Anonymous wrote:I have never, ever heard anyone complain that buses are prioritized over bike lanes. To the contrary, in my neighborhood everyone supported the 8th street bus priority project and understood that a bike lane doesn’t fit there. You’re making sh*t up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote: unless your priority is preserving space on Connecticut Avenue for cars.
It's funny, everyone claims to be so supportive of buses, until someone says that bus lanes should be prioritized over bike lanes, and then they get attacked and accused of being fake bus supporters who are secretly supporting cars. People can claim that bus advocates and cyclist advocates are "are generally exactly the same people", but it appears that many are simply cyclist activists who pretend to be bus advocates, then attack actual advocates when they show up.
I support prioritizing buses over cars. But I also support prioritizing buses over bicycles. They're used by vastly more people, and they tend to represent a much poorer part of the population. If the city can swing it so that they can fit in more bicycle lanes as well, great. But a lot of the efforts the city has made (just look at the maps) suggest that bus lanes aren't being given the priority they deserve. If you're mad that people are pointing that out, it's hard to believe you're an actual bus advocate.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe you need it explained to you that anonymously “pointing out” something on a mommy message board is NOT the same thing as advocating for that thing. Slacktivism, anyone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote: unless your priority is preserving space on Connecticut Avenue for cars.
It's funny, everyone claims to be so supportive of buses, until someone says that bus lanes should be prioritized over bike lanes, and then they get attacked and accused of being fake bus supporters who are secretly supporting cars. People can claim that bus advocates and cyclist advocates are "are generally exactly the same people", but it appears that many are simply cyclist activists who pretend to be bus advocates, then attack actual advocates when they show up.
I support prioritizing buses over cars. But I also support prioritizing buses over bicycles. They're used by vastly more people, and they tend to represent a much poorer part of the population. If the city can swing it so that they can fit in more bicycle lanes as well, great. But a lot of the efforts the city has made (just look at the maps) suggest that bus lanes aren't being given the priority they deserve. If you're mad that people are pointing that out, it's hard to believe you're an actual bus advocate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote: unless your priority is preserving space on Connecticut Avenue for cars.
It's funny, everyone claims to be so supportive of buses, until someone says that bus lanes should be prioritized over bike lanes, and then they get attacked and accused of being fake bus supporters who are secretly supporting cars. People can claim that bus advocates and cyclist advocates are "are generally exactly the same people", but it appears that many are simply cyclist activists who pretend to be bus advocates, then attack actual advocates when they show up.
I support prioritizing buses over cars. But I also support prioritizing buses over bicycles. They're used by vastly more people, and they tend to represent a much poorer part of the population. If the city can swing it so that they can fit in more bicycle lanes as well, great. But a lot of the efforts the city has made (just look at the maps) suggest that bus lanes aren't being given the priority they deserve. If you're mad that people are pointing that out, it's hard to believe you're an actual bus advocate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote: unless your priority is preserving space on Connecticut Avenue for cars.
It's funny, everyone claims to be so supportive of buses, until someone says that bus lanes should be prioritized over bike lanes, and then they get attacked and accused of being fake bus supporters who are secretly supporting cars. People can claim that bus advocates and cyclist advocates are "are generally exactly the same people", but it appears that many are simply cyclist activists who pretend to be bus advocates, then attack actual advocates when they show up.
I support prioritizing buses over cars. But I also support prioritizing buses over bicycles. They're used by vastly more people, and they tend to represent a much poorer part of the population. If the city can swing it so that they can fit in more bicycle lanes as well, great. But a lot of the efforts the city has made (just look at the maps) suggest that bus lanes aren't being given the priority they deserve. If you're mad that people are pointing that out, it's hard to believe you're an actual bus advocate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is pretty great you guys.
ANGRY POSTER 1: CYCLISTS GO SO SLOW AND CLOG UP TRAFFIC1!!!111ONEONE
ANGRY POSTER 2: CYCLISTS BLOW THROUGH RED LIGHTS AND STOP SIGNS AND I NEVER SEE THEM COMING!!!!111ONEONE
ANGRY POSTER 3: BIKES ARE PLAY TOYS AND ARE TOO SLOW TO BE ON THE STREET
ANGRY POSTER 4: CYCLIST MOVE UNPREDICTABLY AND TOO QUICKLY FOR ME TO REACT IN MY MOTOR VEHICLE
You all must be big fans of string theory. Schrodinger's cyclist says hi.
Don’t forget that old saw about how cyclists are more likely to be white, more likely to have higher incomes and more likely to live within biking distance of their jobs so closing roads like Beach to cars benefits them and disproportionately hurts black and brown people who drive because they’re commuting from much greater distances.
Oh wait…that one’s true isn’t it? Sorry teachers, cops and other government employees. Maybe you could save up and buy a place much closer in, near the cyclists?
Do people even bike to work on Beach? Or is it mostly recreational cycling? Doesn't seem like a convenient way to get anywhere you'd need to be for an office job.
OK if it isn't convenient to get to an office job then why are drivers so up in arms about it being closed to cars?
It's a convenient way to get to an office job if you're driving from the northern end of it, because who cares if you have to drive uphill out of the park to get where you're going. But for people who live near the park and bike to work downtown, it's much more convenient to just take surface streets.
So, you just think any hill makes biking inconvenient?
Anonymous wrote: (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote: unless your priority is preserving space on Connecticut Avenue for cars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Let's have both" usually means "let's give lip service to one while completely ignoring it and pushing for our pet project." No one is serious if they're going to pretend that space isn't limited, or if they pretend that no lanes are going to be preserved for cars, trucks, and vans.
Compare the map of D.C. dedicated bike lanes:
https://buspriority.ddot.dc.gov/pages/buslanes
To the map of dedicated D.C. bus lanes:
https://godcgo.com/wp-content/uploads/DC-Bike-Map.pdf
As mentioned, right now there's a push for bike lanes on Connecticut, not bus lanes. As the data above shows, bike commuters are a small segment of the population, but they often are wealthier and have an outsized voice compared to bus commuters, who are much more numerous but tend to be poorer.
So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
exactly. there is NO conflict between bus advocates and bike advocates- they are generally exactly the same people. Miss me with this false dilemma! I don’t know the particulars of the Ct Ave bus situation but here on the Hill I have never ever heard anyone complain about bus priority projects as somehow hurting bike projects. They coexist and are generally the same people supporting them. For example we got the 8th bus priority project - which does not have bike lanes. At the same time we completed Pa Ave (bus AND bike) and C St/N Carolina (bike mainly and some bus improvements)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true that a dedicated bus lane would probably be more beneficial for most people (and particularly poorer citizens) than dedicated bike lanes. Particularly since even many cyclists switch over to the bus/metro when there's inclement weather.
It's crazy that there's more effort to put bike lanes than a bus lanes on Connecticut Ave.
Well, PA Ave put in BOTH bus lanes AND protected bike lanes. People really need to stop making up fake conflicts. DDOT has many bus corridor projects going on right now.
The fact is the dedicated NIMBYs will make a fuss over ANY change to road use. Most triggered by bikes, but they’ll also oppose bus improvements (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
This. I really like the new PA Ave configuration. Its awesome.
Conn Ave is on top of a metro too, like most of PA Ave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true that a dedicated bus lane would probably be more beneficial for most people (and particularly poorer citizens) than dedicated bike lanes. Particularly since even many cyclists switch over to the bus/metro when there's inclement weather.
It's crazy that there's more effort to put bike lanes than a bus lanes on Connecticut Ave.
Well, PA Ave put in BOTH bus lanes AND protected bike lanes. People really need to stop making up fake conflicts. DDOT has many bus corridor projects going on right now.
The fact is the dedicated NIMBYs will make a fuss over ANY change to road use. Most triggered by bikes, but they’ll also oppose bus improvements (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true that a dedicated bus lane would probably be more beneficial for most people (and particularly poorer citizens) than dedicated bike lanes. Particularly since even many cyclists switch over to the bus/metro when there's inclement weather.
It's crazy that there's more effort to put bike lanes than a bus lanes on Connecticut Ave.
Well, PA Ave put in BOTH bus lanes AND protected bike lanes. People really need to stop making up fake conflicts. DDOT has many bus corridor projects going on right now.
The fact is the dedicated NIMBYs will make a fuss over ANY change to road use. Most triggered by bikes, but they’ll also oppose bus improvements (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)
On University Boulevard in Wheaton, they've objected to both...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Let's have both" usually means "let's give lip service to one while completely ignoring it and pushing for our pet project." No one is serious if they're going to pretend that space isn't limited, or if they pretend that no lanes are going to be preserved for cars, trucks, and vans.
Compare the map of D.C. dedicated bike lanes:
https://buspriority.ddot.dc.gov/pages/buslanes
To the map of dedicated D.C. bus lanes:
https://godcgo.com/wp-content/uploads/DC-Bike-Map.pdf
As mentioned, right now there's a push for bike lanes on Connecticut, not bus lanes. As the data above shows, bike commuters are a small segment of the population, but they often are wealthier and have an outsized voice compared to bus commuters, who are much more numerous but tend to be poorer.
So lead the charge and push for bus lanes on Connecticut Ave! Do something other than complaining that the the thing other people are doing is not the thing you would be doing if you were going to do anything, which you’re not…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true that a dedicated bus lane would probably be more beneficial for most people (and particularly poorer citizens) than dedicated bike lanes. Particularly since even many cyclists switch over to the bus/metro when there's inclement weather.
It's crazy that there's more effort to put bike lanes than a bus lanes on Connecticut Ave.
Well, PA Ave put in BOTH bus lanes AND protected bike lanes. People really need to stop making up fake conflicts. DDOT has many bus corridor projects going on right now.
The fact is the dedicated NIMBYs will make a fuss over ANY change to road use. Most triggered by bikes, but they’ll also oppose bus improvements (unless they are using buses to make a dishonest objection to bike lanes.)