Friday is Bike Everywhere Day! There will be a lot more people in the bike lanes and “celebration stations” located all over town worth stopping by. So wake up earlier than usual so you can hit up as many as you can. Or just take the day off and try to hit them all. Tell your boss I said it was OK.
In the aftermath of the devastating news that Steve Hulsman was struck and killed while biking in West Seattle, 177 people donated more than $20,000 to help his wife Rita cover costs related to his death. But Rita had a different idea in mind for this money raised with love for her and her late husband: Use it to make streets safer so this doesn’t happen again.
Rita donated $10,000 to both Cascade Bicycle Club and Seattle Neighborhood Greenways to support their work to improve street safety. “I don’t want anyone else to go through what my husband went through and I know the work you do will move that along,” she said to Cascade Executive Director Lee Lambert during a KIRO 7 News report.
The driver who struck and killed Steve, who KIRO 7 News identified as Aaron Ludberg, has not been charged for actions directly related to the collision. He is facing lesser charges for driving with a suspended license and driving without a court-mandated ignition interlock device. We reported previously on the investigation in which SPD’s Traffic Collision Investigation Squad did not begin working the case until after the scene had been cleared and streets were reopened.
Steve sought out difficult rides with lots of climbing, which is why he was riding on Marine View Drive that evening in December. It was a route he had done countless times, and he was scheduled to lead a free group ride along it just days later. After his death, many people posted remembrances of how he had been an encouraging presence to help them complete difficult rides like the annual Ride Around Mount Rainier in One Day (RAMROD) event with its 10,000 feet of elevation gain. Rita told KIRO 7 News that Steven didn’t count miles, he counted feet of elevation gain. His goal was to log 1,000,000 feet of climbing to his cycling tracker Strava. When he died, he had climbed 787,641 feet, just 212,359 feet short of his goal.
From Rita:
Dear Tom,
Thank you for your suggestions on which organizations I should consider for distributing the proceeds of the Remembering Steve Hulsman fundraiser I set up on GoFundMe several months ago. After getting acquainted with each organization, I zeroed in on two that seem centered on the kinds of efforts I want to focus on in the aftermath of my husband’s death. And since then I have distributed all of the proceeds of the Remembering Steve Hulsman fundraiser to two organizations.
This evening I posted an update on the Remembering Steve Hulsman GoFundMe page to let the almost 200 donors know how their contributions had been distributed, and I thought you might be interested as well, so I’ve included that update below my signature. Please feel free to share it with your readers if you wish.
The goal: No more deaths or serious injuries at Dexter and Thomas.
This seemingly unremarkable intersection has been the site of at least two tragedies in recent memory. Mike Wang was killed by someone making a left turn there while biking home from work in 2011, and Jaahnavi Kandula was killed by a speeding Seattle Police officer while walking in the crosswalk in 2023. Though this project was planned before Kandula was killed, its opening this week feels like the city is saying, “No more. Not again. Not here.”
The new design includes several features Seattle has not used previously, but they are all designed to maximize safety by slowing motor vehicles, shortening crossings, separating modes of travel, and creating redundant safety buffers. It is something of a showcase of safety features, a test of what a high-budget, complete rebuild intersection project could look like. There are curbs and separators all over the place, carefully placed to slow turning traffic, improve sight lines between all users, and make it clear where everyone is supposed to be.
The short section of 24th Ave E south of Lake Washington Boulevard, which is part of the Lake Washington Loop bike route, will be closed as well, though you would not really be able to get there due to the Lake Washington Blvd. closure, anyway.
Montlake Boulevard will be open. Riders should be able to take the east sidewalk on Montlake Blvd. to E North Street then connect to the alleyway north of E Roanoke St that is part of the signed Lake Washington Loop route.
“When I share the fact that a third of people in the United States can’t, or can’t afford to, drive, usually my audience is incredulous,” writes Seattle resident Anna Letitia Zivarts in her book “When Driving Is Not an Option: Steering Away from Car Dependency” out today from Island Press. Zivarts will be speaking 7:30 Monday at Town Hall Seattle’s Wyncote NW Forum on First Hill with Barb Chamberlain and Tanisha Sepúlveda. Sliding scale tickets are $5-$25.
That one-third estimate is almost certainly an undercount since it does not fully account for people who still have a driver’s license but can no longer drive for a variety of reasons such as a new or progressing disability, aging, or an inability to keep up with the costs of car ownership. But despite nondrivers making up such a large percentage of our population, urban planning and transportation policy decisions have largely been made under the assumption that driving is the primary form of transportation, and those policies have created a sprawling web of problems for nondrivers living in communities across Washington State and the U.S.
Zivarts was born with nystagmus, a neurological condition that prevents her from passing the vision test needed to obtain a driver’s license, and she shares some of her personal struggles as a young person unable to get a license like many of her friends. Her work for Disability Rights Washington took her to meet people in all 49 state legislative districts in Washington State who had their own unique stories to tell about the challenges they face navigating their communities with a wide range of disabilities. In her book, Zivarts punctuates the hard data and research with people’s personal stories, creating a deeply humanized analysis of the scattered and often dangerous state of nondriving transportation in our nation and how we can make things better.
The book is focused on nondrivers, specifically people who cannot drive whether they want to or not. So, for example, it’s not focused on people like me who have a driver’s license and the ability to drive but choose not to. It should also not be misunderstood as being anti-driving because driving is not even an option for the primary subjects of the book. The book discusses important problems to address within accessibility-specific programs like deficiencies in paratransit service, but even people who drive will likely find most the solutions suggested here would also make their communities safer and more accessible for themselves and their families. Just like many web designers, media creators, retail store designers, landscape architects and people in many other industries have discovered, universal designs created thoughtfully with accessibility for everyone in mind are also better for people who are not disabled. Complete networks of sidewalks, safe crosswalks to transit stops, predictable and frequent transit service, rural transit service, safer vehicle design standards, affordable housing in walkable neighborhoods, remote access to jobs, remote access to services like healthcare, these are some of the main solutions Zivarts suggests in this book. The book is full of stories of people who are forced to struggle every day to accomplish basic tasks not because they are disabled but because streets are missing basic features that should not be missing, like sidewalks and safe crosswalks. Or bus routes that don’t run on Sundays. Or rural, intercity transit service that has been cut completely. Improving these streets and services would make communities safer and better connected for everyone, but for people who cannot drive they are more likely to be needs rather than nice-to-haves.
We had a lovely Bike to School Day today. There were 68 bikes parked at Green Lake Elementary, and even more kids rode in on a parent’s bike. There was so much joy and so many proud kids. Biking to school is just the best.
Since my kid has been regularly biking to school on her own, her traffic safety awareness, bike handling and hill-climbing skills have all improved dramatically. But so has her sense of responsibility, which is not an effect I was anticipating. We stressed that if she wants to bike in the street, she would need to stay focused on being safe the entire time. She rose to the challenge.
By the way, if you’re a GLE family in Wallingford/Tangletown, email me about starting up a bike bus! [email protected]