"Riding a bicycle or crossing a street shouldn't require bravery."
I'm told that your insurance premiums increase automatically if you try to do either on Queens Boulevard. But the words that opened this post weren't uttered by a fellow resident of my NYC borough.
That person also said he wants to see a network of cycle and walking routes "a 12-year-old would want to use".
He explained "people do the easiest thing", so whatever is created to encourage cycling and walking must be "easy, attractive and safe--all three, in that order". Otherwise, it will be all but impossible to entice drivers in his city--where 30 percent of all car trips are less than one kilometer in length--to trade four wheels for two wheels or feet.
Our cycling/pedestrian advocate isn't trying to turn his city into Portland. Rather, he wants to alleviate its traffic problems, and to reduce levels of air pollution and obesity--which, he wisely points out, will save far greater amounts of money than would be initially spent on a practical, safe network of bicycle and pedestrian lanes.
That last argument could gain more traction in his country, which has a single-payer (i.e., taxpayer-funded) system of health care, than in the US or other nations with profit-driven health care systems.
You might have guessed by now that the fellow is on the other side of the Atlantic. Right you are: He is British, and the city he's talking about is his home town of Manchester.
That fellow is Greater Manchester's Cycling and Walking Commissioner and a British Cycling policy advisor. But you probably know him better for his exploits while pedaling on a world stage.
I am talking about none other than an Olympic Gold Medalist,erstwhile Hour Record holder and winner of six Tour de France stages: Chris Boardman.
If he doesn't think riding a bicycle or crossing a street should require bravery, why should you--or anyone else?
I'm told that your insurance premiums increase automatically if you try to do either on Queens Boulevard. But the words that opened this post weren't uttered by a fellow resident of my NYC borough.
That person also said he wants to see a network of cycle and walking routes "a 12-year-old would want to use".
He explained "people do the easiest thing", so whatever is created to encourage cycling and walking must be "easy, attractive and safe--all three, in that order". Otherwise, it will be all but impossible to entice drivers in his city--where 30 percent of all car trips are less than one kilometer in length--to trade four wheels for two wheels or feet.
Our cycling/pedestrian advocate isn't trying to turn his city into Portland. Rather, he wants to alleviate its traffic problems, and to reduce levels of air pollution and obesity--which, he wisely points out, will save far greater amounts of money than would be initially spent on a practical, safe network of bicycle and pedestrian lanes.
That last argument could gain more traction in his country, which has a single-payer (i.e., taxpayer-funded) system of health care, than in the US or other nations with profit-driven health care systems.
You might have guessed by now that the fellow is on the other side of the Atlantic. Right you are: He is British, and the city he's talking about is his home town of Manchester.
That fellow is Greater Manchester's Cycling and Walking Commissioner and a British Cycling policy advisor. But you probably know him better for his exploits while pedaling on a world stage.
I am talking about none other than an Olympic Gold Medalist,erstwhile Hour Record holder and winner of six Tour de France stages: Chris Boardman.
If he doesn't think riding a bicycle or crossing a street should require bravery, why should you--or anyone else?