We Have Not Yet Begun to Fight the Bike Lanes by F.H. Buckley
The bike wars in my little neighborhood are coming soon to a
city near you.”
Consider reading "Behind the Green Mask" by Rosa Koire and you will understand the agenda behind bike trails, walking trails etc.
http://www.democratsagainstunagenda21.com/
Other reference sites: http://americanpolicy.org/
http://www.freedomadvocates.org/articles/transportation/
http://sustainablefreedomlab.org/category/general-information/
My brave little neighborhood of King Street in Alexandria,
Va., has calmly met the challenges of the Revolution, the War of 1812 and the
Civil War, but now we're seriously annoyed. What's bothering us are the bike
wars. The city of Alexandria has proposed to take away our street's parking
spaces and replace them with a dedicated bike lane. The preening activists who
favor these lanes are in my town, and they will soon come to a neighborhood
near you if they're not there already.
It's not as though local cyclists favor King Street. It's a
main artery, State Highway 7 that runs for 70 miles east from George
Washington's Alexandria to Patsy Cline's Winchester in the west. Each day the
road conveys 15,000 commuters past my house, traveling from Arlington and
Fairfax to their jobs in Old Town or to the Patent and Trademark Office, along
a two-lane street only 30 feet wide. Cars speed by, and city buses plow through
our red lights at 40 miles per hour.
Our stretch of King Street is also extremely steep. The very
few cyclists you do see on this thoroughfare use the sidewalk, as they are
permitted to do. Coming up the hill, they rarely move faster than the very few
pedestrians, so everyone's safe.
As for the residents, we're really attached to our parking
spots. We like to tell our friends to drop by anytime. We don't want to send
our plumbers to park a few blocks over, on streets that are already congested.
Not a problem, the city tells us. Just get a special parking permit from city
hall for visitors. And what about the occasional party? What do we tell our
guests? Ah, the city's street coordinator said, channeling her inner Marie
Antoinette, let them get valet parking.
Part of the bike brigade in Alexandria, Va. City of
Alexandria
Many people on our street are bicyclists, so we're not
anti-bike. When bicycling, however, we never use King Street. We'll take the
safe side streets that get us to wherever we want to go. We're also not
fabulously wealthy. We don't hire valets to park cars for our visitors.
But the bike activists are mobilizing the troops. The
cycling advocacy blog Wash Cycle published a two-step action plan, calling on
proponents to stand up for the lanes by inundating the city council with
support. Alexandria Transportation Commissioner Kevin Posey has taken to firing
off tweets about how "some neighbors can't bear the thought of giving up
unused parking," and that opposition to bike lanes represents "a
trend where a few wealthy residents oppose projects to benefit middle class
consumers."
The problems of a few hundred Alexandria residents wouldn't
deserve a great deal of attention if all this weren't part of a growing
national movement that pits local homeowners and businesses against cyclists
and their trendy allies on city councils. It happened in Washington, D.C., in
2011, when Adrian Fenty's support for bike lanes helped make him a one-term
mayor, and it's going to happen across Alexandria. Bike wars have also broken
out in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Berkeley, Seattle, Austin and elsewhere.
Forget religion and politics, says New York City Council
Speaker Christine Quinn. What you don't want to talk about at dinner
parties is bike lanes, she told a luncheon in January.
We're seeing a similar kind of activism in the national
"Park(ing) Day" movement. These are open-source events when artists
and activists take over a parking space, put a coin in the meter, and for two
hours turn the space into a mini-park or gallery. We've had them in Alexandria,
and they can be a lot of fun, bringing out the tiny anarchist in all of us.
What's behind the movement, however, is an anticar political agenda. The
Park(ing) Day Manual tells us the point of the movement is to let people know
that "inexpensive curbside parking results in increased traffic, wasted
fuel and more pollution."
Our little squabble illustrates the tactics you can expect
to see when the bike wars reach you. Cyclist-commuters may number no more than
2% of the adult American population according to a 2002 report by The Pedestrian
and Bicycle Information Center, but they are the ones who go to city council
meetings. They'll push for the kind of "Complete Streets" policy that
our city adopted, one that gives priority to pedestrians and cyclists over
cars.
In the abstract, that will sound innocuous, but when the
time for implementation arrives, you'll find yourself losing your street
parking, street by street, as roads are repaved. And parking spaces are just
the beginning. As Mr. Posey wrote on the blog Greater Washington, "if we
can't take a few parking spaces, how will we take the traffic lanes?"
When you see the bike activists in your neighborhood, be
warned that they tend not to play nice. Our local gang misrepresents their
number and talks of assembling a "critical mass" of cyclists who will
ride together up King Street. On their blog, one of them urges bicyclists to
"ride slowly and smack in the middle of the lane, especially at peak
times."
Come to think of it, if you've ever been held up by a
cyclist blocking traffic when there was plenty of space on the side of the
road, you've already participated in the bike wars.
Source: Wall Street Journal, by Mr. F.H.Buckley.
WSJ, 11.8.13 By F.H. BUCKLEY, Nov. 8, 2013 6:31 p.m. ETMr. Buckley is a resident of King Street, Alexandria, Va
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