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  • Mayor Harrell order calls for ‘low-pollution neighborhoods,’ sets up pieces for a future transportation levy

    Mayor Bruce Harrell signed an executive order this week with a list of climate actions and plans, including an expansion of Healthy Streets, Safe Routes to School, bicycle freight and green neighborhood efforts.

    “We put together 23 bold actions that we think are not only achievable but essential to our fight against climate change,” said Mayor Harrell during a press conference announcing the order (PDF). “We know that transportation accounts for the vast majority of our greenhouse gas emissions, about 61%.”

    The order calls for completion of a Vision Zero program review in early 2023, which SDOT Director Greg Spotts announced on his first day on the job. It will also update the Bicycle Implementation Plan to make 20 miles of Healthy Streets permanent and will update the Pedestrian Implementation Plan to expand the School Streets program and “ensure an all ages and abilities bicycling facility serves every public school.”

    The order also calls for “zero-emissions freight options at the curb, including the potential for ‘green loading zones’ and new support for e-cargo bike freight delivery programs.”

    Building on the success of the youth-led effort to win free youth transit, the city will convene a Youth Transportation Summit in 2023. I am very excited to see what comes from this summit, especially if it gets a serious level of support.

    Perhaps the most intriguing high-level concept in the order is the goal of creating at least three “low-pollution neighborhoods by Q1 2028.” Potential examples include “low-emissions zones, eco-districts, resilience districts and super blocks.” The timeline is not overly ambitious, and there is not a ton of commitment in the order, but the concept is very exciting. The order only commits to “convening a community conversation aimed at planning” such neighborhoods as well as publishing an implementation and funding plan in 2025. Much of the actual funding will likely be needed from the next transportation levy, so expect to continue seeing this idea evolve in the next couple years.

    Considering the urgency of the climate emergency facing our city and our planet, the executive order was lacking in immediate, concrete actions. Of course, actions require funding, and this year’s budget did not have a lot of spare cash to spread around.

    Seattle has a long history of making great plans and not following through. However, this is the time to make ambitious plans because the city needs to set up efforts for inclusion in whatever fund method replaces the Move Seattle Levy, which is set to expire at the end of 2024. A revamped and expanded Vision Zero needs to be ready for a big funding increase, for example. And a superblock plan could be a great visual concept to center levy communications. A youth-led effort to help shape the levy could also be a powerful and unique element that nobody should underestimate. So yes, the order is full of plans and “conversations,” but if this leads to a strong levy proposal then it is important work.

    Watch the announcement: (more…)

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  • Archive Gem: In 1970, Rainier Beach students created a protest group called Stop Traffic’s Obnoxious Pollution

    Sometimes when you’re digging through the city archives, you stumble on some true gems. This letter I found deep in a box in the Seattle Municipal Archives is one of them.

    In 1970, some students from the Rainier Beach Cottage Program (a sort of alternative school program for middle and high school students housed within Rainier Beach High School) founded a group called STOP: Stop Traffic’s Obnoxious Pollution. The group did not mince words. They wanted everyone to stop driving cars because cars are noisy and pollute the air. And instead of driving in the streets, we could dance there.  Enjoy:

    The original letter. Text is in the body of the post.Text of the letter:

    Have you ever thought of how nice it would be to get up one morning to a cleaner, clearer, quieter environment? And how much the elimination of the automobile would contribute to it? Some of the students in the Rainier Beach Cottage Program have been thinking, and have formed STOP (Stop Traffic’s Obnoxious Pollution) as a result. Though we realize that this goal cannot be accomplished overnight, we are organizing to sponsor a one-day city-wide protest of the use of the automobile. The date is tentative: Sunday, May 3, 1970.

    Some of our ideas for activities that day include: Bicycle Sunday in the parks, seminars on pollution (with a particular interest in the automobile’s contribution), organized hikes and walks, and a street dance. We advocate bicycles, rollerskates, skateboards, transit, and walking as means of transportation on that day. We have much enthusiasm, and would appreciate your help in making this event successful, by means of support, donation, an idea for an event or publicity. To learn more or to contribute ideas and support, write to the above address or call PArkway 5-1677 and ask for Karen Wilson. Thank you.

     

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  • More notes on two-way vs one-way bike lanes on Beacon Hill

    Diagram comparing the one-way bike lane alternative one to the two-way bike lane alternative 2 for the beacon Hill bike lanes. The biggest decision point presented in SDOT’s Beacon Hill bike lane survey (open through January 6) is whether the city should build one-way bike lanes on either side of 15th Ave S or one two-way bike lane on the east side of the street. SDOT’s Hallie O’Brien shined a little more light on the pros and cons of each option during a conversation with the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board this week.

    “Both of these facility types are recommended by our NACTO guidelines as safe facilities, and they follow our design standards for width,” she said. “Safety wise, I think they’re both safer than what’s out there today.”

    In our previous story walking through the project’s options, we put it this way: (more…)

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  • Transit GO app now includes scooter and bike share rewards + Use new micromobility parking areas to get ride discounts

    Screenshot of the Transit GO app with bike share and metro tickets as rewards.Transit GO is an interesting and mostly functional mobile app that allows riders to pay for transit tickets on their phones while also gamifying the transit riding experience. And now scooter and bike share services are now part of the game, too.

    The app is only for people paying full price for transit as they go, so it’s not really useful for folks who have a monthly or discount ORCA pass. But if you pay as you go, like I do, then it may be worth checking out. It’s not as convenient as an ORCA card with autoload because you have to buy tickets individually based on zones or light rail distance. But it has a trick up its sleeve: Rewards.

    As you ride, you earn reward points that you can spend on more transit tickets or free scooter and bike share time. You earn 125 points for taking a train or bus ride, for example, and the bike and scooter share rewards cost 280-300 points. So every three or so transit rides get you a discounted scooter or bike share ride. There is also an ever-changing list of bonus reward options to juice your rewards balance further. You also get 800 points just for joining, so that alone is probably worth signing up.

    Meanwhile, you can get up to $8 in ride credit or discounts per week for Lime, LINK, Bird or Veo thanks to the Bike & Scoot to Transit program running through March 31. You just need to end a ride within one of these “discount parking zones” near transit stops: (more…)

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  • Thorness: 5 Seattle holiday light bike routes

    A person and kid on a cargo bike in front of some holiday lights.
    My spouse Kelli and our kid riding through Candy Cane Lane by bike.

    I like holiday lights as much as the next person. In fact, I like them so much that I never took the lights off my house after last winter!

    But sitting in idle traffic in the middle of a neighborhood waiting for a chance to see some lights outside a car window? No thank you. Biking and walking is without a doubt the way to go.

    To that end, Bill Thorness wrote a piece in the Seattle Times highlighting five short-to-moderate bike loops in all parts of the city for folks looking to tour some holiday lights. Check it out and let us know if you have any favorite holiday season bike routes in the comments below.

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  • Packer: The public won’t build a new surface parking lot near Pike Place Market after all

    Overview map of the proposed parking area with a raised concrete slab and 7 parking spaces.
    From the City of Seattle via The Urbanist.

    Ryan Packer has some wonderful news: Seattle City Light will not build its planned surface parking lot at Western Ave and Blanchard Street after all. Word of the proposed parking lot, located within the Western Ave business strip that extends north from Pike Place Market, was a huge disappointment after a public process revealed a clear desire for a park or other public space on the parcel that was formerly home for a Viaduct off-ramp.

    From the Urbanist:

    Seattle City Light has announced that plans will not move forward to build a new surface parking lot for electric vehicle (EV) charging on a city-owned property adjacent to the Seattle waterfront redevelopment in Belltown. The charging lot, which would have included approximately six to eight parking stalls, was intended to provide public EV charging infrastructure in a part of the city where it might not otherwise be available. But the proposal to build a surface parking lot in one of the densest areas of the city raised a number of questions about the process to determine the highest and best use of city-owned land in Seattle’s densest neighborhoods.

    Read more…

    Not only would this parking lot have been a huge missed opportunity for the neighborhood, it also would have been constructed within close proximity to several other surface parking lots: (more…)

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Bike Events Calendar

Jul
20
Sat
9:30 pm World Naked Bike Ride: Full Moon… @ Seattle Rep Parking Lot
World Naked Bike Ride: Full Moon… @ Seattle Rep Parking Lot
Jul 20 @ 9:30 pm
World Naked Bike Ride: Full Moon Ride @ Seattle Rep Parking Lot | Seattle | Washington | United States
Celebrate the Buck Moon by adorning your bicycle with blinky & twinkly lights. It’s the height of summer – warm nights and easy riding with friends. Saturday July 20 Parking Lot at Mercer St &[…]
Jul
25
Thu
7:15 pm Point83 @ Westlake Park
Point83 @ Westlake Park
Jul 25 @ 7:15 pm
Point83 @ Westlake Park
Meet up in the center of the park at 7ish. Leave at 730. Every Thursday from now until forever rain or shine. Bikes, beers, illegal firepits, nachos, bottlerockets, timetraveling, lollygagging, mechanicals, good times.ShareMastodonTwitterFacebookRedditEmail
Jul
27
Sat
all-day Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washing…
Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washing…
Jul 27 – Jul 28 all-day
Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washington Blvd
Details from Seattle Parks: On scheduled weekends from May to September, a portion of Lake Washington Boulevard will be closed to motorized vehicles from 10 a.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday. “Seattle Parks and Recreation[…]
Jul
28
Sun
all-day Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washing…
Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washing…
Jul 28 – Jul 29 all-day
Bicycle Weekends on Lake Washington Blvd
Details from Seattle Parks: On scheduled weekends from May to September, a portion of Lake Washington Boulevard will be closed to motorized vehicles from 10 a.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. Sunday. “Seattle Parks and Recreation[…]
Aug
1
Thu
7:15 pm Point83 @ Westlake Park
Point83 @ Westlake Park
Aug 1 @ 7:15 pm
Point83 @ Westlake Park
Meet up in the center of the park at 7ish. Leave at 730. Every Thursday from now until forever rain or shine. Bikes, beers, illegal firepits, nachos, bottlerockets, timetraveling, lollygagging, mechanicals, good times.ShareMastodonTwitterFacebookRedditEmail
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