Van Bramer Demanded Protected Bike Lanes on 43rd and Skillman. He’s Been MIA Ever Since.

Now contemplating a run for borough president, the western Queens council member has gone silent about a major improvement for the borough's bike network he endorsed last year.

Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer, podium, speaking in April alongside Flor Jimenez, whose partner Gelacio Reyes had been killed biking on 43rd Avenue 12 days earlier. Photo: David Meyer
Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer, podium, speaking in April alongside Flor Jimenez, whose partner Gelacio Reyes had been killed biking on 43rd Avenue 12 days earlier. Photo: David Meyer

At the request of local Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer, in November DOT announced plans for protected bike lanes on 43rd Avenue and Skillman Avenue. Now the project is languishing, and Van Bramer hasn’t done anything to move it along.

Last April, Van Bramer stood with the family of Gelacio Reyes at the intersection on 43rd Avenue where a driver had struck and killed him 12 days earlier. He called on the city to make the street “safe for every single New Yorker, every single moment of every single day.”

“One of the things that I believe we need is a protected bike lane, right here on 43rd Avenue — a protected bike lane all the way from, essentially, Queens Boulevard all the way to Roosevelt Avenue that would keep cyclists safe,” he said at the time.

Seven months later, DOT delivered, presenting plans for 2.6 miles of protected bike lanes and 30 new painted pedestrian islands along 43rd Street and its westbound counterpart, Skillman Avenue [PDF]. The redesign would close much of the gap in safe bike infrastructure between the Queens Boulevard bike lane and the Queensboro Bridge.

Soon after, Van Bramer and Queens Community Board 2 announced a public town hall with DOT about the project on December 19. But on December 18, Van Bramer sent out an email saying the town hall had been postponed.

More than two months later, the town hall still hasn’t been rescheduled.

Van Bramer, now contemplating a run for Queens borough president, has done nothing to advance the redesign he demanded in April.

The DOT plan converts unprotected bike lanes on Skillman Avenue and 43rd Avenue to parking-protected lanes. Image: DOT
The DOT plan converts unprotected bike lanes on Skillman Avenue and 43rd Avenue to parking-protected lanes. Image: DOT

Instead, he’s said his support is contingent on creating a safer pedestrian crossing at P.S. 11 on Skillman Avenue between 54th Street and 55th Street.

“I will not entertain any plans to change Skillman or 43rd Avenue, and even contemplate bike lanes, until P.S. 11 is taken care of,” Van Bramer said in January. In response, DOT said it will review the location for a signalized crossing or all-way stop sign.

That was seven weeks ago. Streetsblog contacted Van Bramer’s office for an update on his position this morning and has yet to hear back.

Meanwhile, the conditions that led to the death of Gelacio Reyes remain unchanged. One of the most important bike connections in Queens is just as dangerous as when Van Bramer called for action last year.

On Sunday, Queens residents will rally at the Sunnyside St. Pat’s For All parade to call on Van Bramer to make the redesign a reality. To participate, head to 41-15 Skillman Avenue this Sunday at 1:30 p.m.

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This concept for a protected bike lane on 43rd Avenue in Sunnyside emphasizes safety for cyclists and pedestrians at intersections. Image: Max Sholl

Yes, There’s Room for a Protected Bike Lane on 43rd Avenue

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In April, a drunk driver killed Gelacio Reyes, 32, on 43rd Avenue at 39th Street as he biked home in the early morning from work in Midtown Manhattan. Now advocates are renewing their call for DOT to install a protected bike lane on 43rd Avenue and its westbound counterpart, Skillman Avenue, which connect the Queensboro Bridge to the protected bike lanes on Queens Boulevard.