Geonz
07-27-2006, 05:24 AM
... okay, *one* more...
http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0630/bicycling.php
This is an article from Seattle - which has a lot of the same issues our little town does. In a nutshell:
Seattle's bike-friendly reputation isn't everything it's cracked up to be. "I think that it probably got that reputation because people look at things like the Burke- Gilman trail or Green Lake and think, 'Oh, there's bike paths,' because that's what the city is promoting, but the reality of actually commuting is different," he says. "It's one thing for people like myself who are avid bicyclists, but certainly somebody who doesn't bike much and thinks it might be a new way to commute, they might find it frightening. Especially downtown."
A lot of these bottlenecks and dysfunctions have solutions, but they require investment on the part of local government. And for the most part, local government, both at the county and city levels, has tended to treat the bicycle infrastructure more as a boutique recreational amenity, with specialized paths being built here and there, rather than a functioning segment of a regional commuter-transit system."
(going to work on FLASH now...)
http://www.seattleweekly.com/news/0630/bicycling.php
This is an article from Seattle - which has a lot of the same issues our little town does. In a nutshell:
Seattle's bike-friendly reputation isn't everything it's cracked up to be. "I think that it probably got that reputation because people look at things like the Burke- Gilman trail or Green Lake and think, 'Oh, there's bike paths,' because that's what the city is promoting, but the reality of actually commuting is different," he says. "It's one thing for people like myself who are avid bicyclists, but certainly somebody who doesn't bike much and thinks it might be a new way to commute, they might find it frightening. Especially downtown."
A lot of these bottlenecks and dysfunctions have solutions, but they require investment on the part of local government. And for the most part, local government, both at the county and city levels, has tended to treat the bicycle infrastructure more as a boutique recreational amenity, with specialized paths being built here and there, rather than a functioning segment of a regional commuter-transit system."
(going to work on FLASH now...)