Clomid Actos
Jan
29
2010
1

Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle puts brakes on texting while driving

By Steve Doyle for the Huntsville Times

January 28, 2010, 7:36AM

Texting while driving

HUNTSVILLE, AL — Saying he wants city government to set a good example, Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle announced an immediate ban Wednesday on municipal employees sending text messages while driving.

His “Eyes on the Road” policy, which covers about 2,300 city workers, comes as lawmakers in Montgomery consider making Alabama the 20th state to outlaw texting while operating a vehicle.

“We’re products of an electronic age and want to use every second to be as productive as you can,” Battle said. “But while you’re driving is not a time to be productive doing anything but driving.”

“This is just a common sense policy.”

City Administrator Rex Reynolds said employees caught violating the ban would be admonished by their supervisor. Those who continue to break the rules could be suspended, he said.

Specifically, the policy prohibits employees from “sending, receiving or reviewing text messages and e-mails” from behind the wheel during work hours. It applies to both city-owned and personal vehicles.

Reynolds said he believes Huntsville is the first Alabama city to take such a public stance against driver texting.

Retiring Huntsville Police Chief Henry Reyes and his successor, Deputy Chief Mark Hudson, said they both strongly support the crackdown and hope the Legislature will follow suit.

While he could not recall any texting-related wrecks here, Hudson said anything that takes a driver’s attention off the road “significantly increases” the risk of an accident.

According to a city news release, studies have shown that about 20 percent of U.S. drivers admit to texting while driving. They are 23 times more likely to get into an accident than other drivers, it said.

“This policy will not only help save lives and reduce injuries,” Battle said, “but set an example for all the community.”

Meanwhile, state lawmakers continue to debate a broader, statewide ban on driver texting.

The bill, co-sponsored by local Republican state House Reps. Mike Ball, Mac McCutcheon, Howard Sanderford and Phil Williams, calls for a $25 fine plus court costs for the first offense, a $50 fine for the second offense and a $75 fine for subsequent convictions.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Transportation Department announced an immediate ban on texting by truck and bus drivers on interstate highways. Those caught in the act may be subject to civil or criminal penalties of up to $2,750.

Written by Peter in: News |
Dec
14
2009
0

Huntsville’s Green 13 Council hears suggestions at town hall meeting

By Brian Lawson for the Huntsville Times

December 12, 2009, 5:39PM

Huntsville Mayor Tommy BattleHuntsville Mayor Tommy Battle appointed the Green 13 Council in May.

HUNTSVILLE, AL — Like the space projects Huntsville is best known for, Saturday’s town hall meeting with the Green 13 Council included a historically successful approach  getting a lot smart people in one room to figure out how to solve a complex problem.

The problem in this case is finding sustainable approaches to building, transportation, energy and the environment and developing an education and communication strategy to spread the word.

The Green 13 Council was established by Huntsville Mayor Tommy Battle in May. It is charged with producing a report by February for the mayor and City Council with recommendations on how Huntsville can become a national leader in green initiatives.

The town hall meeting Saturday at the City Council chamber drew nearly 100 people. Rodney Pennywell, who chairs Green 13, and members of the group outlined the steps they have taken to have their report ready by February.

Along with plenty of research and meetings, they have looked at plans other cities have adopted. The plans drawn by the City of Chattanooga drew special praise from several Green 13 members, who also stressed they were committed to providing ideas that can be implemented.

The second half of the two-hour session was a public comment period. Several cyclists thanked Battle for making a commitment to promoting cycling and protecting cyclists. Their ideas included more bike racks in public places, a revision to the city ordinance that bars cycling on city sidewalks and adoption of a “Complete Streets” policy.

“Complete Streets” was called for by a number of speakers Saturday. Its aim is to make streets safe and accessible for all users, motorists, public transit users,  bicyclists of all abilities and pedestrians. The streets feature sidewalks, medians, comfortable transit stops and bike lanes or wide shoulders.

read more here

Written by Peter in: Events, News |
Dec
07
2009
0

Cargo Bikes: Go Ahead And Bring The Kitchen Sink

by Deena Prichep for NPR

A cyclist and boys ride one of Metrofiets' cargo bikes.

A Million And One Uses: A cyclist and two boys take one of Metrofiets’ cargo bikes for a spin in Portland

December 7, 2009

Picture a vehicle that can carry around your kids and groceries efficiently, and doesn’t burn any fossil fuels. But there’s one drawback: You have to pedal it yourself.

Cargo bicycles are specially designed bikes that can haul several hundred pounds. Long popular in Europe, they’re starting to make their way into the United States.

On a recent afternoon in Portland, Ore., Carie Weisenbach-Folz picked up her two kids, ages 5 and 2, from school. But instead of loading them into the usual minivan, she’s using a cargo bicycle.

Between the handlebars and front wheel, there’s a stylized wheelbarrow-type box, with a sturdy see-through cover. Bicycles like this can cost a lot — over $3,000.

“Random people walk up to me at the grocery store” to ask her how much her bike cost, says Weisenbach-Folz.

“Well, how much is the cost of gas? And how much is insurance? And how much do you pay for a parking spot?”

Weisenbach-Folz bought her bike at Clever Cycles, a shop specializing in utility bikes that can carry a load.

Asked what kind of cargo people are looking to haul, store owner Todd Fahrner said “children, and groceries. Families are probably 70 percent of our customers.”

Most cargo bikes are made overseas, in Europe or China. But in recent years, a few manufacturers have sprung up in the United States — including one in northeast Portland.

Philip Ross and Jamie Nichols started turning out bikes for their company, Metrofiets, about a year ago. They were inspired by European models, but adapted the design to make it easier to tackle the hills of Portland.

“It has a slightly different geometry,” Ross said. “And we were able to shave off about 30 pounds from the frame, without affecting the amount of weight we could carry.”

Their workshop is pretty small, with a waiting list of nearly a year for a bike. And the bulk of Metrofiets’ customers aren’t families — they’re businesses.

“They can absolutely get rid of one of their fleet vehicles, and use one of these bikes, within a certain geographical area around their shop or business,” Ross said.

Metrofiets has built a custom cargo bicycle for a floor refinisher to carry his sander, and another for a brewery to transport their beer kegs. And they’re not the only ones predicting a rise in business cargo biking.

“The urban freight issue is one where I think cycling has a huge role to play, and which at the moment is really relatively untapped,” said Andy Clarke, head of the League of American Bicyclists.

Clarke predicts that bicycle commuting will continue to rise, as well. Today, more than 750,000 Americans bike to work. That may seem like a small number, but it’s an almost 50 percent jump since the 2000 census.

Clarke credits several factors for the rise: higher gas prices; concerns about health and climate change; and bike-friendly initiatives included in recent transportation bills.

“Sometimes we take the love affair with the car, that we think we have, to a bit of an extreme,” Clarke said. “We really have a love affair with the quickest, easiest, most convenient way of getting around.”

But it’s not always so simple, according to Cotten Seiler, who teaches American studies at Dickinson College. Seiler, who wrote a book about American society’s relationship with driving, says that how Americans use cars is about more than just a rational weighing of the pros and cons.

“It’s highly emotional, it’s psychologically charged, and it gives us a sense of identity,” Seiler said. “The utilitarian choice about how to get from point A to point B is often obscured by all of these other emotional and psychological resonances that cars have for us.”

Seiler sees Americans starting to let go of some of these attachments to their cars. He says it can be an uphill battle, especially in cities that don’t have the density or infrastructure to support cycling.

But in bike-friendly cities like Portland, bike builders and riders are hoping that the cargo bicycle can become the new minivan.

For commuters like Carie Weisenbach-Folz, it’s already happened.

Written by Peter in: Inspiration, News |
Nov
30
2009
0

Report an Incident

We have a new tab at the top of the page – “Report an Incident”. It is a place to let us know what types of encounters you may have had on the road. This will assist BASC in helping the city make better informed decisions.

Written by Peter in: News |
Nov
05
2009
0

“Loud” ads on Huntsville city buses will promote cycling safety

From the Huntsville Times

By Steve Doyle

November 05, 2009, 7:12AM

Spring City Cycling Club rideRiders with the Spring City Cycling Club pedal along Dug Hill Road in Huntsville. 

HUNTSVILLE, AL — Bicyclists have rights, too.

That’s the message behind a year-long advertising blitz the city of Huntsville plans to roll out in early 2010.

Largely financed by a $158,000 Alabama Department of Transportation grant, the educational campaign comes on the heels of three cycling fatalities in the city since September 2008.

The City Council will consider the grant agreement at tonight’s meeting, which starts at 6 p.m. in City Hall, 308 Fountain Circle.

Jamie Miernik, who commutes by bike to her job on Redstone Arsenal, said she hopes the ads promote more respect and understanding for cyclists who ride in traffic.

Rolling billboards attached to city buses will try to hammer home the point “that bicycles are vehicles, they’re allowed on the road,” Miernik said Wednesday.

“There’s a percentage of drivers out there,” she said, “that really think bikes are not safe to be on the road with them.”

James Moore, a senior planner with the city, said the ads need to be compelling enough that drivers can’t ignore them.

“I’m hoping to make the buses loud, so to speak, so that it generates some interest,” he said Wednesday. “It’s trying to bring awareness and wake the drivers up.”

Moore and Miernik both serve on an advisory committee that is working to make Huntsville a more bike-friendly town. Over the past year, the city has installed dozens of “Share the Road” signs and indicated a willingness to build wider streets with shoulders that are safer for riding.

Also, more than 400 Huntsville police officers have taken a refresher course on bicycle laws.

City Administrator Rex Reynolds, a former police chief, said that was done because an officer wrongly used his vehicle’s loudspeaker to order a group of cyclists from the road onto the sidewalk.

Cyclists are prohibited from riding on sidewalks in Alabama.

“That was a reality check for us,” Reynolds said Wednesday. “We needed to go back and make sure our officers are aware of the bicycle laws.”

Mayor Tommy Battle made cycling safety a priority following the death of UAH student Sarah Chapman, who was struck by a sport-utility vehicle while riding near campus on Technology Drive last fall. The driver was never charged.

Another local bicyclist, 49-year-old Henry James Luhana, was found dead near Oakwood Avenue late last month.

Police first described it as a hit-and-run but now say they won’t know for sure until an autopsy is completed.

The advertising campaign will start and end with a survey to gauge what people think about bicycles on the road. Miernik said she hopes drivers’ attitudes toward cyclists are much better by the end of 2010.

“Bikes have a right to be there,” she said. “They’re not just in the way.”

http://blog.al.com/breaking/2009/11/loud_ads_on_huntsville_city_bu.html

Written by Peter in: Events, News |
Nov
05
2009
0

C.A.R.S. (Citizens Advocating Rider Safety) Grant on City Council Meeting Agenda for 05-November, 2009

Dear all,

The resolution for a Transportation Enhancement Project (Alabama Dept of Transportation) and the City of Huntsville Bicycle/Pedestrian Education: C.A.R.S. (Citizens Advocating Rider Safety) Grant is on the agenda for tomorrow’s city council meeting.

Please come out and show support for this major motorist/cyclist education grant!  The meeting is at 6:00 pm, City Council Chambers, 1st floor, Municipal Building, 308 Fountain Circle.

Ride your bike to the meeting if you can.

Written by Peter in: Events, News |
Oct
09
2009
0

Why we have a bicycle committee: Bicyclists on the road treated no better than deer

From the San Antonio Express-News

By Metro Columnist Veronica Flores

What’s the point in having laws if there’s no accountability?

It’s just one of many questions that San Antonio-area bicyclists are asking after the deaths last week of Gregory and Alexandra Bruehler. The couple were on their tandem bicycle, riding on the shoulder of Highway 16 north of Helotes, when a truck struck them from behind. The Bruehlers left a 7-year-old daughter.

 

Tom Reel/Express-News
Seven-year-old Kylie Bruehler attends a memorial service for her parents Tuesday.

The bicyclists’ ire has several targets – reckless drivers and law enforcement’s inconsistent handling of auto-bike accidents, for instance. And then there’s Gov. Rick Perry, who in June vetoed legislation that would have required motorists to give bicyclists and other “vulnerable road users” a clearance of at least 3 feet when passing on most highways.

For eight years, bicycling advocates worked to get such legislation passed, changing the proposal as necessary to gain widespread support. So sure were they of the bill’s success in this legislative session – it passed unanimously in the House and 25-6 in the Senate – they asked the governor’s office for a public signing ceremony in hopes of raising awareness of the new law.

But the signing ceremony and the law were never to be. In vetoing the bill, Perry cited penalties that he said already exist when a motorist is at fault for causing a collision, “whether it is against a ‘vulnerable user’ or not.”

That’s a politically convenient interpretation.

The state transportation code – a morass of often-broad laws – governs how authorized vehicles and pedestrians use our roads. The code establishes that bicyclists are bound by the same laws that apply to motorists. They must obey stop signs and traffic signals – though, critics point out that many don’t – they must signal before they turn and, in general, must follow the rules of the road.

The same code includes provisions for safe passing of slower-moving vehicles. Bicycling advocates sought to give the law a tighter focus and impose penalties – a Class B misdemeanor – on those who violate it. Instead, Perry’s veto left the same loose guidelines in place.

The definition of a “safe” passing distance remains in the eye of the beholder. To one driver, giving another vehicle or a vulnerable road user 6 inches of clearance might seem, ahem, safe. To another, it might be 3 feet.

It’s foolhardy to believe – and for the governor to claim – that this vague law provides sufficient protection for anyone who isn’t riding in a 3,000-pound metal box.

Robin Stallings, executive director of BikeTexas, the educational arm of the Texas Bicycle Coalition, notes the prevailing sentiment among the many prosecutors and judges he’s consulted.

“If we can’t win, we’re not going to try to prosecute. And if we’re not going to prosecute, police officers aren’t going to write the tickets.

“They don’t do it just to have busywork,” Stallings said. “They indict to convict.”

While there was no guarantee that drivers’ behavior would change, the legislation last spring offered some hope that motorists would be more thoughtful about how they behave when driving around bicyclists, joggers, construction workers, stranded motorists, tow-truck operators and others who would have fit the “vulnerable road user” definition under SB 488.

By many accounts, the awareness is sorely needed. Express-News Austin bureau reporter Gary Scharrer previously reported that, of 1,000 Texans who are killed each year in highway crashes involving motorists and pedestrians, cyclists and motorcyclists, about 400 are pedestrians and about 50 are cyclists, with a peak of 53 deaths last year.

In San Antonio this year, the Bruehlers’ deaths mark the second and third auto-bike fatalities.

Last month, former House Speaker Pete Laney’s brother-in-law died after he was hit by a vehicle while he rode a bike on a service road of Interstate 20 west of Fort Worth. As with the Bruehlers, a motorist “veered into” Larry McQuien’s path, according to published reports.

BikeTexas, meanwhile, has gathered more than 5,000 signatures in a show of protest against Perry’s veto. Alex Bruehler was among those who signed the petition.

Some bicycling enthusiasts darkly joke that, when it comes to how bicyclists are treated on the road, they may as well be deer. But deer don’t leave little girls as orphans.

Written by Peter in: News |
Oct
05
2009
0

Community Bike Day big hit with kids, volunteers

Community Bike Day

From the Huntsville Times

By Yvonne T. Betowt

October 05, 2009, 6:45AM

HUNTSVILLE, AL — Aubrey Langford, 11, was busy tearing strips of yellow, green and purple duct tape and putting them on her bicycle handlebars and seat while Leela Pahl was wrapping the spokes with tin foil.

The two had teamed up Sunday on the first Community Bike Day, which drew some 80 participants and 17 volunteers to the Seminole Boys and Girls Club on Clinton Avenue.

“It’s fun,” said Aubrey, a sixth grader at Westlawn. She also decorated her helmet to match her bike.
It was difficult to tell who was having more fun – the kids or volunteers such as Pahl, who pedals to work each day at Alabama A&M University.

“This is a great neighborhood for riding bikes and the kids are really excited,” said Pahl, who also rides each Sunday with other area cyclists for pleasure and exercise. “What better thing to do than to help kids with their bikes? It’s a perfect fit for the bikers.”

Boys and Girls Club Director Starrett Archie was ecstatic over the turnout, especially with threatening skies. But the rain held off long enough for the kids to get old broken bikes repaired and newer ones souped up.

“The No. 1 reason we wanted to do this was because childhood obesity is so rampant and we need to get kids more active,” he said.

Archie, 34, rides his bike to work to set a good example for the children. He said the children have been “enthusiastic” and many invited friends who do not usually attend the Boys and Girls Club events.
But even more important than bringing friends, said Archie, is bringing their parents and getting them more involved in their activities.

Olivia Jefferson, was beaming while watching her 9-year-old son, Jaren Jefferson, with the bicycle he had been given.
“He had a bike, but the tube was busted,” said Jefferson. “It’s a real good thing, them coming out to help the children. I’m very thankful they would take up their time to do this.”

For one volunteer, it was not just about helping the kids with their bikes, but teaching them how to live a greener lifestyle.
“A lot of us ride through here and see the kids on bikes and we want to support them,” said Jim Garvin, a native New Yorker who moved to Huntsville three years ago. “Kids should be able to ride their bikes to school. It’s a quality of life issue.”
Bikes of all shapes and sizes, including a bicycle-built-for-two, a double-decker and one which uses solar power, were scattered in the parking lot, along with bent wheels, old inner tubes, loose chains and all types of tools to make repairs.
DeMarco Thompson, a seventh grader at Chapman Middle School, proudly showed off the like-new Nitro 26 green bike he had just received.

He said he was “grateful” for his new bike, but would be thankful for what everyone is doing to help out his community even if he hadn’t gotten the new wheels.

Archie and the volunteers hope to make Community Bike Day a regular event and to expand it to other Boys and Girls Clubs throughout the city.

Written by Peter in: News |
Sep
28
2009
2

Green U: A very wet day, but BASC was there.

What a WET day!  The rain was relentless.  Water came down in buckets, but people still came to Green U.  Inspite of the downpour, we had a fairly good turnout.  I’m just glad we were in a tent with sides on it.  We shared tables with Alabike and SCCC.  We had fliers for bicycle awareness and education.  And, we had the map!  Not just the one on the easels, but multiple copies of an actual bona-fide published map on quality paper, folded and ready for anyone to pick up and use.  Below are pictures of the event.

Approaching out tent

Sharon at Table

BASC and Map

Mayor Battle at our Table

Mayor Battle Generating Power

Potential Commuter Looking at Map

People Learning More

Our Newly Published Map!

New Map Users

Finding that Route

Marjorie & Potential Communter

Hugging a Tree

Written by Peter in: News | Tags:
Sep
27
2009
0

Columbia, Mo., is spending millions to promote cycling.

REINVENTING AMERICA

A Free-Wheeling City

by Bill Donahue
published: 09/27/2009
Darwin Hindman, 76, Mayor of Columbia, Mo.

For a bicyclist, Darwin Hindman is rather nattily attired, wearing a crisp tweed blazer and an orange silk tie as he pilots his ancient mountain bike through the center of Columbia, Missouri. Hindman, 76, (pictured) is this Midwestern town’s mayor and a survivor of both esophageal and prostate cancer. As he glides along, coattails flying, he is savoring the streets of Columbia, which he’s transforming into one of the nation’s premier cycling cities.

“Here outside this café is a huge corral of racks for locking your bike,” Hindman says, riding along happily. “And here, we’ve painted a bike lane. We want bicyclists to feel as happy as larks out in the road.”

Until recently, Columbia (pop. 100,733) was, like most American cities, designed almost exclusively for automobile transit, offering up a host of four-lane mini-highways over which motorists could zoom between parking lots. For Hindman, a retired lawyer, the situation was all wrong. “If we depend too much on cars, then we increase our reliance on foreign oil, childhood obesity goes up, and life just isn’t as much fun,” he says.

Across the country, the number of bicyclists has exploded. Between 2003 and 2007, the number of American bike commuters increased 38%. Yet many of these riders are forced onto dangerously crowded streets and roads designed for motorists, not bicyclists. In fact, in 2007, 698 cyclists nationwide were killed and more than 44,000 were injured in collisions with motor vehicles.

The Federal Highway Administration has launched a pilot program with an aim to make roads safer and more enjoyable. More than $90 million has been allocated to four communities—Columbia, Minneapolis, Sheboygan County, Wis., and Marin County, Calif. Each will receive about $22.5 million to make them more bicycle- and pedestrian-friendly.

With the support of Sen. Christopher S. Bond (R., Mo.), who helped launch the program, Hindman recently ordered concrete bike paths alongside Columbia’s streets, rejiggered major intersections for bike safety, and turned existing residential streets into “bike boulevards” with painted bike lanes and obstacles to slow down cars.

Other cities are enacting their own changes. New York City just spent three years building 200 miles of bike lanes. Louisville, Ky., lured more than 10,000 cyclists to a Mayor’s Memorial Day Hike & Bike Ride. And tiny Carmel, Ind., identified a 100-mile network, an “Access Bikeway,” that consists of existing streets on which cyclists can safely ride.

Congress is watching the Federal Highway Administration’s pilot program closely. Rep. Jim Oberstar (D., Minn.) is now pushing for the passage of a new transportation bill that reportedly could devote up to $1 billion a year to facilitate biking and walking across the country. But not everyone is happy about the new embrace of cycling. Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.) has decried “pet projects like walkways and bicycle paths,” saying they come “at the expense of our nation’s roads and bridges.”

While it may be too soon to gauge the success of early efforts, bicyclists in Portland, Ore., are setting the pace. Since 1992, the city has spent almost $60 million—or roughly the cost of building one mile of an urban highway—to enhance its cycling infrastructure. The number of riders flowing across the city’s bridges has more than quadrupled, and on one bridge last year, more than 20% of all trips were made by bicycle. Portland, meanwhile, has become one of the few U.S. cities to decrease its greenhouse-gas emissions below 1990 levels.

Columbia is still far from equaling Portland’s gold standard, but Mia Birk, once Bicycle Program Manager for Portland and now a principal in a transit-planning firm there, notes: “There’s no overnight magic wand you can wave. It takes a generation to change an ingrained habit like driving, but Columbia is on its way.” From 2007 to 2008, the number of cyclists riding midweek increased by 71%. There are now about 10,000 people riding Columbia’s streets.

Among the new converts is Bonnie Trickey, a 66-year-old mortgage broker who had scarcely mounted a bike in three decades—and was afraid to brave Columbia’s streets. Trickey took a city-sponsored cycling-safety class and now rides through Columbia’s hillier neighborhoods for an hour most mornings. Likewise, Alvin Sweezer, 40, a school custodian, commutes 15 miles each way from his home. Sweezer’s journey begins at 5 a.m., in darkness, and wends up a couple of steep hills and over a potholed country bridge before passing a yard full of dogs who invariably greet him with bloodcurdling growls. Still, he says, “Even if it snows, I ride in. They plow the roads pretty good around here.”

But Columbia’s most stalwart cyclist is probably the mayor. Hindman rides about 60 miles each week—to the grocery store, to meetings, and to the dog park, hauling his faithful mutt, Loki, in a bike trailer.

Hindman’s next goal is to connect every neighborhood to a bike path, in the hope that he can continue to wean citizens from auto-dependence. “If we could get people to use their bikes or walk on 20% of their short trips, I’d be delighted,” he says.

Meanwhile, the mayor will keep pedaling. “Every ride is different,” he says. “Every ride is a new adventure.”

OTHER BIKE-FRIENDLY CITIES
Besides Columbia, Mo., and Portland, Ore., many other cities are promoting bicycling. Some innovative plans:

• Boulder, Colo.
At least 95% of major roads have bike lanes or trails. In 2005, the city was among the first to launch a Safe Routes to School program to encourage kids to walk and bike to school.

• Tucson, Ariz.
All new street construction is required to include bike lanes. The city created a “Share the Road” safety guide for bicyclists and motorists.

• Davis, Calif.
One of the first cities to incorporate bicycling into its transportation infrastructure, the university town of 60,000 has more bikes than cars.

Previous1 of 1 Next
Written by Peter in: Inspiration, News | Tags: , , , , ,

Powered by WordPress. Theme: TheBuckmaker. Kreditkarte, Tirol