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SF Begins Partial Implementation of Bike Plan
Created by Kimberlee Sakamoto on 12/3/2009 6:29:00 PM


SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, supervisors and other city  officials slapped down the first coat of green paint at a busy intersection Thursday to inaugurate a renewed push to make San Francisco one of the most  bike-friendly cities in the world.

A San Francisco Superior Court judge last week ruled to partially  lift a three-year injunction on the city's bike plan. The case will return to  court on June 1.

"Finally we got here," Newsom told a crowd of bicycle advocates  today at the corner of Scott and Oak streets, a busy thoroughfare and popular  bike route near the city's Panhandle, Alamo Square and lower Haight  neighborhoods.

Newsom, supervisors Ross Mirkarimi and Bevan Dufty and San  Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency head Nathaniel Ford joined workers  in splashing green paint over a section of roadway to create a "bike box"  marking a protected area where bikers can stop at an intersection.

The intersection is along a well-traveled bike route known as the  "Wiggle," used by bikers to avoid hills between Market Street and the  Panhandle.

The mayor's office said the box is believed to be the first of its  kind in California, a trial effort to last at least six months.

The city's overall bike plan aims to add 34 miles of bike lanes to  the existing 45-mile network; 75 miles of on-street bike routes with  "sharrows," stencils that demarcate shared use between cars and bikes;  thousands of new bike racks and other improvements for bikers.

The plan was put on hold by litigants who are challenging the  adequacy of the plan's environmental impact report.

San Francisco Bicycle Coalition Executive Director Leah Shahum  said Thursday that the improvements "will welcome a whole new class of  bicyclists."

Since the partial lifting of the injunction, workers have added  new bike racks and sharrows along the Wiggle, where bicycling has increased  by 85 percent since 2006, according to the San Francisco Municipal  Transportation Agency.

The mayor's office said the ruling will allow for the completion  of 10 of 60 planned bike lane projects -- adding another six miles of lanes  -- as well as the addition of 350 bike racks and 2,000 sharrows.

Newsom said the improvements "could potentially be unraveled" but  added that he did not expect the court to reverse the decision.

Despite the injunction, the number of bicyclists in the city has  risen 53 percent since 2006, the SFMTA said.

Newsom called the city's goal to increase the percentage of  commuters going to work by bicycle from 6 percent to 10 percent in the next  few years "eminently achievable."

"We are all unified in the mission statement of making San  Francisco bike-friendly," said Mirkarimi, who has at times clashed with  Newsom.

"Great things are going to happen now," Dufty agreed, and  Supervisor Sophie Maxwell added, "And we're going to make it fun, and we're  going to make it funky," prompting cheers and laughs from the crowd.
                 
(Copyright 2009, Bay City News, All rights reserved.)

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  Comments

  12/4/2009 4:40:18 PM
RPM 


New Comment 
Completely agree. I'm ALL for these changes. HOWEVER (and this is a big however), as I drive in this City, I find that I am frequently put at liability because bikers do not obey traffic rules and regulations. I think there needs to be more much regulation of bike *traffic*, which seems to be completely unhampered at the moment.
  12/4/2009 8:14:46 AM
T. Taylor 


New Comment 
Great! Now, let's get them to follow the rules of the road. Like, stopping at intersections rather then whizzing through, creating a hazard to motorists and pedestrians. Wearing head gear (motorcyclist are required to), having lights at night, etc. Maybe it should be required to have bicycles and there riders be licensed. This would bring more money into the city to help pay for the projects. If bicyclists want more respect on the road they need to have more respect for others!
     
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