You are just wrong. And apparently selectively blind. |
Three in our household just off Connecticut Avenue would use bikes daily, one to commute downtown instead of driving, one to run errands during the day and one would commute to school. That is three cars off the road daily right there. I doubt ours is the only one. |
This entire thread is basically people who have a sense of scale (the opposed) and people who don’t (the supporters). |
This article from the NYT on how e-bikes have made life more dangerous for pedestrians in New York. Shouldn’t Washington DC consider similar legislation/rules for e-bikes?
“[T]he explosion of e-bikes has also soured the way some New Yorkers view the streets. “In the last three years there’s been an enormous shift,” said Susan Simon, who moved to New York in the late 1970s. “The quality of life has gone down.” “The streets are very dangerous,” Simon continued. “What used to be a wonderful walking city for tourists, for pedestrians, has become something of a nightmare.” Simon used to pedal a bike herself, for fun or to go to the grocery store. But e-bikes are different, she said — faster and heavier and therefore riskier. She noted that a woman was killed last year after someone riding an electric Citi Bike hit her. There are some efforts to tame the chaos. Janet Schroeder and Pamela Manasse, who was hit by an electric vehicle in 2022 and suffered a severe brain injury, founded the NYC E-Vehicle Safety Alliance, which promotes various regulations for e-bikes. The alliance supports a bill that would ban e-bikes and other e-vehicles from parks and greenways. It would also like the government to require that e-bikes be registered and riders licensed.” |
I am a cycling advocate. I would support such limits for eBikes that can go over a certain speed. I would not be supportive of banning them from parks and greenways. Otherwise, one couldn't ride one in Rock Creek Park, either on the road or the path, which seems misguided. I would also be for speed limiters for cars, so they could not exceed the posted speed limits. |
Or, actually, the opposite. People who have a sense of scale (the supporters) and people who don't (the opposed). |
Let's stipulate that people under 16 are people, and not only that: people under 16 are (1) people, who (2) go places. |
No. Drivers on Connecticut Avenue win. Everyone else loses. |
You’re probably the “we would have 3 bikers in one house” person. Or the “it’s not a few people, the census data says it’s 3 percent of commuters” person. Or one of the “we swear there are a lot of bikers they just don’t use it to commute” people. Take your pick. Still no sense of scale. |
Bikers lose because bikers get bike lanes? Logic checks out. |
Why? What’s wrong with cyclists using the side streets? |
Rock Creek Park was not created for use by motorized vehicles and their ban in the park would be far from misguided. It would bring the use of the park back to its true purpose. |
Let’s stipulate that people under 16 are students with free transit passes to get them anywhere they need to go. Honestly bizarre that people who know nothing about DC or Connecticut Avenue keep wasting their time posting about this hyper local issue. |
Sorry, gatekeeper. |
The amount of carbrain idiocy in this thread is staggering. You know what was bigger in the 1960's and 1970's? Kids riding bikes and walking to school. You what wasn't bigger in the 1960's and 1970's? The kids themselves - childhood obesity rates were so low it was never considered a major concern - less than 5%. Today? ONE FIFTH to ONE FOURTH. Jesus christ. Why? Because our roads are ridiculously dangerous. SUVs and massive trucks. Distracted driving because of phones or texts. Too much speed. Too many cars. A major dependence on automobile infrastructure has provided us with... ...massive increases in obesity rates across all age groups ...a huge amount of microplastic pollution from tires ...a ridiculous amount of money being dumped into road resurfacing constantly to fix all the potholes left by the increasingly heavier cars (electric vehicles are WORSE for this) ...noise pollution (hello mr. Dodge Challenger driver, or mr. I'm late for my dentist appt but stuck in this school drop off traffic-horn lay-er on-er) ...air pollution ...a money sink for a massive chunk of the average family's income into an asset that depreciates quickly and doesn't help build wealth (which btw is disproportionately felt by lower income families) ...a defunding of public services related to mobility like buses, trams, trains, etc because "no one is using these because they all drive" (while sticking buses and trolleys in traffic and then wondering why people don't use it). We need all of our major streets in the city to be rethought. We need all of our streets in the city to consider multiple modes of transportation that *advantage* anything but a single-occupancy motor vehicle. The amount of energy poured into blocking this bike lane by a bunch of people who have spent their whole lives happily driving automobiles and wanting to do so to the grave while their kids and kids' kids can deal with the consequences is absolutely absurd. Like wtf. We have speed limiters on freaking stand on scooters in DC. But every freaking day the dozens or so of speed cameras are racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in tickets (which many go unpaid because of VA and MD drivers just ignoring them) and there's not really any serious discussion about speed limiters on motor vehicles. Instead you carbrains are like - ah ITS THE EBIKES FAULT that our roads are so dangerous!!! |