Howdy all!
I've reduced my car driving to about a fifth of what it used to be. I'm commuting by bicycle about 12 miles per day, all told. I've noticed some things as I've done this, and surprise surprise! This has changed some of my policy views.
We need more bike lanes. We need more bike lanes. We need more bike lanes.
And we may need to change how we educate budding new drivers. Seriously! This ain't easy.
Read on?
A coworker of mine is from Brazil. Apparently their equivalent of drivers-education includes a lot of focus on bicyclists. It even goes so far as to stress that car drivers should actually defer to cyclists if need be. I can barely imagine what that must be like.
A bike lane is about as wide as a shoulder. It isn't that hard to create them. Remember, every person you see riding a bike isn't driving a car. If they've got their own space then they aren't clogging up your automotive commute.
It's interesting. You don't need every road to have a bike lane. I can handle riding with traffic so long as it doesn't go much faster than 35 mph. However, in heavy traffic or faster traffic areas we need more bike lanes.
Mass transit needs to better accomodate bicyclists too. Sometimes I see a bike rack on an Akron bus, sometimes I don't. Amtrak tries to accomodate bikes, but they're not that great at it. Depending on the train you can either rack it or you actually have to box it and check it. It's nuts.
As our society comes to grips with the ever increasing cost of energy I think we'll see more and more people commute this way. We do not need to legislate it, but we do need to facilitate it.
Oh, and wholly separate from any political issues, more empoyers need showers. Seriously. I hate coming in to work sweaty.
Any other cyclists? Drivers with an axe to grind?
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