That is idiotic when Montgomery County, with its plentiful parking garages and neighborhood shops, is right next door. |
Oh bullshit. Tell me with a straight face that you genuinely cannot figure out how to "pop into" a store across Connecticut Ave by using the signaled intersections every. single. block. at: Oliver St, McKinley St., Morrison St, Livingston st. Military Rd OR the mid-block pedestrian crossing signal near the Avalon. |
If we're going to argue entirely by first-person anecdote, I will chime in to say that I routinely bike to small businesses on Connecticut and Wisconsin avenues, because errands within two miles of my house are the perfect thing to bike to instead of driving. |
The bigger issue is that tens of thousands of people use these roads every day. How many people use these bike lanes? Some of these lanes aren't even used by 10 people a day. |
I don't know if we have data that shows that bike lanes are used by fewer than 10 people a day. When I bike to work along Connecticut, I usually see more than 10 other people on bikes just when I'm on the road, so I can guarantee that a bike lane there would get more use than that. There's no question that thousands of people use that road every day. But are we sure that two lanes in each direction, with protected bike lanes, will lead to significantly less use of the road by drivers than the reversible lanes and the parking? Some tradeoff that makes the roads safer and more usable for non-drivers but still leaves most cars able to use the road as they currently do would surely be OK, no? Or is your argument that anything that delays a driver's commute by, say, 4 minutes in total is unacceptable? |
30,000 use this road each day DDOT estimates that 7,000 of them will start using the side streets instead In addition, the 2 lanes in each direction will frequently become 1 lane because of left hand turns and deliveries. It will be harder to cross the street because of the increased vehicle density and less safe to walk because of the massively increased residential traffic. Everyone loses under this plan. |
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Not to mention the fact that there is no chance anyone in the bike lanes is going to stop for a pedestrian regardless of what the law is or what color traffic lights are. |
DC was lucky to catch a generational millennial wave. Moving poor Black families out to replace with young, single white professionals is not a viable long term growth strategy. Being anti-kid will end up hurting the city long term, particularly as this millennial wave looks to form families. The millennials are trying hard to turn the city suburban, effectively turning neighborhoods into cul de sacs. This can never be effective in a city and will end with the families eventually leaving and a destroyed city in the process. Cities are places where people, goods and services are to come together. That’s why most cities are located on important trade corridors where transportation is facilitated. People that want to end circulation in cities want to end the key role and purpose of cities. It’s really weird thinking how people who grew up in suburbs fetishizing cities are now trying to replicate the suburban experience in the city. Totally crazy. |
It won’t hurt the city. People with kids will move and take the cost of educating those kids with them to their new houses. Those people will be replaced by other people without kids. DC’s only risk is if childless millennials start annoying themselves. |
We don’t know how many people use bike lanes because DDOT conveniently stopped recording data at many of them and doesn’t install bike counters at new bike lanes. If one were a conspiracy theorist… |
Out-migration has exceeded in-migration since 2015 and DC’s population has shrunk since 2019. |
Of course it's not going to make 10,000 people a day stop driving. it will just make all the streets more congested and less safe for everyone. This has absolutely nothing to do with safety and anyone that thinks that is either naiive or a liar. Make no mistake DC Gov is pushing this through against the wishes of the locals and alternatives were not seriously discussed. DDOT was so adamant about this plan that they completely changed the rules regarding community input at the end of last year in order to prevent citizens from stopping this idiocy. |
If a lot of people were using the bike lanes, the city would definitely be counting. But when the numbers are so small that it will only embarrass the city and raise uncomfortable questions.... |
Are millennials just never going to start families? Are boomers not going to die? The even more insane thing about this is that boomers are the least capable of handling increased congestion and the most impacted by extra traffic on the side streets. |