Archive for September, 2011

Kids take Duthie Hill on Saturday

Friday, September 30th, 2011 by M.J. Kelly

On Saturday, rain or shine, kids (and their grown-ups) will be taking on the trails at Duthie Hill Park for Take a Kid Mountain Biking Day. Kids, grab your grown-up and get out to Issaquah!

Schedule:
9 a.m. – 10 a.m. Registration at LDS Church Parking Lot
10 a.m. – 12 p.m. Trail Rides
12 p.m. – 1 p.m. Lunch
1 p.m. – 2 p.m. Jump Jam
2 p.m. – 3 p.m. Drawing for Prizes

This event is for kids age 6 and older who are riding a two-wheel bike. It’s not a drop-off, so adults, plan to get out on those trails, too. Just think! Kids who start like this may end up doing this.

Thanks to our community partners: King County Parks, IMBA, Gregg’s Cycles, Bicycles West, Clif Kid, Team Dirt Corps, Project 529, and the Sturdy B’s.

A year of AmeriCorps at Cascade

Friday, September 30th, 2011 by Mary Collins

As the summer and my time as an AmeriCorps volunteer draws to a close, I find myself in a similar position to last year. Having recently graduated from a Midwestern college, I’d spent the summer working and hanging out – both with the knowledge of my looming unemployment and the uncertainty about what I would do next. But there is a key difference between fall 2010 and fall 2011, and this makes me much less apprehensive about the future. I was lucky to spend the last year working at the Cascade Bicycle Club, and working at such a fun, diverse and driven organization has taught me a lot.

Ten and a half months isn’t much time. The strength of the AmeriCorps program — that volunteers can do meaningful, exciting work without a long-term commitment — is also a weakness. As I settled into my position my time at the club was almost up. Cascade is constantly looking forward, and something exciting is always around the corner. That positive momentum, combined with great coworkers, makes it difficult to leave.

I was hired into the Commute Department as the Commute Programs Assistant. My job has evolved over the course of the term, changing to fit my strengths (and weaknesses) and the needs of the club. I’ve enjoyed being part of the development of some exciting programs, like the soon-to-be-debuted Bike Friendly Business Certification System and the accompanying Best Practices Guide. I fully experienced the stress and excitement that is Bike Month, along with the months of planning preceding it. I was also given room to pursue my other interests, from graphic design to teaching, and the adaptability of the position greatly contributed to the experience.

Cascade has set the bar high for future work. I’ll be hard pressed to find another job with equally warm and inspired coworkers and a similarly strong sense of purpose. Luckily another AmeriCorps volunteer gets the chance to have the same experience I did.

I saw a car/bike crash today

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011 by M.J. Kelly

I had just dropped my first-grader at school and was winding my way through the north-end of the University District, heading east on 47th St., approaching the stop sign at Brooklyn with my preschooler on board. I was scanning the pavement for cracks and potholes as I prepared to stop at the intersection, when we heard her yell.

Colin and I looked up and saw, just a few feet in front of us, an SUV hitting a cyclist, the cyclist impacting the hood, then the cyclist falling over onto the pavement, her left side hitting the ground hard. The driver stopped immediately. I pulled to the side to unload Colin so we could help. The cyclist lay in the street curled up, scared but conscious. People helped her to the sidewalk, and she seemed to be moving OK. It was a classic T-bone scenario.

This isn’t the first collision I’ve witnessed, and I discreetly took down the license plate number of the vehicle. The driver was calm, caring and attentive and didn’t seem to be going anywhere. Once though, at a previous crash I witnessed, the driver (who was at fault) seemed to be cooperating with the bicyclist, but I later learned that she gave him entirely false information, never to be heard from again. Lesson learned: always get the plate.

The paramedics arrived, followed by the police. While I saw the crash impact, I did not see what led up to it. Either the driver or the cyclist, or both of them, didn’t proceed through the four-way stop properly. Thankfully, both were going slow enough that the consequences weren’t catastrophic, though they were very scary. As I stood on the fringes of the emergency vehicles, I pondered the intersection, while Colin clutched my hand and pondered the firefighters.

It’s a busy four-way stop intersection, with loads of pedestrians. Both Brooklyn and 47th are popular bike routes, connecting south-bound riders to the Burke-Gilman and east/west riders to campus and Trader Joe’s. I always wonder why drivers use Brooklyn, with its series of stop signs. I suspect many are trying to avoid Roosevelt due to congestion.

I glanced down at my helmeted three-year-old (almost, four, he would be quick to add) and thought, “Is this a good street for us? I thought it was, but maybe it’s not. What are our options?”

Let’s review, from west to east, starting at Interstate 5:

7th Ave: One-way northbound, full of aggressive high speed traffic entering and exiting the interstate.

8th Ave: Not a through-street. Even if that were fixed with a path through Gorilla Park, one cannot cross 50th or 45th safely.

9th Ave: I ride four blocks of 9th Ave. Yesterday, a car heading east on 50th flat out blew the red light in front of us as we were riding through on a solid green. I don’t want to think about had I been 10 seconds faster.

The traffic “circle” at 47th is terrifying on a bike, thanks to an increase in cut-through drivers. These are drivers who use 9th — a narrow neighborhood street — to beat the lights on Roosevelt. Boo and hiss. Generally speaking, cut-through drivers are looking to speed down neighborhood streets to shave seconds off their drive, and they scare the heck out of me.

Roosevelt Ave: One-way south-bound with a typical bike lane. With my kids on-board, I’m never going to ride this street in its current design. On days I drive, I see people driving in the bike lane to the right (hello Metro routes 66 and 67!), the parking lane to the left and doing all sorts of crazy, unpredictable maneuvers because they’re frustrated about being traffic.  Plus, there are people going in and out of the Trader Joe’s parking lot, people wanting to turn right on 45th, and the tangled cluster down near the UWMC-Roosevelt parking garage. Roosevelt is maybe, kinda-sorta OK for the brave and stolid cyclist (mind the door zone), but it’s not remotely family-friendly.

11th Ave: One-way northbound. Similar situation to Roosevelt. Not family-friendly.

12th Ave: Ahhhh, now we’re talking. A nice low-traffic street. However, there’s no signal to cross at 50th, an extremely busy, high-speed arterial. I’ve also had difficulty triggering the light with my bike at 45th. Still, if the crossing at 50th were fixed, this is a potential candidate for a Neighborhood Greenway. [Update: Upon closer inspection, 12th comes to a T at Campus Parkway. Then what?]

Brooklyn Ave: Tons of bike traffic and plenty of opportunity for conflict. The pavement is horrendous, full of deep gashes running north/south, ideally located to grab a bike tire and take a rider down. People turning left onto 45th don’t get an arrow, and frustrate the people behind them. I always worry a that a taxi cab will dart out from the stand at the Deca Hotel, so I make a point of ringing my bell and waving to the cabbies. Maybe they’ll look out for us if they get to recognize us.

University Way AKA The Ave: Another street that could be for people on bikes. From Ravenna Blvd. to 50th, it’s a fair street for biking with kids on-board. But from 50th south, it would be an incredible rejuvenation to keep bikes and foot traffic and lose the cars (except deliveries and taxis). [See Madison, Wisconsin’s State Street, a vibrant, pedestrian mall adjacent to a major university.] I’ve been passed by drivers in the most shocking ways on the heart of The Ave. Since Robert Townsend’s death at The Ave and Campus Parkway, I’ve changed my commute route, riding through campus now.

15th Ave: Don’t make me laugh. Lovely, fresh, smooth concrete and no where any family would be found riding it.

So there we were, on Brooklyn and 47th, just trying to get from home to schools and on to the office safely. On the list above, I see mostly car-dominated streets. Where should we be? I’m tired of feeling cars breathing down my back no matter which street above I take. I’m tired of worrying that I’m going to get rear-ended by a driver who isn’t paying attention. I’m tired of not being able to get across needlessly high-speed arterials without taking my life in my hands. I’m tired of trying to do something modestly good by biking a few miles instead of driving, and feeling like I’m at battle.

Lest I sound totally beaten down, I’m not. I still have hope, but hope alone won’t amount to much. If more families are going to get around by bike, we need safer streets. And we need them now.

If you’re a biking parent, who rides with kids during rush hour, I’d love to hear what you think. Please drop a comment below.

Cast your vote in the Cascade election

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011 by M.J. Kelly

Members: Your vote matters!
Help us get at least 1,500 votes

Cascade Bicycle Club belongs to its 14,000+ members, and Cascade’s staff and board want you to be involved. In the past, club ballots have been largely a rubber stamp. Last year, less than 5% of the membership voted. During this year’s contested election, your vote will determine how the club is governed. And our goal is to double voter turnout.

The ballot for this October’s election includes nine candidates running for the four open board positions and a change to the by-laws. Your ballot must be postmarked by Oct. 11. Learn more and meet the candidates in person at the Annual Membership Meeting or the Board Candidate Forum, both coming up soon. Please exercise your voice, be informed, and vote! [more…]

Meet the candidates in person:

  • Board Candidate Forum
    Thursday, Oct. 6
    7 to 8:30 p.m. (Doors open at 6:30 p.m.)
    Mountaineers Office, Magnuson Park, 7400 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle
  • Annual Membership Meeting
    Tuesday, Oct. 11
    7 to 8:30 p.m. (Doors open at 6:30 p.m.)
    REI Seattle, 222 Yale Ave. N, Seattle

Vote Pro-Bike: Cascade issues endorsements for the general election

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011 by John Mauro

Post co-written by John Mauro, Director of  Policy, Planning & Govt Affairs and Kevin Carrabine, Board of Directors and Legislative Committee Chair.

In less than a month, your ballot will arrive in the mail—and you’ll need to make decisions about who should represent you, your vision for our community and your values.

Of course, we know that most if not all of you share our vision for a community where bicycling is safe, normal, and embraced by everybody and where it contributes to a healthier, more livable and more economically vibrant place to work, live, learn and play. We also know that most if not all of you value pro-bicycle policies (like complete streets ordinances) and bicycle infrastructure (like buffered bike lanes and protected cycletracks)—they’re what give us room on the road, keep us safe and allow us to get where we’re going conveniently.

Vision and values become reality through the political process. And that’s why Cascade evaluates and then endorses candidates and measures. Cascade’s board of directors approved early endorsements in June, primary endorsements in July and has now voted to endorse the following for the general election:

Ballot Measures

Candidates

Vote

Please do your part in creating a better community through voting for bicycling. Better yet, volunteer for a campaign and tell your friends, too. (Hint: use the Share It! buttons below.) Together, we can transform our community into the vision of a safer, more mobile, more livable and downright better and more bikeable place for all.

Confirm your legislative district and voter information here.

Review Cascade Bicycle Club’s Endorsement Policies and Procedures (PDF).

Learn more about Cascade’s endorsement process and how to get involved at our Elections Page. We will update this page as we continue to evaluate candidates in the coming weeks, and we’ll post the latest news here on the Bike Blog.

If you liked “The Hangover”, you may love this detour!

Monday, September 26th, 2011 by Stephanie Frans

“The night before his big medical school exam, a promising student celebrates his 21st birthday with his two best friends.”

For the production of the film “21 and Over,” a small section of the Burke-Gilman Trail at UW Rainier Vista may be closed for film production Monday, Sept 26 – Friday Sept. 29. Detour routes are in place (see maps here.) For questions or comments, please contact UW Commuter Services at ucommute@uw.edu.

Bike series breezes into Burien

Monday, September 26th, 2011 by Robin Randels


Burien is the new black when it comes to getting it’s  bike on. Our neighbors to the south are serious about promoting biking in their fair city and have been taking action to make Burien one of the more fun and bike-friendly places  to ride. Everything from more bike parking and bike sharing to pie jousting ! More people on bikes = more fun and here at Cascade, we want everyone to have fun AND get where they are going in one piece.

Check out our new Wednesday series Oct. 5 – Oct. 26, with our good friends at Burien Parks and Rec. (Look for us on page 23.) They are conveniently located near the shiny new transit center to make it even easier for you to attend.  Get down there!

Here is the line up:

Oct. 5 — How to Buy a Bike  — So many choices!

Oct. 12 — Finding a Route  — From A to B, learn what to look for in a great bike route.

Oct. 19, — Riding with the Kids  — Tips on how to take the kids along.

Oct. 26 — Rules of the Road and Trail  –  “Drive” your bike with confidence.

Members: Vote in the upcoming election

Friday, September 23rd, 2011 by Kathy McCabe

At Cascade, we have a tremendous opportunity to encourage people to bicycle, reduce the size of our collective carbon footprint and improve the health and well-being of our families, friends and neighbors — in short, to create communities that bicycle. If Cascade is to continue being a leader in this transformation, the club needs strong leaders — leaders with vision and drive — to serve on its board.

Over the last several months, the club’s Nominations Committee, chaired by board member Bill Ptacek, has been busy searching for such leaders. The committee was delighted to present a nine-member slate of candidates to the club’s board of directors and to have the full slate approved. These nine candidates will be running for four open 2012 to 2014 board positions as the board expands to 12 members from its current nine (one current board member will be stepping down).

Voting in our annual election is a great way to participate in the future of your club. Click on the links below to read candidate statements, meet the candidates in person at the Annual Membership Meeting or the Board Candidate Forum, and remember to cast your ballot before October 11. Thank you for your help in ensuring that Cascade’s leadership remains strong.

Candidates for the 2012 Board of Directors:

Meet the candidates in person:

Meet the candidates online

If you are unable to make the in-person candidate meetings, you can still meet the candidates on the Cascade forums. Reading the forums is open to anyone, but if you want to post, you must first join the forums.

Bylaws revisions

In early 2012, Cascade will convene a Task Force to review our bylaws. If you are interested in being a member of this group, please call the office at (206) 522-3222. In the meantime, several contentious and perhaps outdated bylaws were reviewed by a Committee appointed by the Board of Directors. The Committee’s recommended changes appear on the October ballot along with the board candidates.

The board is proposing bylaw revisions in three areas: (a) the process for director recall; (b) the terms of board-appointed interim directors; and (c) the quorum required for the board to conduct Club business. The full text of each recommended change is here and will also be  mailed to members in the October issue of the Cascade Courier. Please see the FAQ for information. Ratifying the proposed changes will require a two-thirds majority of all votes cast.

Vote:

Download a ballot or look for a copy in the October issue of the Cascade Courier. Ballots must be dropped off at the Annual Membership Meeting or mailed to Cascade Bicycle Club at 7400 Sand Point Way NE, Suite 101S, Seattle 98115. Ballots must be post-marked by October 11.

FAQ: Changes to Cascade’s bylaws

Friday, September 23rd, 2011 by Michael Snyder

The club has proposed bylaw changes for approval by the membership. This FAQ explains the reasoning behind these changes. Read the full text of Cascade’s current bylaws here. Members, you can vote on whether or not to approve these changes in the October 2011 election.

If you have questions that aren’t answered here, remember that you can join us at the Board Candidate Forum on Thursday, Oct. 6 or the Annual Membership Meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 11 to get more answers from board members and Cascade staff in person.

What was the motivation for the proposed updates?

The motivation was to make the bylaws work better for the membership and to make the club more responsive to the membership. First, with the huge increase in membership, the processes laid out in the bylaws no longer ensure a fully participatory democratic process. When the bylaws were created, the membership could fit into a large room to conduct club business; this is no longer the case. This update is the first step toward maximizing membership participation in club business by requiring membership-wide balloting, where possible, for issues decided by the membership. Second, the club wants to give the membership more power over the composition of the board of directors by limiting the term of board-appointed interim and fill-in directors to one year.

The bylaws don’t ensure full participation in club business?

Except for the election of directors, the bylaws do not require club-wide balloting for important votes, such as recalls. They only allow for proxies at club meetings and do not require the club to aid in the proxy process. At any club meeting (whether the annual meeting or one called by the board or membership), club business is conducted by majority vote of those present and eligible to vote. Because the club is not required to ballot important issues or help in providing proxies, your voice could be easily lost, allowing a small number of people at a meeting to decide the outcome. In particular, the proposed bylaw changes require balloting for recalling directors. This change not only makes the process more democratic, because it ensures that all club members have a voice; it also makes it fairer: since ballots are required to elect a director, they should also be required to un-elect (recall) a director.

Other than balloting, what’s the biggest change being made to the director recall process?

In the first phase of the recall process, signatures are collected to trigger a Special Meeting of the membership to vote on recalling the director named in the petition. The bylaws currently place no time limit on signature gathering, which puts a cloud over the director being recalled for an indefinite period of time. The time limit is necessary to ensure that the board member(s) facing recall are not under that threat for an undetermined amount of time, as it is very difficult to conduct business with an uncertain future. Proper and efficient governance requires a closed-ended process. The proposed bylaws make two changes that give more power to the petitioners and limit the time for gathering signatures. To give the petitioners more power and a stronger voice, once a petition has 100 valid signatures, the club must announce the petition effort to the membership and provide hyperlinks to relevant websites so that the membership can learn more about the pros and cons for the petition. The proposed changes also put a time limit of eight weeks on the signature-gathering process. Given the requirement that the recall petition be announced to the membership, the ubiquity and reach of social media, and other avenues for reaching the membership (such as advertisements and inserts in the Cascade Courier), eight weeks should be more than adequate for collecting signatures (at today’s membership numbers, that’s about 90 signatures a week, or less than 13 signatures a day). Because a recall undoes an election, which should happen only under extraordinary circumstances, the cause for recall should be obvious and gathering the required signatures should pose no hardship. The proposed bylaws changes do not prevent a failed petition effort from being attempted anew, so a dedicated effort could immediately launch a second petition to gather the necessary signatures.

Are there any other changes to the process to make it more democratic and give the membership more voice?

Yes, the proposed bylaw changes require a quorum on the number of votes in a recall to prevent a small number of votes from removing a director. A recall undoes an election, thereby removing the voice of those who initially elected that director. It would be unfair and undemocratic if a few tens of votes were all that it took to remove a director elected with hundreds or thousands of votes. To guarantee that a recall is truly the choice of the membership at large, the proposed changes require that at least half as many people vote in a recall as voted in the prior election.

Isn’t the club just trying to make the recall process harder?

No, the club is trying to make the process more open, democratic, and fair and to involve the entire membership. But democracy is hard. Undoing an election via recall must be as democratic and open as possible. The proposed changes explicitly attempt to balance the extra burden of a time limit with guaranteeing the petitioners access to the entire membership, which makes conducting a recall easier.

Why does the club want to prevent recalling the entire board of directors at once?

The club is able to enter into contracts, hire employees, obtain insurance, and collect revenue, etc., because it is a Washington state corporation. The state laws that govern corporations put the legal power of the corporation in the board. The board is the legal entity that conducts club business by delegating its powers to the staff that it hires. Recent events have shown that the board member recall provisions of the bylaws, which were never intended to be used to recall the entire board, can be used to do just that. If there is no legally constituted board, the club’s corporate status is at risk: it can no longer enter into contracts, hire employees, make insurance claims, etc. Any actions taken by the club could later be declared null and void. To avoid this jeopardy to the club, the proposed changes do not allow the number of board members to be reduced below the quorum required to conduct club business.

But then how do we keep the directors accountable?

Attend the board meetings that are announced in the club calendar, held at the club office, and open to the public. Read the minutes that are published on the website for all members to read. [9/29 update: Find minutes online here.] Vote when board members stand for re-election at the end of each three-year term. Volunteer to serve on committees and task forces. Attend the annual meeting. And most importantly, vote!

With My Own Two Wheels TONIGHT in Tacoma

Friday, September 23rd, 2011 by Anna Telensky

Friday, Sept 23, 6 p.m.
$10/adult, $5/student
Tickets available at the door
Charles Wright Academy
7723 Chambers Creek Road W
Tacoma, WA 98467 [map it!]

If you missed our showing of With My Own Two Wheels this summer, you’ve got another chance to check it out TONIGHT. The film, which is currently being shown across the country and internationally as part of Bicycle Film Festival, features five incredible stories about the life-changing power of a bicycle. Shot on location in Zambia, Ghana, India, Guatemala and California, the film includes breathtaking regional footage and inspirational narratives that highlight the impact a bicycle can have in improving a life.

This special showing is being put on by the students of Charles Wright Academy for World Bicycle Relief. Since 2005, World Bicycle Relief has provided 87,265 bicycles to people in developing nations. They work with local assemblers to produce heavy duty bicycles designed to withstand rugged roads while carrying up to 200 pounds of cargo. As part of their current project, they’re working to provide 50,000 bicycles to improve rural Zambian children’s access to education.

Charles Wright Academy has already raised $7,000 to support this project, with the goal of raising a total of $14,000, and they plan to send five students to Zambia in February to help assemble and distribute the bikes. Come out this Friday to see an awesome movie and support a great cause!