Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
It is such a trope to suggest this is for several dozen wealthy white people. As it currently sits, there are a lot of blue collar workers who ride bikes and bring them into the backs of the restaruants etc they work in. YOu don't see them because they are commuting to their work midday and are leaving in the dark of night. You have NO idea how people get to and from their jobs.
If they're coming in mid day and leaving at night, when the roads are dead, they don't need bike lanes.
It is dark out...they need them more than ever. This isn't about the road being congested and having bikes in a different space. It is about having a safe space for bikes and pedestrians, segregated from cars all together.
Then make sidewalks for bikes. Don't take up space that is urgently needed for cars to drive on. More people need roads for cars than they do for bikes. That's the reality of how we use the space.
Sidewalks are for pedestrians. Pedestrians don't like having bicyclists on the sidewalk. Bicyclists also don't like bicycling on the sidewalk with pedestrians. The only people who like having bicyclists on the sidewalk are drivers.
The reality of how we use that space is that there will be bike lanes on it.
I said, make sidewalks FOR BIKES. Sidewalks for pedestrians and sidewalks for bikes. The bike lanes in idiotic on so many levels. One is that cars have to cross them all the time. The other is that way, way more people need the space for driving than for biking. So dumb.
Ah, sidewalks FOR BIKES. We call those "bike lanes".
No, bike lanes are in the road. Where cars belong. Sidewalks for bikes are not on the road. Just like sidewalks for pedestrians.
If your bike lanes are off the road, like sidewalks are, then I'm all for them.
So you want to keep the same space for cars but squeeze all of the people walking and biking and not polluting, who are supporting their local neighborhood businesses, so you can sit in your car and spew pollution at all the people who have to breath it, while you blow past one commercial area after another in your car.
That sounds....fair.
Don't pretend you care about pollution. Aren't bikers trying to do away with right turn on red? All those cars idling uselessly at red lights, just in case that one bike comes by?
That is more a pedestrian safety issue, but sure, blame it on the cyclists.
Pedestrians are not the ones pushing to eliminate the right turn on red. The cyclists are.
Yes I never understood this one either. When you eliminate right turn in red turn cars are “competing” with pedestrians to turn right before the light turns red again. Better to turn right into a clear lane when the walk signal is red.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
It is such a trope to suggest this is for several dozen wealthy white people. As it currently sits, there are a lot of blue collar workers who ride bikes and bring them into the backs of the restaruants etc they work in. YOu don't see them because they are commuting to their work midday and are leaving in the dark of night. You have NO idea how people get to and from their jobs.
If they're coming in mid day and leaving at night, when the roads are dead, they don't need bike lanes.
It is dark out...they need them more than ever. This isn't about the road being congested and having bikes in a different space. It is about having a safe space for bikes and pedestrians, segregated from cars all together.
Then make sidewalks for bikes. Don't take up space that is urgently needed for cars to drive on. More people need roads for cars than they do for bikes. That's the reality of how we use the space.
Sidewalks are for pedestrians. Pedestrians don't like having bicyclists on the sidewalk. Bicyclists also don't like bicycling on the sidewalk with pedestrians. The only people who like having bicyclists on the sidewalk are drivers.
The reality of how we use that space is that there will be bike lanes on it.
I said, make sidewalks FOR BIKES. Sidewalks for pedestrians and sidewalks for bikes. The bike lanes in idiotic on so many levels. One is that cars have to cross them all the time. The other is that way, way more people need the space for driving than for biking. So dumb.
Ah, sidewalks FOR BIKES. We call those "bike lanes".
No, bike lanes are in the road. Where cars belong. Sidewalks for bikes are not on the road. Just like sidewalks for pedestrians.
If your bike lanes are off the road, like sidewalks are, then I'm all for them.
So you want to keep the same space for cars but squeeze all of the people walking and biking and not polluting, who are supporting their local neighborhood businesses, so you can sit in your car and spew pollution at all the people who have to breath it, while you blow past one commercial area after another in your car.
That sounds....fair.
Don't pretend you care about pollution. Aren't bikers trying to do away with right turn on red? All those cars idling uselessly at red lights, just in case that one bike comes by?
That is more a pedestrian safety issue, but sure, blame it on the cyclists.
Pedestrians are not the ones pushing to eliminate the right turn on red. The cyclists are.
Yes I never understood this one either. When you eliminate right turn in red turn cars are “competing” with pedestrians to turn right before the light turns red again. Better to turn right into a clear lane when the walk signal is red.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
It is such a trope to suggest this is for several dozen wealthy white people. As it currently sits, there are a lot of blue collar workers who ride bikes and bring them into the backs of the restaruants etc they work in. YOu don't see them because they are commuting to their work midday and are leaving in the dark of night. You have NO idea how people get to and from their jobs.
If they're coming in mid day and leaving at night, when the roads are dead, they don't need bike lanes.
It is dark out...they need them more than ever. This isn't about the road being congested and having bikes in a different space. It is about having a safe space for bikes and pedestrians, segregated from cars all together.
Then make sidewalks for bikes. Don't take up space that is urgently needed for cars to drive on. More people need roads for cars than they do for bikes. That's the reality of how we use the space.
Sidewalks are for pedestrians. Pedestrians don't like having bicyclists on the sidewalk. Bicyclists also don't like bicycling on the sidewalk with pedestrians. The only people who like having bicyclists on the sidewalk are drivers.
The reality of how we use that space is that there will be bike lanes on it.
I said, make sidewalks FOR BIKES. Sidewalks for pedestrians and sidewalks for bikes. The bike lanes in idiotic on so many levels. One is that cars have to cross them all the time. The other is that way, way more people need the space for driving than for biking. So dumb.
Ah, sidewalks FOR BIKES. We call those "bike lanes".
No, bike lanes are in the road. Where cars belong. Sidewalks for bikes are not on the road. Just like sidewalks for pedestrians.
If your bike lanes are off the road, like sidewalks are, then I'm all for them.
So you want to keep the same space for cars but squeeze all of the people walking and biking and not polluting, who are supporting their local neighborhood businesses, so you can sit in your car and spew pollution at all the people who have to breath it, while you blow past one commercial area after another in your car.
That sounds....fair.
Don't pretend you care about pollution. Aren't bikers trying to do away with right turn on red? All those cars idling uselessly at red lights, just in case that one bike comes by?
That is more a pedestrian safety issue, but sure, blame it on the cyclists.
Pedestrians are not the ones pushing to eliminate the right turn on red. The cyclists are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
The funniest thing about this job is that it doesn't exist, and yet you keep repeating that it does.
+1
They paid the executive director a total of about $110,000 in 2020 (last year the 990 is available for), and that was apparently the only paid employee then, so I guess the idea here is supposed to be that this fictional job is paid entirely out of a city contract and not disclosed on their tax forms?
https://waba.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2020-WABA-Form-990_PD-website.pdf
Do you not understand how government contracting works?
WABA is charging DC government $180k per year for the Bike Ambassador. They don’t have to pay the Bike Ambassador $180k per year. They are paying less and pocketing the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
The funniest thing about this job is that it doesn't exist, and yet you keep repeating that it does.
+1
They paid the executive director a total of about $110,000 in 2020 (last year the 990 is available for), and that was apparently the only paid employee then, so I guess the idea here is supposed to be that this fictional job is paid entirely out of a city contract and not disclosed on their tax forms?
https://waba.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2020-WABA-Form-990_PD-website.pdf
Do you not understand how government contracting works?
WABA is charging DC government $180k per year for the Bike Ambassador. They don’t have to pay the Bike Ambassador $180k per year. They are paying less and pocketing the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
The funniest thing about this job is that it doesn't exist, and yet you keep repeating that it does.
+1
They paid the executive director a total of about $110,000 in 2020 (last year the 990 is available for), and that was apparently the only paid employee then, so I guess the idea here is supposed to be that this fictional job is paid entirely out of a city contract and not disclosed on their tax forms?
https://waba.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2020-WABA-Form-990_PD-website.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
The funniest thing about this job is that it doesn't exist, and yet you keep repeating that it does.
+1
They paid the executive director a total of about $110,000 in 2020 (last year the 990 is available for), and that was apparently the only paid employee then, so I guess the idea here is supposed to be that this fictional job is paid entirely out of a city contract and not disclosed on their tax forms?
https://waba.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2020-WABA-Form-990_PD-website.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
The funniest thing about this job is that it doesn't exist, and yet you keep repeating that it does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
The funniest thing about this job is not that it’s completely unnecessary or that it pays almost $200,000. The funniest thing is that it’s a part time job. It’s not even full time. On a per hour basis, this “bicycle ambassador” makes more than many medical doctors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
You’re right, it’s a conspiracy to supply bike riding children to DDOT so DDOT can build bikelanes that roll the kids right into the basement of Comet Ping Pong.
Obviously not because the WABA crowd is boycotting Comet
No one called for a boycott of businesses directly. There was a particular call out to the owner of Comet because like 3-4 days after he signed the petition, a freaking DC Bike Party with several hundred people rolled up to his bar and provided a crap ton of business to him. Pretty lame on his part.
This is a lie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
You’re right, it’s a conspiracy to supply bike riding children to DDOT so DDOT can build bikelanes that roll the kids right into the basement of Comet Ping Pong.
Obviously not because the WABA crowd is boycotting Comet
No one called for a boycott of businesses directly. There was a particular call out to the owner of Comet because like 3-4 days after he signed the petition, a freaking DC Bike Party with several hundred people rolled up to his bar and provided a crap ton of business to him. Pretty lame on his part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
One of the WABA contracts with the city include paying someone $150,000 per year, rising to $180,000 to be a “bicycle ambassador” which includes hanging out and riding around trails and bike lanes for 20 hours per week
Maybe this bike ambassador could teach cyclists to ride their bikes safely. I saw one riding on the sidewalk at probably close to 30 mph, ignoring every single stop sign, who came with a hair’s breadth of being mowed down by a SUV turning left
30 mph on a bike on a sidewalk with stop signs in DC? Wow! Where was this?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Connecticut Avenue is already on a diet now that parking is allowed all day, no rush hour restrictions. That should slow things down the same as bike lanes would.
With the safety argument gone and the transportation argument quite dubious seeing that it is a major public transit corridor there is no rationale at all beyond providing an expensive amenity for a couple dozen of wealthy white people in a city where a lot of basic needs are not being met. This is the kind of thing a city does when it has a growing economy and is flush with cash. That is not the DC of 2023 and thankfully Mayor Bowser and the Council understand that very well.
DC has the same poverty rate as West Virginia
Is West Virginia planning any boondoggle transportation projects that will only benefit a handful of rich people?
Exactly. DC has spent billions of dollars on bike lanes.
Not sure about billions but certainly more than $100 million over the past decade.
This is total nonsense. After repeated requests, someone in the other thread strung together a bunch of projects that allocated funding to a wide range of infra, including road maintenance, and sheepishly tried to claim that the allocations were all for bike lanes. It was patently absurd. If you nothing to contribute other than lies and manipulation, please just be quiet.
Bowser's current budget proposal alone has close to $60 million. $100 million over the past decade is neither absurd nor an exaggeration.
Bike funding routinely exceeds $100 million annually. DC has had bike lanes for 15 years. Things aren’t cheap and the DC government is very generous when it spends other people’s money
show a link for this claim
Here's a sampling from the 2023 budget:
$36 million to expand bike lanes
$15 million to expand Capital Bikeshare
$1.3 million to hire people to clean bike lanes
$57 million to make K Street more bike/bus friendly
$21 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$18.5 million for bike/pedestrian bridge
$120,000 to buy electric bikes
Most of the Washington area bicycling associations annual budget comes from the city. DC pays the bike lobby to lobby the DC government. Surprisingly few real people actually give to waba
can we create a bingo card for this thread? “WABA is funded by DC and controls DDOT” will be a square.
Uh, well you can look at the budget and see for yourself
WABA gets about $100,000 annually in membership dues and almost $1 million from the government. I think that’s called astroturf
WABA has/had a contract with DC to teach 2nd graders how to ride bikes. How horrible! What monsters!!!
Oh you mean the program where WABA charges DC public schools $1,000 per child to rent one of their bikes? No, that’s not shady at all
You’re right, it’s a conspiracy to supply bike riding children to DDOT so DDOT can build bikelanes that roll the kids right into the basement of Comet Ping Pong.
Obviously not because the WABA crowd is boycotting Comet