike_camp
-- FB4KPortland.org refurbishes bikes, working with WashCo Bikes, in 2021 they gave out more than 2000 bike packages, "light, lock, helmet, and safety programming"
FB4Kidz -- Free Bikes for Kids -- is a national group based in Minnesota
https://fb4k.org/
-- also gave bike packages to refugees from Afghanistan
-- WashCo Bikes has a storefront in Hillsboro, Oregon
https://washcobikes.org/retail_amp_repair_shop
does somewhat discounted repairs, and provides discounted and free helmets based on ability to pay.
WPVI-TV: Ben to the Shore Bike Tour: North Philadelphia kids preparing for big bike ride alongside police.
ReplyDeletehttps://6abc.com/temple-university-urban-bike-club-philadelphia-youth-mentorship-families-behind-the-badge-childrens-foundation-ben-to-shore-tour/12047444/
https://www.bicycling.com/culture/a38602470/cycling-charities/
ReplyDelete"14 Ways Cyclists Can Give Back to the Community"
Nonprofit organizations nationwide are utilizing bikes to uplift communities and empower individuals. Here’s how to get involved.
More best practice program examples, including one focused on Latinos and another on Native Americans.
"The Live in Peace Bike Shop Brings Bikes and Life Lessons to Community Youth"
The East Palo Alto community organization and bike shop offers student apprenticeships, bike racing, and so much more.
https://www.bicycling.com/culture/a40667723/live-in-peace-bike-shop-brings-bikes-to-community-youth/
"These Kids Are Bike Repair Wizards. Here's What They Can Teach You."
Community Bike Works, Allentown, PA
https://www.bicycling.com/repair/a35235930/student-bike-repairs/
Should e-bikes be included in the state’s electric vehicle rebate program?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/08/17/metro/should-e-bikes-be-included-states-electric-vehicle-rebate-program/
Like the bike pooling example from Los Angeles.
ReplyDeleteStreetsblog Chicago: Chicago, Bike Grid Now's Halsted Bike Bus provides a safe, fun ride downtown.
https://chi.streetsblog.org/2022/08/25/chicago-bike-grid-nows-halsted-bike-bus-provides-a-safe-fun-ride-downtown/
It was a one time event, more about advocacy. But you can see how scheduling this regularly would increase visibility and the number of people shifting to more regular biking as transportation.
https://www.startribune.com/st-paul-couple-restores-and-gives-away-hundreds-of-bicycles-a-year/492731141/
ReplyDeleteSt. Paul couple restore and give away hundreds of bicycles a year
For the hundreds of people each year who receive free bicycles from Mr. Michael Recycles Bicycles, it feels pretty magical.
9/7/2018
"Rochester bikers, businesses launch program to get more people pedaling"
New bicycle benefits program urges residents to take up biking as transportation.
https://www.startribune.com/rochester-bikers-businesses-launch-new-program-to-get-more-people-pedaling/600203633/
9/5/2022
Hennepin County Public Health
ReplyDeleteMarch 11, 2016
Calling all North Minneapolis residents 18 and over! There's still spots left in this summer's Orange Bike Program. Participants will be given a FREE Nice Ride Minnesota bike (and a helmet, lock and key) to keep at home for four months over the summer. If you log at least three rides per week, attend four community events, and return the bike and its accessories at the end of the season, you'll receive a $200 GIFT CERTIFICATE to Venture North Bike Walk & Coffee. To register, email LaTrisha Vetaw at lvetaw@northpointinc.org
Read more at :
https://web.archive.org/web/20211021190506/http://healthyhennepin.org/stories/orange-in-motion
This query on Reddit:
ReplyDeleteAny grants or programs to encourage bike commuting?
My work has a secured bike room, but there is still usually only 2-4 people riding in daily. Is there any programs that offer say some basic tools or other support? That might encourage some others some peace of mind if they ride in?
Currently there is a plastic drawer that says “bike tools donations” on a post it and it’s empty. I’m thinking something like a floor pump, 3 or so common sized tubes and a couple patch kits and a multi tool? Maybe some easy how to QR codes/how to posters?
Edit: Location is Oregon, USA
Reminds me that years ago, Toronto had a small grants program, called Bicycle User Groups, to provide funds to encourage commuting at workplaces and other sites.
I can't find any mention of it now, but there is a Wikipedia entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bicycle_User_Group
London has a small grants program, £10,000 over three years, for walking and biking promotion.
https://airqualitynews.com/cars-freight-transport/transport-for-london-open-applications-for-new-walking-and-cycling-grants
Would living in a hilly area not be a good reason to buy this bike?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.reddit.com/r/bikecommuting/s/ldg32BTdxh
The writer is seeking advice on whether or not a particular type of bike is suitable to his potential commute, which has hills.
Too bad he couldn't borrow a bike and test it out.
Link-Up Bike Ministry donates repaired bikes to Cleveland residents in need of transportation
ReplyDeletehttps://thelandcle.org/stories/link-up-bike-ministry-donates-repaired-bikes-to-cleveland-residents-in-need-of-transportation/
1/30/24
“The principle behind Link-Up is for me to fix up donated bikes and get them in the hands and feet of people,” Matt Whisenhunt told The Land. Whisenhunt is director and pastor at Harbor and Bridge Community Center and church at W. 44th St. and Bridge Ave. in Ohio City and heads up the bike-based nonprofit, which has fixed and donated over 450 pre-owned bicycles since it got rolling in 2021.
“But cycling is way bigger than that,” he continued. “It’s the middle transportation option. Bicycles really bridge the gap for people to help get around (our) car-dominated society a little quicker.”
Midway through his volunteer shift, Whisenhunt responded to a knock on the foot door to find a mother and two children, ages 8 and 10, both wide-eyed at the sight of 200 bike frames. They had taken an RTA bus from their nearby home after hearing about Link-Up and came seeking bikes.
Link-Up’s mission is helping Clevelanders, primarily on the west side, access transportation that’s cheaper than owning and maintaining a car. All the bikes are repaired and distributed for free. Neighbors in need of a bike are encouraged to reach out by filling out a form with their size and what kind of bike they’re looking for. Volunteers, mostly local retirees and church members, then comb through stacks of damaged, donated bikes to either find a frame worth fixing or cannibalize one from scattered parts.
... Hints said Link-Up is part of a network of bike repair nonprofits tied to churches in cities including Atlanta, Houston and Las Vegas. They all use similar setups, getting donated bikes, fixing them up for free, and distributing them to community members.
https://citibikenyc.com/community-programs/ride-leader-academy
ReplyDeleteHow it Works
We will be accepting 6 Ride Leaders from Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan & the Bronx into this year’s program.
Ride leaders will receive:
3-week training from Courtney Williams, aka “The Brown Bike Girl”
Seed money to start a bike club in your neighborhood
Support to become a League Certified Instructor
1 Year Membership to League of American Bicyclists
Stipend of $1,000 for full participation in the program
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdHSjikqONeB3t1AyGAelmYJcDl0KWHOxiz0nd-SyISBujEKg/viewform
Which statement best describes your level of comfort with cycling on city streets?
*
I ride a bike in car traffic with confidence.
I ride a bike with car traffic, but sometimes feel nervous / unsure.
I prefer to ride a bike in car-free spaces, and only ride with cars when necessary.
I have never ridden a bike in car traffic.
Which statement best describes your current level of comfort with cycling in a group?
*
I have never cycled with a group.
I enjoy riding with small groups and personal friends.
I enjoy large bike rides (including large formal tours or the large social clubs)
I do not enjoy cycling
Move Minneapolis offers consulting service for those going multimodal
ReplyDeleteFree 15-minute calls provide tips and information on how to get around without driving.
https://www.startribune.com/move-minneapolis-pilots-consulting-calls-for-those-considering-going-multi-modal/600344500/
2/10/24
Called Customized Consultations, the 15-minute virtual or phone sessions are designed to help the uninitiated become comfortable with making sustainable trips by taking the bus, carpool, bike, scooter — or hoofing it.
"We don't imply that nobody should ever use a car to get anywhere," said outreach specialist Catherine Windyk. "Sometimes they need to drive, and alone. We want people to know their options and what would work best for them."
The free service is available to anyone who lives or works in downtown Minneapolis. It also can be used by people in the suburbs who need to come downtown for appointments, want to take in a show, see the Timberwolves or for any other reason. There has to be a connection to downtown, Windyk said.
In the webinar "How to Plan a Multimodal Trip in the Twin Cities" Move Minneapolis held last week, Windyk, with help from four panelists who get around mostly without a car, highlighted several tools for multimodal trip planning.
Worried about parking your e-bike? More secure 'bike shelters' are coming to Minneapolis
ReplyDeleteA pilot program will offer covered, locked areas to better protect bikes from theft and vandalism.
https://archive.is/57gjc
ttps://www.startribune.com/worried-about-parking-your-e-bike-more-secure-bike-shelters-are-coming-to-minneapolis/600341420/
Minneapolis this summer will offer a new generation of bicycle shelters — covered, locked bike racks — for cyclists worried about theft or vandalism.
The pilot program is especially conceived with electric bikes in mind. E-bikes are expensive and a target for thieves, who can remove components from the bikes if they're exposed, such as in a traditional bike rack.
"People are feeling increasingly uncomfortable locking expensive bikes outside," Russ Brooks, mobility planner for the city's Department of Public Works, told a City Council committee last week. Brooks said that as bicycle use increases in the city, especially for commuters who must leave their bikes unattended for stretches of time, secure bike-parking infrastructure will need to be developed. The pilot program is the first step.
Brooks said the program, which would last three years, is still being formed. Bike shelters could spring up as soon as the summer, and Brooks envisions 15 to 20 locations in the city before the winter, with various kinds of shelters that can be rented for short periods.
Another condition of the pilot program: No cost to taxpayers. Spots would be rented by the bike owner, and the shelter company would pay for any energy costs, permit fees and maintenance. Several companies currently operating elsewhere supplement their revenues with advertising on their shelters. Brooks said the experimental program will help answer the question of whether the best long-term course for the city is to contract with a private company, or companies, or pay for permanent infrastructure with city funds.
The types of shelters available on the market vary, from basic cages to fully enclosed structures that also offer charging stations for e-bikes. Some have enough space to handle cargo bikes — elongated bicycles or tricycles that have extra space for passengers, grocery bags, pets or other cargo.
candaid.org manufactures bikes. Gives a free bike to kids in need for every bike purchased
ReplyDeletehttps://candaid.org/treads-trails/
Helping the Homeless with Rebuilt Bicycles, WSJ, 1/16/24
ReplyDeleteRapid City, DC, street minister Roberta Harmon fixes bicycles for homeless people who need to get to work. Over 1,000.
https://apnews.com/0eabd771fc8ad5ae08ad6b3d53ce05e9
For nearly six years, Mike’s Bikes: Rides That Matter has provided bicycles to people who lack transportation, and the nonprofit ministry continually has a waiting list. Currently, about 50 people are waiting for bikes to help them become self-sufficient.
Roberta Harmon launched the nonprofit in 2016. Mike’s Bikes strives to fill a gap in Rapid City for people without transportation. The organization is named in honor of Mike English, a volunteer who rebuilds and repairs bikes and who helped Harmon launch Mike’s Bikes.
“Food, shelter and clothing are basic needs but you don’t get those things without employment,” Harmon said. “Public transportation doesn’t always get people there in a timely matter.”
RapidRide buses run during the day, but people whose jobs require them to work after 6 p.m. or on Sundays especially need alternate transportation, the Rapid City Journal reported.
https://rapidcityjournal.com/news/mikes-bikes-seeks-to-fill-growing-need-in-community/article_514df9bb-1eb2-5d72-923c-5b858d059f13.html
e bike vouchers
ReplyDelete=====
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-04-17/a-library-for-bike-riders-to-south-los-angeles
A library for bike riders brings 250 e-bikes to South Los Angeles
The Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator and L.A.’s Department of Transportation, aided by nearly $3 million in funding from the California Air Resources Board, debuted their e-bike “lending library” Tuesday at Leimert Park’s Ride On! Bike Co-Op.
The library was christened the “South Central Power Up” and was bolstered by the delivery of 250 e-bikes that are immediately available to the public.
“We are very excited to launch this pilot, which will meet an essential need for the community, making checking out a clean, reliable e-bike as simple as getting a book at the library,” the incubator’s president and chief executive, Matt Petersen, said in a statement.
The bikes will be placed at seven locations throughout South Los Angeles and will be available for rental for up to one month. Michelle Kinman, the incubator’s senior vice president of market transportation, said the 250-unit fleet comprises 215 commuter bikes, 29 cargo bikes and six adaptive bikes, including tricycles.
The library is part of a two-year pilot program funded by $2.7 million from the Air Resources Board. The money covered the purchase of the e-bikes and insurance along with maintenance and repairs, obligatory and complementary training for all participants, and additional support.