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  • Study confirms that a safer street design doesn’t slow emergency vehicles

    Before image with two lanes in each direction.
    After image with one lane in each direction plus a center turn lane.
    Before/after comparison images by the Iowa DOT that the study authors used for illustration.

    Making a street safer does not increase emergency response times, a recent study published in the peer-reviewed journal Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives found. It is the first significant study on the topic, according to the journal article.

    Specifically, the study looked at the actual change in emergency response times on streets in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, that went through a 4-to-3 lane conversion similar to Seattle’s most common style of safe streets redesign. Researchers Nicole Corcoran, Cara J. Hamann, Michelle L. Reyes, Stephanie Jansson, and Joseph E. Cavanaugh looked at actual EMS response time data and conducted a survey of emergency responders to gather their perceptions. They found “no difference in emergency response rates from before to after” implementation.

    Chart showing response speeds before and after safety changes. All are statistically unchanged except for 42nd Street, which shows faster response times afterwards.
    The team analyzed 3,872 emergency responses in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Note that even though the 42nd Street data shows faster responses after the changes, the study authors caution that the before data on 42nd was less robust, which is why there is such a wide uncertainty range. Chart description from the authors: “Emergency response travel rate (min/km) before vs. after road conversion by road segment.” Lower is better.

    They also surveyed emergency responders to record their perspectives and found that “over half of EMS responders thing that [the safety projects] don’t affect emergency response times,” according to the journal article. The most common issue EMS responders reported was people not properly yielding to an emergency vehicle, which led researchers to suggest that “public guidance on how to properly respond to the presence of EMS vehicles on these roadways may be needed.”

    Hopefully, this study helps put to rest one of the most frustrating and persistent arguments against safe streets projects. Every time I hear someone use emergency vehicles as an excuse for keeping an outdated and dangerous road design, I want to pull out my hair and scream. These arguments can be effective because it’s scary to think that assistance in an emergency might be delayed due to a city street project. There are emergencies, such as heart attacks, where every second counts. But the argument is often used as a convenient cover for people who simply don’t want the project to happen. It is also buried under many layers of misunderstanding at best and disinformation at worst.

    Dangerous streets are NOT more efficient

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  • Bad news for car-free households: Gig Car Share is shutting down in December

    A Gig car with two bikes on the roof rack.
    Having access to pay-by-the-minute or pay-by-the-day cars nearby that included roof racks for bicycles made out-of-town bicycle adventures so much easier for car-free Seattleites.

    Gig Car Share’s fleet of pay-as-you-drive Priuses and their pre-installed bicycle roof racks will leave town December 27 as the AAA-owned company ceases all operations, according to an email I received as a Gig member. Geekwire reports that the shutdown is for the whole operation, not just Seattle.

    This is a huge blow to car-free households in Seattle because the Gig cars were by far the most useful of any of the free-floating car share services we’ve had since the launch of Car2Go in 2013. Gig launched at a very strange time back in 2020 when the news got very buried for obvious reasons, and it never felt like the service ever had a high-profile introduction to the city. It was just sort of here one day, and the people who found them and tried them out loved them. Thanks to SDOT’s data sharing requirements, we can see exactly how many trips people took each month since Gig launched:

    Line chart with dots for each month. The peak was 872 in April 2022. June 2024 saw the most rentals so far this year at 624.
    You can see how strange and subdued the 2020 launch was. It took a year before the service really caught on. The peak was 872 average daily trips in April 2022. June saw the most use so far in 2024 with only 624. From the SDOT New Mobility Program’s data dashboard.
    (more…)
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  • The photo Mayor Royer sent CM Williams after the opening of the Burke-Gilman Trail

    An old color photo of Royer and Williams standing on a trail next to a man showing them a high-wheel bicycle. The note reads: “Jeanette — If they get one with training wheels, I’ll race you home. Charley.”
    Photo from the Seattle Municipal Archive (which lists the wrong year, it was 1978).

    First-year Seattle Mayor Charley Royer sent this photo to City Councilmember Jeanette Williams following the opening of the first section of the Burke-Gilman Trail in 1978. On it he wrote, “Jeanette — If they get one with training wheels, I’ll race you home. — Charley.”

    Williams died in 2008, and now Royer died Friday morning, the Seattle Times reported. He was 84.

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  • Alert 7/26-29: 520 Bridge trail closed late Friday until early Monday

    Map showing the 520 Bridge weekend closures, including the trail between Montlake and Evergreen Point.
    Map of the closure from the 520 Construction Corner website.

    The trail across the 520 Bridge will be closed from 11 p.m. Friday through 5 a.m. Monday along with all the traffic lanes and ramps. The Montlake Bridge and Montlake Boulevard will remain open for regular travel.

    Kind of a bummer for the bridge to close for a summer weekend with such a spectacular forecast. But the project is getting closer to completion, though it sure feels like it will never end. The website still lists a 2024 completion date for the whole Montlake project. The unique walking and biking bridge over SR-520 that will connect from the bridge trail on the north side to the Arboretum could open in September, though no official date has been released yet.

    More details on the closure from WSDOT:

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  • Tonight: Public meeting about possible 16th Ave SW bike lanes in White Center + Take the survey

    Well, this one’s a pretty easy choice. Support Option 1 for a section of 16th Ave SW in White Center! Take King County’s short online survey and attend the open house at 6:30 p.m. July 24 (tonight!) at White Center Food Bank. From the survey:

    Diagram of the existing roadway.
    Diagram of option 1 with bike lanes and some extra parking.
    Diagram of option 2 with no bike lanes and lots of extra parking.
    Table outlining the differences in the options.

    As a side note, King County is making a classic mistake with their outreach here. If there’s an option that is safer than the others, it really shouldn’t be put up for a public debate. Why would we ask a community whether the safety of people is more or less important than 21 theoretical parking spaces that don’t even exist today? Especially since they have an option that improves bike safety while also increasing parking. Like, what are we doing here, folks?

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  • Aug 3: Join me for a family-friendly social and book reading in Tacoma

    Downtown on the go event poster with headshots of a Anna Zivarts and Tom Fucoloro along with their book covers and event details.

    Hey Tacoma folks, I’m headed your way August 3 along with Anna Zivarts, author of the excellent book When Driving Is Not An Option: Steering Away From Car Dependency.

    This will be the first ever Seattle Bike Blog event in Tacoma, and I’m looking forward to meeting up with you all at this Downtown On The Go event. We’re meeting up at Wright Park from 2–4 p.m. for a family-friendly social followed by a joint book reading and discussion at King’s Books starting at 4:30 p.m. It’s all free of course, and you can go to one or both. Please RSVP via the event listing so we have a rough idea of how many people will be there.

    Bring your copy of Biking Uphill in the Rain or buy one at the event and I’ll sign it. More details from Downtown On The Go:

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