Author Archive

Why Cascade opposes the Columbia River Crossing boondoggle

Monday, April 22nd, 2013 by

For the past five years the Cascade Bicycle Club has been opposed to the Columbia River Crossing mega-highway, a Vancouver-Portland area project now at the center of heated legislative negotiation.

Although the current corridor is far from ideal for people on bicycles, the proposed $3.2-$3.6+ billion project does little to improve the situation. The mega-project would divert several billion dollars away from higher transportation priorities while fueling costly sprawl that’s bad for families who want to bike in their neighborhood.

Every organized bicycling or pedestrian group that has taken a CRC position is opposed to the current plan – including the BTA, Bike Walk Vote and the Cascade Bicycle Club.

Huge Opportunity Cost for a Non-Functioning Project

The biggest reason Cascade opposes the CRC is its opportunity cost: every one of the billions of dollars we spend on this boondoggle can’t be spent on Washingtonians’ higher transportation priorities — providing safe transportation choices and maintaining the roads and trails we already have.

As we work hard to find a few million dollars to fund dozens of projects across Washington to make it safe for kids and families to bike, the state is hoping to spend billions on this single poorly-designed, non-functional highway expansion. To be clear: roughly half of the project’s cost is for five miles of highway expansion, while only one-quarter goes toward a new bridge and one-quarter to light rail.

One serious problem: the CRC’s hand-picked Independent Review Panel found the project’s value is questionable unless Oregon spends billions of more dollars in addition to the billions on this project, and there is no plan for that funding, amid a huge maintenance backlog. The Review Panel concluded: “Questions about the reasonableness of investment in the CRC bridge because unresolved issues remain to the south… threaten the viability of the project.”

Bad Design and Process

The CRC plan includes a steep new bridge which would require significantly more effort to bike across than the current spans, a five-block corkscrew detour to get to downtown Vancouver, and a long multi-use pathway under the car bridge, which many expect to feel unsafe to bicyclists, especially at night (more). These elements – safety, distance, hills – are top reasons the 60% of Washingtonians who want to bike more often do not.

Throughout the project’s design and planning, the project’s high-priced consultants shunted aside concerns and desires of people on bicycles, and cut back design elements to save money, while $575 to $650 million-dollar highway interchanges remained. The process was so egregious Oregon’s Bicycle Transportation Alliance resigned from the advisory board.

Bicycle-Unfriendly Land Use

As we strive to build communities that encourage families to bike, the CRC undermines that vision. By expanding highways, the CRC promotes longer travel distances and costly sprawl across Clark County and beyond. During a hearing this February in Oregon, one CRC proponent argued housing values would increase as far north as Chehalis.

Poor Project Management

Lastly, the CRC has a record of mismanagement, from its misdirected Purpose and Need Statement to the recent discovery, nine years into planning, that the new bridge would be too low for upstream boat traffic to travel under. It has shunted aside more affordable alternatives arguing they failed to retain passage for 100% of upstream vessels – something the CRC’s own design fails. When facts got in the way, an ODOT statement from the mid-2000s saying the current spans could serve for another 60 years was disappeared from ODOT’s website, and when facts were not compelling enough, CRC backers have used rampant fear-mongering about safety. The list goes on – including using traffic models based on $1.10 gas, models that aren’t designed to consider tolling, models that presume no land use changes from the project, and contracting practices that raise significant red flags.

Simply put, the CRC is an example of misplaced priorities, a project pushed by the well-heeled highway lobby at the expense of Washingtonians.

We can find a more affordable, functional solution in the corridor that better serves the values of Washington’s families. We urge the legislature to stop pouring millions of dollars into this dysfunctional boondoggle.

Read more at the Seattle Transit Blog and Sightline.

Larsen, McDermott, DelBene, Smith Call for Safety for All

Tuesday, March 26th, 2013 by

“What’s measured, matters” is a traditional saying in business schools, and a practice in both business and government.

Hence Cascade has joined groups from across the country to call on the U.S. Department of Transportation (US DOT) to measure states’ records on bicycle and pedestrian safety, and reward those states that improve their safety records.

We thank Washington Representatives Larsen, McDermott, DelBene and Smith for signing a letter calling on the US DOT to specifically measure biking and walking safety. The letter was signed by 68 Representatives across America. Read the letter here.

Some context: as part of MAP-21, the federal transportation funding bill, the US DOT rewards states that do well on performance measures. While overall safety is proposed as a performance measure, there is currently no performance measure specifically relating to bicycle and pedestrian safety.

That’s a significant blind spot. Currently 15 percent of road fatalities are people on bike or walking, but states are spending less than 1 percent of the Highway Safety Improvement Project funds on bicycle and pedestrian safety projects.

We hope US DOT Director Ray LaHood will direct the Department to measure – and reward – states that focus on our most vulnerable roadway users. LaHood is leaving soon, once his replacement is found. Measuring and rewarding improving safety for people who walk and bike could be a parting legacy for LaHood.

In the meantime, please join us in sending your thanks to Reps. Larsen, McDermott, DelBene and Smith.

Congresswoman DelBene Joins the Bike Caucus

Monday, March 18th, 2013 by
Congresswoman DelBene

Congresswoman Suzan DelBene

First-term Congresswoman Suzan DelBene joined the Congressional Bike Caucus this week, and signed on to a letter calling for the measurement of bicycle safety under our national transportation funding bill, MAP-21.

Rep. DelBene’s actions come after a nine-person delegation of Washingtonians visited Capitol Hill last week as part of the National Bike Summit, and requested the Congresswoman to take these actions. Cascade’s Executive Director Chuck Ayers and Director of Policy, Planning and Government Affairs Evan Manvel helped lead the delegation.

We were glad to hear DelBene became Washington’s fourth Bike Caucus member. The Congressional Bike Caucus includes more than 160 members, including Washington Representatives Larsen, McDermott, Smith, and now DelBene. Governor Inslee was a member when he served in Congress.

We were also appreciative Rep. DelBene signed on to the letter to US DOT Secretary Ray LaHood calling for bicycle safety measurements. As part of MAP-21, the U.S. Department of Transportation rewards states that do well on performance measures. While overall safety is proposed as a performance measure, there is currently no performance measure specifically relating to bicycle and pedestrian safety. And while 15% of road fatalities are people on bike or pedestrian, states are spending less than 1% of the Highway Safety Improvement Project monies on bicycle and pedestrian safety projects. Rep. Larsen has also signed onto the letter.

Rep. DelBene represents Washington’s 1st Congressional District. She is one of Washington’s newest representatives, having been sworn in last November.

Join us in thanking Rep. DelBene by contacting her here.

Draft Transportation Package includes bike tax

Wednesday, February 20th, 2013 by

Rep. Judy Clibborn

Today Rep. Judy Clibborn released her draft transportation package (read more from The Seattle Times).

Cascade thanks Rep. Clibborn for getting this conversation started; Washington needs additional transportation investment and her draft proposal includes some investments we support.

However, the package is still a long way from meeting our state’s diverse and most critical transportation priorities.

The package does not sufficiently provide for the basic needs of our communities: maintaining our existing roads, providing options for those who cannot or choose not to drive, and giving everyone safe places to walk and bike. It does, however, dedicate billions of dollars to hugely expensive highway expansions.

The package’s proposed bike excise tax ($25 on sales of bikes costing more than $500) would harm hard-working small business owners. Most such bikes are sold by small family-owned bike shops and this would impose red tape and costs for them while creating virtually no revenue.

People who bicycle already pay substantial taxes for our transportation system, including the sales taxes, property taxes and federal taxes that together cover two-thirds of all transportation spending in Washington. Bicyclists who own cars also pay the same car tabs as everyone else even if they drive less.

Unfortunately, the package almost completely ignores bicycle and pedestrian investments. Given the benefits people on bicycles provide to the rest of the transportation system by taking cars off the road, this is short-sighted.

A more detailed letter about our funding requests is posted at Transportation for Washington.

Cascade Bicycle Club looks forward to working with Rep. Clibborn and other stakeholders to craft a transportation revenue package that works for all of Washington.

Inslee Selects Lynn Peterson as WSDOT Director

Tuesday, February 19th, 2013 by
Lynn Peterson

New WSDOT Director Lynn Peterson

Today Governor Jay Inslee announced the selected of Lynn Peterson as the new Director of the Washington Department of Transportation.

“We’re thrilled Governor Inslee is signaling a new approach to transportation, one that serves people who are working together to make neighborhoods safer for our children, while also protecting the climate,” said Evan Manvel, Director of Policy, Planning and Government Affairs for Cascade.

Peterson brings a lifetime of experience at all levels of government, including work on transportation choices.

She currently serves as the Sustainability Communities and Transportation Policy Adviser to Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber. She has a long history of work in transportation and land use issues, including stints at 1000 Friends of Oregon, TriMet, Metro (the Portland-area’s regional government), and as Chair of the Clackamas County Commission.

“We need an innovative approach to fixing a transportation network that is outdated and hampering our economic growth,” said Gov. Inslee. “Lynn has the experience, creativity and leadership skills to help Washington build a transportation system for the 21st century. And we’ll do that in a way that more efficiently moves people and goods and reduces carbon emissions.”

“She’ll bring a fresh perspective to one of Washington’s largest agencies,” said Manvel. “We look forward to partnering with her and WSDOT to invest in communities that are safe for people of all ages and abilities to bicycle in.”

Of interest to Cascade Bicycle Club members: Peterson rides a bike. We hope she will join us at one of our signature events.