02 May 2025

A Republican Is A Republican

 Lest you think only the Republicans closest to Trump,’in the reddest states, are hostile to cycling, look at the Republican caucus in Oregon’s House of Representatives.

They comprise 24 members of the 60-person chamber.  Although they are in a state that includes Portland—nicknamed “Bicycle City”— and where one out of every ten driving-age citizens doesn’t have a license, they want to slash funds for mass transportation and bicycle infrastructure. Moreover, they want to eliminate sales tax for new car buyers but not for bike, or even eBike, customers.


Oregon’s House Republicans 


House Republicans say that their actions are in keeping with the Oregon Department of Transportation’s mission of  “maintaining safe and reliable roads and bridges.” But, as Jonathan Maus, the editor of Bike Portland notes, they seem to believe that only cars and trucks belong on those roads and bridges, and cyclists and pedestrians don’t have a right to use them safely.


01 May 2025

Help!

Today marks the beginning of International Bicycle Month, which includes "Bike to Work Days" and other commemorations across the globe.

Today also happens to be May Day.  On one hand, it's a mid-Spring festival with roots in ancient agricultural traditions. On the other, it's a celebration of workers' rights known as International Workers Day.

It's terribly ironic that so many workers have chosen, not only in the United States, leaders that are working, covertly or not, to destroy the very rights that their parents and grandparents fought so hard to win.  The most insidious erosion of their interests come from politicians--like the Fake Tan Fuhrer--who make vague promises that policies like tariffs will bring jobs back to their home countries.  Shuttered textile, steel and auto--and bicycle--plants that have been shuttered won't suddenly open and start churning out their wares--if indeed those plants are still standing.  New, more automated, factories will not provide nearly as many jobs.  And because more people will be competing for fewer jobs, those positions won't pay as well.  Worse yet, those new facilities are likely to be built in "right to work" (Don't you love the Orwellian doublespeak?) where unions are weak or non-existent.  Thus, laborers will have fewer benefits and little or no redress if they're hurt or incapacitated as a result of their work.





All of that got me to thinking about how "May Day!" came to be a call of distress on a plane or ship.  Why "May Day?"  Well, when goods and people crossed oceans on ships, and in the early days of aviation, French was the lingua franca.  "M'aider!" is "Help Me!" in that language.  To an anglophone, it sounds like "May Day!"  

(The Beatles have long been popular in France--even if a certain John Lennon song is all but untranslatable.)

No matter how hard they work, workers need help.  So do we, if we want safer streets--and a more welcoming environment overall--for cycling.

30 April 2025

Tariffs=Pandemic 2.0? (For Cycling)

Last night, Donald Trump held a rally celebrating his first 100 days in office.  As he is wont to do, he made exaggerated or simply false claims about the positive effects of his actions (or inactions) during that time.

Of course, since he was in Warren County, Michigan--literally next door to the automotive industry capital--he talked up the tariffs he's imposed.  All along, he's claimed they would bring manufacturing back to the US.  During his speech, he defended his steep tariffs on cars and auto parts--just hours after the White House announced it was reducing them.

A bicycle company might provide one of the best examples of why he backpedaled (this will seem like a bad pun in a moment) on his earlier actions.  Most of you, I imagine, are not riding Kent bicycles, but you may have had--or your kid might be riding--one.  You may have assumed, as I did, that they are made in China or some other low-wage country.

In 2014, however, the Bicycle Company of America--Kent's parent, which has also made and sold bicycles under the BCA brand--has produced bikes in its Manning, South Carolina facility.  Notice that I used the word "produced:"  Although the machines produced in Manning bear "Made in USA" labels ("with domestic and imported parts" appears in smaller type), almost everything on the bikes--including the frames--comes from someplace else.  For example, the rims, hubs and spokes come from Asia but are assembled into wheels in the South Carolina plant.  And because the headsets and crank bearing races are pressed into the frames--and those frames are painted--in the same facility, they qualify for the label.





That scenario puts Kent and other bicycles made by BCA in a bind:  They have to pay higher prices for all of those parts, but they can't pass those costs on to customers unless bike prices are increased outright to "levels consumers may not want to pay" said Kent chairman Arnold Kamler. 

According to Kamler, the tariffs and duties total around 175 percent of pre-tariff prices.  As a result, he said, the company stopped importing parts--and bicycles--from China on 18 April.  Unless those tariffs are reduced, as they were for auto parts, in the next 30 days, Kamler says "we will need to suspend production later this year."

Since very few bicycle frames--save for custom and extremely high-end models--and virtually no parts--save for small-batch varieties of hubs, bottom brackets, headsets and pedals from the likes of Phil Wood, Chris King, White Industries and other small companies--are made in the US, it's easy to imagine that shops, distributors and online retailers could experience a run on current inventories.  And, when those are exhausted, bikes, parts and accessories could become very difficult to find and expensive.  In other words, we might see a re-run of what the cycling world experienced during the worst days of the COVID pandemic in 2020-21.