Showing posts with label bike path. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bike path. Show all posts

02 August 2023

A Path To Inclusion And Integration

An industry is booming. So it needs workers, especially those with the specific skills that industry requires.

There is a group of people who need jobs.

The solution seems obvious: Train the people and steer them toward those jobs.

An organization in said industry is doing exactly that for a particular group of people.

Bike New York is best known for running the Five Boro Bike Tour. It’s also become known for its programs that teach people how to ride. Bike New York CEO Ken Posziba, who calls the Tour “the world’s most inclusive bike ride,” explains that those classes—and ones aimed at training formerly-incarcerated people as bike mechanics—as extensions of that inclusivity.

The five-week training program not only trains the former inmates how to fix bikes and e-bikes.  It also makes them part of the mechanics’ union  and sets them up with job interviews—which, for them, is often the most difficult part of integrating or re-integrating into the job market and society in general.




This program, called Bike Path, is an example of how cycling can be not only inclusive, but also “transformative,” as Posziba says:  Bicycling can transform our environment just as getting the skills and professional (and personal) connections that lead to employment can transform someone’s life. Just ask Vincent Casiano, who got a job with Citibike upon completing the course.

26 January 2013

From Brazil To Florida: Fragmentos do Cotidiano

Today I'm going to plug another blog I enjoy:  Fragmentos do Cotidiano.  It's a cyclists' blog, but it's also interesting for the photographs and stories of daily life in Brazil.  It's in Portuguese, which I can more or less understand because I can read Spanish and French.  But even if you can't do that, the photos are worth looking at.

Here's one that reminded me of cycling in Florida:


From Fragmentos do Cotidiano




I couldn't get over how much the layout of that bike lane, and that intersection, reminds me of the ones nearest my parents' house.  The trees and sky also look like what I often see when I'm in the Sunshine State.

And the light is very much like what I'd see on a partly cloudy-to-overcast day when I rode down Palm Coast Parkway to the bridge for US A-1A.  Some things are universal, I guess.