Cyclists Rally at City Hall

Call on Mayor Bloomberg to "take control" of city streets.

062906_rally.jpg
Almost exactly one year ago, New York City cyclists rallied on the steps of City Hall, mourning the deaths of four of their own and demanding that Mayor Bloomberg take action to make the city’s streets safer for bike commuting.

This morning, in what is almost becoming a sad early-summer ritual, one hundred cyclists, gathered on the steps of City Hall after the deaths of three cyclists in just the last three weeks. Led by Transportation Alternatives, the group is demanding that Mayor Bloomberg follow the example of other big city mayors by developing a plan to modernize New York City’s bicycle commuting infrastructure.

Calling directly on Mayor Bloomberg, Paul Steely White, executive director of Transportation Alternatives said, "You took control of the city budget. You took control of the city’s schools. Today, our streets our out of control. We need you to take control of our streets."

In the past three weeks there have been four serious bike crashes in New York City, three of them resulting in the deaths of cyclists Donna Goodson, Dr. Carl Nacht, and Derek Lake.

On Monday, June 5, Goodson was killed by a truck on Rockaway Park Bridge in Brooklyn. On Monday, June 19, a taxicab driver opened his door and knocked a cyclist into the path of a bus on 10th Avenue in Manhattan. On Thursday, June 22 an NYPD tow truck driver turning onto the Hudson River Greenway and slammed into Dr. Nacht. He died a few days later. On Monday, June 26, Lake slipped on a steel construction plate on Houston Street and fell beneath the wheels of a tractor trailer.

Transportation Alternatives bike program director Noah Budnick, who himself suffered a nearly-fatal crash just two years ago, said, "These cyclists didn’t ride because they were training for the Olympics. They didn’t ride to protest cars. They rode bikes because it makes sense."

White and Budnick both noted that the mayors of other world class cities are putting forward comprehensive plans to make their streets safer for cyclists. In London, Budnick said, Mayor Ken Livingstone has announced a £20 million investment in bike infrastructure saying, "Bicycling is the fastest, cheapest most environmentally healthy way to get around London." In Chicago, Budnick said, Mayor Richard Daley has also pledged millions of dollars of investment in bicycle infrastructure saying that his "goal is to promote environmentally-friendly lifestyles and make Chicago the most bike-friendly city in the United States."

New York City’s bicycle master plan, in the meantime, hasn’t been updated in ten years. The ten-year-old plan itself is barely complete. It doesn’t set any specific targets and doesn’t establish any design standards.

"A six inch-wide stripe on the street doesn’t make the street safe for cyclists," Budnick said.

062906_ghostbike.jpg

062906_nacht.jpg

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

City Hall Press Conference on Cyclist Safety

|
Thursday, June 29, 2006, 9:00amCity HallOrganized by Transportation Alternatives Cyclists, Advocates: City’s Bike Safety Efforts not Enough Demand New City Bike Safety Plan to Address Chronic Hazards In the past week there were three serious bike crashes in New York City, two of them resulting in the deaths of individual cyclists, Dr. Carl Nacht and […]

Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff: Bike Commuter

|
Adrianne Pasquarelli profiles New Yorkers who commute by bicycle for Crain’s New York. You have to subscribe to read the entire article, but here she introduces Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff, cyclist: Mayor Michael Bloomberg gave bike commuting a boost with PlaNYC 2030, his administration’s blueprint for sustainability. It calls for 1,380 additional miles of bike […]

Spring Bike Counts Show Steady Growth of 14 Percent

|
The growth of cycling in New York City shows no signs of letting up. The Department of Transportation’s latest count of cyclists entering the center of the city posted a 14 percent increase this spring compared to last spring. If the trend holds up for the rest of 2011, it will mark the fifth consecutive year […]