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5/31/2011

Help Improve Mitchell Avenue!

If you ride Mitchell Avenue between Vine Street and Clinton Springs, attend Xavier University, or live in St. Bernard, North Avondale, Clifton, Spring Grove Village, Northside, or Carthage, this message is for you.

We need your help to make a major improvement for bicyclists to Mitchell Avenue. A proposed climbing lane* on Mitchell has been held up by the desire of St. Bernard's engineers to reserve 10 feet for car parking rather than 8 feet on their side of the road. The City of Cincinnati, which owns half the road, needs St. Bernard's agreement to include a bike lane on the roadway.

We need as many people as possible to send an e-mail to St. Bernard Service Director Phil Stegman explaining why it is important to them personally -- and to St. Bernard and the region -- to enable this change to be made to Mitchell right away. 

A copy of my message and the correct e-mail addresses are below (You may need to adjust spacing and punctuation when you copy these into the address field of your e-mail program). 

I am sharing this to help you draft your own message.  If you already ride Mitchell or live in St. Bernard or an adjacent neighborhood, let them know!  If you would consider riding this route if bike lanes were added to the roadway, let them know that, too!

We believe that the St. Bernards engineers simply are not aware how many people there are who would like to see more bike-friendly streets.  Now is your chance to let them know.

Thank you for your help!
Gary Wright

*A climbing lane is a just a bike lane going uphill, where bikes will naturally be going slower.

DRAFT E-MAIL MESSAGE FOR YOUR PERSONALIZATION  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
E-MAIL ADDRESSES (copy into your e-mail program):

TO:  
service@cityofstbernard.org

CC:
bburkhardt@cityofstbernard.org;
jestep@cityofstbernard.org;
roxanne.qualls@cincinnati-oh.gov;
queencitybike09@gmail.com

TEXT TO MODIFY:
Phil Stegman, Director
Service Department
City of St. Bernard

Dear Mr Stegman,

I am writing to urge you to work with the City of Cincinnati to add a bike lane to Mitchell Avenue by allowing 8 feet for parking rather than 10 feet on the St. Bernard side of the street.

This minor change would allow a bike lane to be added to the uphill side of Mitchell, making it possible for bicyclists to use this important street to get to and from North Avondale, Hyde Park and points east from St. Bernard, and to Cincinnati neighborhoods to the west and north.  Changes have already been made or are being planned for Dana Avenue and Spring Grove, leaving Mitchell as a critical gap in the regional bicycle street network.

A bike lane would also make St. Bernard a more desirable place to live for Xavier University students who want to live in a green, healthy community that encourages and supports active lifestyles. Bicycles on the street are a sign of a desirable place to live for young people, and can be an important part of revitalizing neighborhood business districts. Clifton, Northside, and O'Bryonville are all areas where bike lanes are making a real difference.

Can you confirm that you will work with the City of Cincinnati to allow a bike lane to be added to Mitchell Avenue this year?

Sincerely,
Gary Wright
Over the Rhine, Cincinnati
Queen City Bike Board Member

cc: 
Mayor William Burkhardt, City of St. Bernard
Councilperson John Estep, Chair, Transportation Committee, City of St. Bernard
Councilperson Roxanne Qualls, Chair, Transportation Subcommittee, City of Cincinnati
Frank Henson, President, Queen City Bike

5/12/2011

Bike to Work Week Rolls into View

From http://www.queencitybike.org/

It's almost here! Plan your week now!  

Be sure to join us on Fountain Square from 11:30 to 1 pm on Thursday, May 19 for our big Bike to Work Day Event, and ride TANK and METRO free with your bike all day Thursday!

Warm up for the week ahead with one of these events this weekend:

Saturday, May 14
9 am - 1 pm Bike Depot and Flash Class at Findlay Market
10 am          Evendale Bicycle Rodeo
1 pm            Bikes + Brews (pedal from pub to pub)

Sunday, May 15
9 am            Erlanger Friendship City Bike Ride
11 am          Bike2Baseball - Ride to the Reds game!
Then the biggest week in local bicycling begins...
Bike to Work Week, Monday, May 16 to Friday, May 20
Monday May 16

Morning Commuter Stations:
7 am - 9 am
Coffee Emporium, 3316 Erie Ave (Hyde Park)
Cafe Moca, 2835 Woodburn Ave @ Madison Rd (Walnut Hills)
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!

Bicycle Happy Hour
5 - 6:30 pm
MOTR, 1345 Main Street 
Free homemade chocolate chip cookie and happy hour drink prices

Tuesday May 17

Morning Commuter Stations:
7 am - 9 am
Roebling Point Bookstore, 306 Greenup Ave (Covington)
College Hill Coffee Co., 6128 Hamilton Ave
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!

 Wednesday May 18

Morning Commuter Stations:
7 am - 9 am
Fuel, 2726 Riverside Drive (East End)
Sidewinder, 4181 Hamilton Ave (Northside)
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!

Afternoon Commuter Stations, University of Cincinnati
4 pm - 7 pm
Martin Luther King & Clifton Avenue
McMillan & Vine
Free stainless steel water bottles and ice water for riders and snacks

Thursday May 19 
BIKE TO WORK DAY! Ride TANK and METRO free all day with your bike!

Morning Commuter Stations:
7 am - 9 am
Sitwells, 324 Ludlow Avenue (Clifton)
Corner BLOC Coffee Shop 3101 Price Ave (Price Hill)
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!

BIKE TO WORK DAY CELEBRATION ON FOUNTAIN SQUARE 
11:30 am - 1 pm Fountain Square
Music by Lagniappe, our first Tricycle Olympics, and displays by dozens of local groups. Show the city how many of us there are! 

Bicycle Happy Hour
4 pm - 5:30 pm
Fries Cafe, 3247 Jefferson Ave (Clifton)
Free slice of pizza from Adriaticos, and discounted drinks.

Friday May 20

Bike Newport's  Breakfast on the Bridge (Purple People Bridge)
7 am to 9 am 

Morning Commuter Stations:
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!
7 am - 9 am
Coffee Emporium, 110 E. Central Parkway (OTR);

University of Cincinnati Commuter Stations
Free coffee and goodies, and a check-up for your bike!
7 am - 10 am 
Martin Luther King & Clifton Avenue
McMillan & Vine 

Bicycle Healthy Happy Hour
4 pm to 5:30 pm
Park + Vine,1202 Main St
We are throwing a kombucha keg party on our patio!


 Click here to see the full Bike Month 2011 Calendar of Events!

About Queen City Bike
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Queen City Bike is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that promotes bicycling as a safe and healthy means of transportation and recreation for everyone. Learn more at http://www.queencitybike.org/.

Join Queen City Bike By May 21 and you can win a spot on our exclusive Behind The Scenes Bike Tour of the Zoo.
Your membership is tax deductible

5/11/2011

Cincinnati Cycle Club DAY AT CAMP ERNST POSTPONED!!!

CCC DAY AT CAMP ERNST POSTPONED!!!

The seemingly endless rain has affected trail conditions at the YMCA's Camp Ernst. They have yet to dry out and the camp's maintenance crew has been doing what they can to get the trails ready, but most of the trails are still not yet safe to ride. Of course, there is more rain in this week's forecast.

Some parts of the trails may be open but the decision about what is safely available might not be made until Saturday. Because of this, we are postponing the CCC day at Camp Ernst until a drier date (TBA).

5/05/2011

New bike plan brings renewed hope for a bike-friendly future for Cincinnati

From Citybeat.com
A
nyone familiar with Cincinnati’s cycling infrastructure or, perhaps more importantly, the great lengths other cities go to provide safe and effective means for navigating the streets by bike knows that Cincinnati isn’t exactly what you would consider a cyclist’s dream. But our city during recent years has taken the initial steps toward becoming a more bike-friendly place.


The city’s 2010 Bike Plan includes the creation of 445 miles of on-street and off-road improvements, including dedicated bicycle lanes, shared bicycle lanes (sharrows) and on- and off-street facilities. By creating bike-friendly streets, city planners hope to provide traffic relief along with environmental, economic and health benefits to residents.

On June 23, 2010, Cincinnati City Council approved the Cincinnati Bicycle Transportation Plan, a 15-year plan broken up into three five-year phases. Phase I will add 91 miles of street improvements and 12.4 miles of off-road improvements to 13.3 miles of existing cycling infrastructure. Phase II will add 116 miles of street improvements and 17.2 miles off-road and Phase III will add 122.3 miles of street improvements with 53.3 miles of off-road initiatives.

The overall goal is to more than double the number of people using bicycles for regular transportation while reducing the number of injuries and fatalities. When all said and done, the city projects 113.9 miles of bike lanes, 105.3 miles of sharrows, 23.8 miles of climbing lanes, 11.1 miles of paved shoulders and 102.7 miles of off-road facilities.

The key to changing the city’s culture in terms of cycling awareness and understanding is to change residents’ perception of safety on city streets and their desired form of transportation, according to Melanie McVay, a city planner in the Department of Transportation. In Cincinnati, 79.4 percent of area residents drive or carpool to work, while only .5 percent use a bicycle, according to the 2008 Census. McVay says the city is dedicated to changing these statistics.

The Bike Plan initially focuses on three corridors: Madison Road, Spring Grove and Riverside Drive. As the plan progresses, gaps between destinations all across the city will be narrowed and eventually connect downtown to its vital nearby neighborhoods. To show how positive cycling infrastructure can effect area residents, McVay points to the most recent National Household Travel Survey, which found that for Americans 30 percent of trips are a mile or shorter, 40 are two miles or shorter and 50 percent of all trips are three miles or shorter.

McVay believes the high number of short trips is evidence of how easily many Cincinnatians could adopt bike use into their everyday lives. “It really makes sense to me in a city like Cincinnati where we have these great business districts in every neighborhood,” she says.

In 2010 Cincinnati installed 2.3 miles of the plan, according to McVay, adding bike lanes from Crawford Avenue to Winton Road with sharrows from Winton Road to Mitchell Avenue, bike lanes from Brighton Place to the Western Hills Viaduct, with sharrows from Western Hills Viaduct to Hopple Street (southbound only), and bike lanes on Linn Street from Sixth Street to Gest Street.

Weather-delayed sharrows on Central Parkway will be completed this year, she says, along with bike lanes on Beechmont Avenue just before the shopping district, a half a mile of sharrows where Ludlow turns into Jefferson Avenue, 2.5 miles of bike lanes on Madison Road to close the gap between O’Bryonville and Dana Avenue, about one mile of bike lanes on Martin Luther King Drive, about a half a mile of a shared path on Dana Avenue near Xavier University and 3.4 miles of bike lanes on Riverside Drive. All totaled, improvements add up to about 9 miles for 2011.

As for off-road improvements, McVay says great progress continues on the Mill Creek Greenway Trail in Spring Grove and on the Ohio River Trail, both of which are benefitting from additional funding sources. When completed, the Ohio River Trail will span 23 miles from Coney Island to Cincinnati Riverfront Park, ending at the site of the new Bike, Mobility and Visitor’s Center. Scheduled to open this fall, the center will house bike storage and repair, showers, lockers, toilets, rental facilities and retail. McVay says the Ohio River Trail rides will be showcased as part of Bike Month and continue throughout the summer to educate riders on the routes.

“Hopefully by the time the Mobility Center opens we’ll have this whole mass of new people who have learned how to use the Ohio River Trail,” she says.

Although the 15-year Bike Plan carries a $55 million price tag, McVay says much of the actual cost will be lowered by
piggybacking the installation of bike lanes and sharrows with roads already slated for the city’s street rehab program. The only drawback will be waiting sometimes up to six or seven years to install bike lanes while following the city’s schedule. This year, the program needed $1 million in funding from the city, of which $600,000 was approved by council in the budget. The city received input from renowned bike planning firm Toole Design Group, which advised that the first few years would pose the biggest challenge, McVay says.
“Basically we have 75 miles left to do in five years, so that’s about 15 miles a year,” McVay says. “So it’s not impossible, but the first few years are going to be challenging to hit our goals.”

Cycling advocate and MoBo Bike Cooperative board member Jess Linz took part in the planning process as well, observing the early stages of the Bike Plan. She says the city recognized that simply building bike lanes and sharrows wouldn’t be enough to inspire riders to take to the street. She credits the city’s forward thinking approach that incorporates all facets of improvement into its comprehensive plan, which relies on the five “E”s: Engineering (putting infrastructure on the roads); Encouragement (creating bike-friendly destinations); Education (teaching drivers and cyclists road rules); Enforcement (police involvement to ensure safety); and Evaluation (the city reports on its progress).

The city hit another milestone in June 2010 with the passing of the “Safe Distance Law,” Linz says. The law requires cars to allow 3 feet of distance when passing bikes and prohibits driving or parking in a bike lane. Linz believes it validates cyclists on the road as long as motorists understand the law and police enforce it.

“Putting those five things together, we’re going to see a change in and an improvement in Cincinnati,” she says. “So once those 90 miles are on the road, plus law enforcement is starting to participate in a different way and people are starting to get some more education, then I think it will start coming together.”

As one of the driving forces behind the Bike Plan, local cycling advocacy organization Queen City Bike continues to encourage riders to take to the streets and serves as the go-to spot to find out about any cycling event in the city via its website (www.queencitybike.com) or Facebook page. Gary Wright, president of the nonprofit organization, credits the city with having good intentions but would like to see progress occur at a faster pace. He says he sees the challenge to be funding necessary improvements in the face of opposition from local, state and national representation.

In order to keep positive momentum, Wright says residents must remain organized and focused to make the case that bike facilities are good for the city and the city’s neighborhoods. To show support, he encourages residents to attend one of May’s Bike Month events and fill out one of the organization’s “green cards” that advocates continued improvements for cycling in the region. He says as part of the city’s self-issued “Bike Plan Evaluation” the city was fair in issuing itself a “C” for respect shown by motorists, pavement quality and as a city for bicycling, a “C-” for completeness of the bicycle network and a “B ” for the city’s effort and progress in the last 12 months.

“There’s been change in the attitude of the city and the city is moving forward — but there’s a lot to be done,” Wright says. “It’s still a marathon and not a sprint, but we’ve got to make continuous progress. So it’s going to be up to us to keep organizing the community and keeping people expecting change and it’s going to be up to the city to figure out how in this climate to do things quickly, cheaply and efficiently.”

One major change occurred last year when the city transformed a single parking space on Lingo Street in Northside into to a bike corral, one of the first in the region. This past March, the city installed the second corral just outside of Park Vine on Main Street in Over-the-Rhine, creating parking for up to 12 bikes. Park Vine owner Dan Korman says the corral marks a bold move by the city as it places bikes on the same level as cars. He says his friends in Chicago are envious because their renowned bike-friendly city has yet to install any corrals for cyclists.

The corral’s steady rotation of bikes during all hours of the day proves that area residents are starting to embrace cycling, according to Korman.

“Some of my friends who are terrified of being on a bicycle or have never been on a bicycle are now considering buying a bicycle because they’re getting hit with these different messages all over the city,” Korman says. “OK, there’s a bike corral in front of Park Vine and MoBo is having a bike sale this coming weekend — their excuses for not riding a bike are becoming fewer and fewer.”
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