This $91 million expenditure will go
towards bringing roughly 650 miles of new protected bike lanes to the city of
Chicago over the next eight years. This, Mayor Emanuel says, will add more
“transportation choices” and help the city recruit start-up companies.
Ironically, while safety is another
stated reason for the new bike lanes, the project actually forces opposing
lanes of motor vehicle traffic much closer together. The bike lanes, which are
normally only painted lanes that run with motor vehicle traffic, will now run
along the sidewalk, with permanently installed pillions that protect them from
parked cars. This, in turn, also moves parking lanes closer to moving traffic,
as the overall lane space is much tighter, with approximately seven feet of
road space removed on each side of the street for the bi-directional bike
lanes.
Currently, just 1.3 percent of
Chicagoans commute by bicycle, a number that, according to the city’s “Chicago
Forward: CDOT Action Agenda,” needs to be much higher.
Just over 1% of Chicago commuters
choose to travel by bicycle. While this number has almost doubled each of the
last two decades, it’s still less than the enviable 6% rate in Portland, Oregon
or the 4.5% achieved in chilly Minneapolis. Even in the central portion of the
city, only 2% of all trips (errands, lunch, and commute) are by bicycle. We can
do better — much better.
Continuing to invest in the right
infrastructure and safety enhancements will keep increasing the number of
Chicagoans who choose active transportation and, by extension, contribute to a
healthier, happier, and more productive populace and city.
The bike plan is just part of a
massive infrastructure initiative for Chicago that ranges from rebuilding water
systems to roads that will cost the city billions upon billions of dollars. The
plan’s funding mechanism, a “public-private infrastructure trust,” has
been highly criticized both over transparency concerns and how private
interests will affect the project.
Emanuel
defended his plan and public-private funding mechanism to Bloomberg Businessweek in an interview
published last week, claiming, “It will fully comply with all
the laws that are on the books. It’ll be totally transparent. Every reform,
every change, every amendment I adopted, all dealt with governance. I
understand people’s concerns based on past actions that they all participated
in…. We’re the only economy that still does its infrastructure on a socialist
model, state-owned….do you know there are 147 different projects that are all
public-private in Canada, just north of us? It’s a tool. It’s not an end.”
The city still faces a $650 billion
budget shortfall, along with a public pension crisis and looming teachers
strike. Chicago is now leading the country as a “world class city,” on pace to
hit 500 murders this year, but due to lack of funding, there is a police
shortage and the city is now being patrolled by the Nation of Islam.
Despite this, the Chicago media began pumping out
propaganda to support the Mayor’s plan, touting the mayor’s ambition to become
the country’s “bike-friendliest city” and focusing its coverage on bike and
pedestrian safety and more “travel choices.”
Even CBS 2 Chicago’s traffic reporter Kris
Habermehl chimed in during his report on the newly announced 33 miles of lanes
to be completed this year (along with one that will have its own bicycle
traffic signals). According to Habermehl, “each mile will cost about $140,000,
but if it keeps the bicycles separate from the cars and bicycles a good and
viable way to come into the city of Chicago, why not?”
So, will Occupy Chicago and the rest
of today’s outspoken “champions against corporate and government collusion,” on
the institutional left, speak out about this kind of government and corporate
partnership?
Something in my gut tells me no,
probably not. If Mayor 1 Percent’s spending helps a different 1 percent, the 1
percent of Chicagoans who ride their bikes to work, at a cost of $7.3 billion
in overall infrastructure spending in the next couple years alone, $91 million
on bike lanes should be plenty to keep them quiet.
Source: Rebel Pundit 2
Comments
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
29
This is really great! I feel that other cities could learn a lot about Chicago's view on bicycle lanes! Thanks for sharing
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