NEWS FLASH ! – VICTORY IN D.C.

March 10, 2012

Federal trans. bill amendment has won !

FROM JEFF MILLER/CEO Alliance for Bicycling and Walking >

We’ve just won a big battle for biking and walking in the federal transportation bill. After several long weeks of intense work from advocates around the country and our partners at America Bikes, we are extremely pleased to report that the Cardin-Cochran amendment has been accepted as part of the base Senate transportation bill, MAP-21. This amendment will ensure that local governments, school systems, and metropolitan planning organizations are able to access much-needed funds for making bicycling and walking safe and accessible.We are one step closer to a federal transportation law that makes streets safer for all users. Please consider calling your Senators to thank them for including the Cardin-Cochran amendment in MAP-21.While this is a big victory and a significant step forward, we still have a ways to go before it can become law. 

Your help will be critical in coming weeks to ensure passage of the Senate bill, to restore bicycle and pedestrian funding in the House, and to make sure any extension of current transportation law retains Safe Routes to School, Transportation Enhancements and Recreational Trails.”



CABA GOES TO CAPITOL HILL

March 7, 2012

LAB Annual Summit 2012

League of American Bicyclists Summit

It’s coming again in late March and CABA will be there. Board Member Keith Sorensen, Advisory Board member Harry Johnson and Richard South, UNCC graduate architect and CABA member will be attending from Charlotte along with delegates from mountain biking and other clubs, shops, bike industry folks and bike planners from all over North Carolina. A full day of meetings at each NC Congressperson’s offices will complement plenary sessions at the Ronald Reagan International Center, just a few blocks from the White House.

This year’s goal will be daunting: defending critical bike-ped funding programs that benefit the American taxpayer, and preventing Congress from turning back the clock on 40 years of hard-fought progress.


NEWS FLASH ! BIKE-PEDS LOSE IN D.C.

February 4, 2012

Partisanship triumphs once again


DATELINE: 8:41  a.m. Feb. 3 -
The U.S. House of Representatives Transportation and Infrastructure Committee yesterday voted down the bipartisan Petri/Johnson/Lipinski amendment that would have fixed many of the deficiencies in the House transportation bill, particularly as they relate to the “Transportation Enhancements” ( a major source of traditional bike-ped funding ) and the “Safe Routes to School” programs. “Safe Routes to Schools” is currently administered locally through the Mecklenburg County Health Dept.
The vote as expected was along party lines, with 29 Republicans voting against funding (2 Republicans in favor, including the amendment cosponsors).
But all is not lost. This was a committee vote. It may not be the nail in the coffin.
See how Congresspersons voted now.
Please phone NC Rep. Shuler and thank him for his support.
NC Rep.Coble voted with the Republican majority.
Rep. Heath Shuler – Democrat -225.6401 (area code 202)
Rep. Howard Coble – Republican – 225.3065(area code 202)
………………………………………………………………………………………………..
TECHNICAL DETAILS:

The bill contains changes to two of the three core programs for pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure; one program remains intact:
1)    The Recreational Trails program is consistent with the structure under SAFETEA-LU. Funding is established at $85 million for each of fiscal years 2013 – 2016.

2)    The Safe Routes to School Program is eliminated in its entirety.
Eliminating the SRtS program means the loss of $180 million per fiscal year for infrastructure and non-infrastructure projects to support walking and bicycling as modes of transportation for children to school, as well as the established institutional support of the SRtS coordinators at each state DOT.

3)    The Transportation Enhancement activities remain eligible under the Surface Transportation Program, but the 10 percent set-aside of apportioned funds is stricken.Eliminating dedicated funding for transportation enhancement activities means these projects will have to “compete” for prioritization with all other surface transportation projects in regional and state planning processes. The following activities which were eligible under SAFETEA-LU are eliminated:
a.    Acquisition of scenic or historic easements, including battlefields
b.    Historic preservation
c.    Rehabilitation and operation of historic transportation facilities
d.    Preservation of abandoned railway corridors
e.    Establishment of transportation museums
These five categories combined comprise 24% of all state DOT project programming of TE activities since 1992. Eliminating these activities will significantly restrict the flexibility state DOTs have relied upon in the past to enhance the nation’s surface transportation system. This is especially true for the two most popular activities of these five singled out for elimination, rehabilitation and operation of historic transportation facilities (9.4% of all TE activity) and preservation of abandoned railway corridors (7.2%).

Outside of the three core programs, there are two other noticeable provisions of this bill for pedestrian, bicycle and trail interests:
1)    Funding for the CMAQ program is moved to the new “Alternative Transportation Account,” which was previously the Mass Transit Account.
2)    The ability of state DOTs to use CMAQ or STP apportionments to fund bicycle and pedestrian coordinator positions is stricken. Eliminating the bicycle and pedestrian coordinator positions represents a huge step backward for state DOTs. It passes more of the burden of administering federal-aid highway programs directly to them.


NEWS FLASH ! – GOOD NEWS FROM U.S.CONGRESS

January 16, 2012

“Complete the Streets” bill 

A new federal transportation authorization bill will include a measure for the safe accommodation of all users, including bicyclists and pedestrians, in federally funded street projects. The bill directs the U.S. Secretary of Transportation to create national standards for the safe accommodation of all road users. The bill is now awaiting passage of the full Fiscal Year 2012 budget. Charlotte has been ahead of the curve with its own version – the ”Urban Street Design Guidelines” -(passed by City Council with strong CABA support) –  .

For more details, CLICK: CTS legislation.


CABA INVITE ! – DNC 2012

October 15, 2011

CABA selected to serve

Democratic National Convention Advisory Group for Sustainability

At the request of Dan Murrey and his Host Committee staff (with the behind the scenes support of Mayor Anthony Foxx ), we are pleased to announce that CABA will participate directly in convention planning in the coming months.

We pledge to make this the greenest convention with the smallest carbon footprint to ever land in the Queen City !

We intend to provide expertise to promote an innovative green transportation framework that will equal or surpass the success of the 2008 Denver convention. We will join other NGO partners incuding June Blotnick of Clean Air Carolina, Shannon Binns of Sustain Charlotte and Bill Gupton of the Sierra Club. We look forward to this opportunity to advance cycling as an integral component of the bigger mobility picture.


GLOBAL ADVOCACY UPTICKS

October 2, 2011

How to build a greener city 

  • Dateline: Sept.12, Wall Street Journal – “Can cities be part of the environmental solution instead of part of the problem ? ……Bike lanes, micro wind turbines, pneumatic garbage collection—and other ways to make urban areas more environmentally friendly…” This is the lead article in today’s Environment section of the WSJ. For full article: CLICK: Urban Green.       

 Who is Janette Sadik-Kahn ? 

  • Dateline: Sept. 11, New York Times –  Highly complimentary essay on New York City’s proactive bicycle advocate and visionary (and frequently demonized) , Janette Sadik-Khan/Transportation Commissioner. If urban biking can work in the Big Apple, it can work anywhere (!). Thanks to CABA member Harry Johnson for alerting us.   For full article CLICK: Big Apple WonderWoman.  For Utube interview CLICK: BAWoWo.

ACTION ALERT ! Congressional bike-ped funding slash !

September 14, 2011

No time to lose, folks

Contact our NC Senators right now.

CLICK: I bike I vote today and fill in your zip code !

This year, around $700 million of Federal transportation funds, which in reality is less than 2 percent of total transportation dollars, will be spent on bicycling and walking.  Given the unsettling situation inside the Beltway, that figure might be a big fat zero within a matter of days, not weeks.

Some Members of Congress want to  force us backwards to a 1950s highway-only mindset: as if oil embargoes, suburban sprawl, congestion, smog, the obesity epidemic, strained family budgets and climate change never happened. We expect Senator Coburn (R-OK) will ask Congress to eliminate the federal Transportation Enhancements program. Without this record of past funds, there is no way the bicycling movement would be where it is today.

We’re talking a track record of 20 years for bike lanes, mountain biking and other off-road trails, bike racks on buses, bike education, etc. etc. This isn’t safe or smart; it’s not good for the economy or the environment; this is bad health policy and bad transportation policy.

Bicycling projects create more jobs per dollar than highway-only projects. Cutting enhancements won’t impact the deficit. Act now. The future of the bicycle and pedestrian movement is just a few clicks away.

- Martin Zimmerman / CABA Exec. Director and CABA Board of Directors


BICYCLING IS NOT AN “ALTERNATIVE MODE”

August 14, 2011

Words to the wise

cartoon by Kevin Siers, Charlotte Observer. Click on cartoon to read text

 Check out this excerpt from a memo sent by the TriMet transportation agency to its regional partners in ( you guessed it) Portland Oregon, and we quote:

” Avoid calling walking bicycling, and transit “alternative modes”. They are used by almost everyone to promote health, save money, avoid congestion, and reduce oil dependence. INSTEAD SIMPLY SAY “walking, bicycling and transit.”

Sounds obvious doesn’t it ? Well, in auto addicted cities of the Southeast, that is not always the case. (Thanks to John Cock of Alta Design for sending this along).