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  • Bike Everywhere Day is Friday! It may be reduced in scale, but still a great excuse to get up early to ride

    Bike Everywhere Month logoThere’s no rally downtown, no after-party in Ballard and only a fraction of the community-created “celebration stations” in a typical year. But hey, Bike Everywhere Day 2021 is still an excuse to to ride your bike Friday, so it’s still a pretty good day. Biking is really fun.

    There are six stations in Seattle plus a handful more around the region. The primary Cascade station will be near the Fremont Bridge as usual. So set an alarm to get out a little early to hit up some stations and say, “Hi!” to some friendly faces.

    Here’s the official map of stations:

    More details from Cascade:

    To build a network of support and fun for the thousands of cyclists on Bike Everywhere Day, Cascade Bicycle Club and our local partners host dozens of celebration stations along major bike routes in the region. We’ve provided our station hosts with suggestions on how to host no-contact stations and we encourage everyone to follow local public health guidance.

    Stop by and:

    • Pick up a free souvenir (at select stations)
    • Join Cascade Bicycle Club by signing up for a membership (Fremont area Station only).
    • Take a selfie and share it on social media with the hashtag #WABikeEverywhere
    • Enjoy socially distanced waves and smiles!

    But hope for biking events is finally on the horizon. With vaccination rates climbing every day and closing in on half the county’s population (and more than half of eligible people), Cascade announced that 1,000 riders will be allowed at Flying Wheels June 5. That will make it “Washington’s biggest in-person cycling event in more than a year,” according to the Cascade Blog. There are still changes from a typical year (no day-of registration, no gathering at the start line, etc), but it’s a sign of change. Finally.

    Y’all, COVID has been really hard. You are all amazing and wonderful for doing your part to get through this. We’re not out of it yet, but it’s coming (at least it seems that way).

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  • Bike News Roundup: Watch the new headlines show!

    The Bike News Roundup is back! And I’m trying out a new format for a news headlines video. It’s short and (hopefully) entertaining. Check it out and tell me what you think.

    Stories highlighted in the Headlines Show:

    Pacific Northwest News (more…)

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  • NorthStar Cycling Club featured in Time Magazine

    Photo of the magazine spread.Very cool to see Seattle’s NorthStar Cycling Club in Time Magazine this week. The young club is featured as part of the issue’s Visions of Equity project as an example of “How Communities of Color Have Found Strength, Joy and Comfort in a Year Like No Other.”

    From Time:

    “When we get on our bikes, it is an element of freedom,” says founding member Edwin Lindo, who launched the cycling club based in Seattle in February 2020, just before the pandemic started. He and co-founder Aaron Bossett wanted to encourage more BIPOC individuals to take up cycling. Lindo, who identifies as Central American, attributes the lack of diversity in cycling to attitudes that often focus on questions like: “Do you have the nicest bike?” or “Do you have the fastest bike?” This culture, he says, is not welcoming to individuals who might not have the means to take up the sport. “There’s an archetype of cycling— we’re not it.”

    Read more…

    Follow NorthStar: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Website

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  • Text message cover-up shows Mayor Durkan is unfit for office

    Screenshot of the start of the SEEC's letter to Mayor Durkan.
    A letter to Mayor Durkan from the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (Full Letter PDF).

    Mayor Jenny Durkan, then-Police Chief Carmen Best and Seattle Fire Chief Harold Scoggins all deleted or otherwise lost their text messages from the midst of one of the most tumultuous times in Seattle history. The mayor has hidden the loss of these texts from the public since at least August in an apparent attempt to cover-up her breach of public disclosure laws, and one whistle-blowing public records officer resigned out of fear of retaliation while another has been placed on unpaid leave after they bravely informed the public about the cover-up. Our city owes Kim Ferreiro and Stacy Irwin a debt of gratitude (and probably compensation, too).

    Jenny Durkan has destroyed whatever trust the public might still have in her, and she is not fit to be Mayor of this great city.

    Though she denies it, the deletion of these texts looks like an attempt to hide damning information from the public. Perhaps those texts include the answer a gigantic, extremely consequential question Durkan and Best have continually dodged: Who ordered police to abandon the East Precinct? Or maybe those texts could shine a light on who was ordering police officers to gas people protesting police brutality and the murder of George Floyd every day for more than a week. The mayor publicly ordered SPD to stop using tear gas, yet the practice continued. Did she lose control of the department, or did she lie to the public? One of those must be true, though neither is good.

    Mayor Durkan’s failures of leadership last June were so egregious that Seattle Bike Blog joined many other groups in calling for her resignation or removal from office. Seattle Bike Blog has not changed that stance.

    She has refused to answer the public’s questions about these decisions, and now key records that could have provided insight have been deleted not just from her phone, but also the phones of the public officials in the relevant chain of command. This stinks of possible criminal activity and must be investigated as many elected officials and candidates have demanded.

    But even if the public were to accept her dubious defense that she accidentally set her phone to auto-delete texts thinking they were saved in the cloud somewhere, her fully conscious and purposeful cover-up of the missing public information is more than enough reason for her to leave office and should also be investigated. The Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (“SEEC”) has already found her Legal Counsel Michelle Chen in violation of the Public Records Act (PDF) for failing to disclose the missing texts and trying to conceal that they were missing. But the SEEC finding raises more questions than it answers, and should be just the beginning.

    When Mayor Durkan is conducting public business, her texts do not belong to her. They belong to the people. Every city employee whose communications quality for public disclosure are trained in how to preserve their records including their texts. Durkan, who was a U.S. Attorney before running for mayor, is very familiar with public disclosure laws. It is vital to the integrity of our democracy that we have the ability to observe how our elected officials are conducting city business in our names. We must know who ordered the precinct to be abandoned, for example, because we need that information to make better electoral choices in the future. That’s how democracy works. Mayor Durkan deleting the texts and then covering it up is nothing short of an attack on our democracy.

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  • Saturday: Memorial walk and ride for Mike Colmant near Seward Park

    Photo of Michael Colmant and a map of the planned walk and ride.
    From the event listing.
    A ghost bike decorated in bright flowers with photos and mementos about Mike.
    A ghost bike in memory of Mike Colmant near the site of the collision.

    Mike Colmant was a father, grandfather, triathlete, and Deputy Director at Boeing Field. He was biking on Seward Park Ave S just north of Wilson Ave S when someone drove on the wrong side of the road and struck him, killing him before fleeing the scene. Police have not posted any updates in the case. Colmant was 63.

    His death April 11 led to an outpouring of love from friends, family and colleagues. A white ghost bike memorial sits near the location of the fatal collision, overflowing with flowers, a Clif Bar, a small airplane, mementos from Boeing Field, a photo of him cycling in a race, Hawaiian leis, and a photo of him holding a child after completing the 2000 Hawiian Ironman competition. Someone wrote “We love you Mike” on the telephone pole.

    Just over a month after his death, friends and family will join Seattle Neighborhood Greenways for a memorial walk and ride 2 p.m. Saturday that is open to the public. The walk will start at Seward Park and the bike ride will start at Be’er Sheva Park. Both will meet at the site of the ghost bike, where friends and family will speak. You can also contribute to a GoFundMe set up to help his family in British Columbia with all their costs, including the added difficulty of crossing the border during the pandemic.

    More details from Seattle Neighborhood Greenways: (more…)

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  • Last chance to tell the Feds: Make our national road standards safer

    Cover of the 2009 MUTCD.
    This very boring-looking book has had a huge impact on the way our communities look and function (or not).

    There is a book that gives traffic engineers across the nation guidelines for how to design streets and highways, and the Federal Highway Administration is updating it right now. Unfortunately, the current draft of the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (“MUTCD”) is backwards, limiting safety innovations while defending the same dangerous road designs that contribute to the deaths of tens of thousands of people every year.

    Preliminary counts show that about 42,000 people died in U.S. traffic collisions in 2020, the highest count since 2006 and a figure on par with the 1980s. We will not see the amount of carnage change until we change the designs of the roadways to encourage safer travel for every person. The status quo is not working, and our faulty national road-building standards are largely to blame.

    You have until tomorrow evening (9 p.m. 5/14) to submit a comment on the updated guide. The League of American Bicyclists has a handy online tool you can use.

    The MUTCD does not make the laws exactly, but it does constrain the design decisions traffic engineers feel comfortable making. The guide encourages car-prioritized streets with many lanes, high speeds, wide turns and long crosswalks, conditions we know are dangerous and lead to deaths and injuries. But if someone dies in a crash on a new roadway, it’s very difficult to win a lawsuit against the agency responsible if the design follows the national standards outlined in the guide. The guide gives agencies and engineers cover to repeat the same dangerous design mistakes over and over and over again in communities all across the nation. (more…)

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