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United States Government Transportation

After Spike In Deaths, New York To Get 250 Miles of Protected Bike Lanes 201

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The New York Times: Riding a bicycle in New York City is often a harrowing journey across a patchwork of bike lanes that leave cyclists vulnerable to cars. The dangers came into focus this year after 25 cyclists were killed on city streets -- the highest toll in two decades. Now Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council have agreed on a $1.7 billion plan that would sharply expand the number of protected bike lanes as part of a sweeping effort to transform the city's streetscape and make it less perilous for bikers. Its chief proponent, Corey Johnson, the City Council speaker, calls it nothing less than an effort to "break the car culture.'' Such ambitions show how far New York has come since around 2007 when the city, under Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, started aggressively taking away space for cars by rolling out bike lanes and pedestrian plazas.

Under pressure from the City Council, the city would be required to build 250 miles of protected bike lanes in the coming years, along with a dizzying list of other street upgrades that safety advocates have long called for. The city now has about 1,250 miles of bike lanes, including 126 miles on city streets that are protected, meaning that a barrier separates the lanes from vehicles. The bill calls for the Transportation Department to release a plan every five years to make streets safer and to prioritize public transit, starting in December 2021. The city must hit targets every year, including building 150 miles of bus lanes that are physically separated from other traffic lanes or monitored by cameras over five years.
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After Spike In Deaths, New York To Get 250 Miles of Protected Bike Lanes

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  • Good (Score:2, Insightful)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

    Buses and bikes have in common that mixing them with other traffic causes problems. I think adding buses is a sorry substitute for improving the rail systems, but more public transit is needed, and they clearly have no handle on the rail problems.

    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      In London bus lanes are a good working solution, bicycles and sometimes motorbikes and sometimes taxis are allowed in the bus lanes. Often the lanes are not 24/7 but only during rush hour.

      What problem do bikes cause? Less Traffic? Faster journey times? Or is it that you don't think people shouldn't have to pay proper attention to where they are driving? Same for buses, a bus takes up much less space than 90 cars.

      • by robsku ( 1381635 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {ekusiadekusbor}> on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @07:40AM (#59361320) Homepage

        He didn't say that bikes cause problems. He said mixing them with other traffic creates problems - the other traffic is just as much part of the equation, and as a daily bicycle user I tend to agree. Bikes among cars are a recipe for problems, where separate bike-lanes are where I feel safer cycling and car drivers feel more at ease too. I feel less safe when cycling among cars, and it's not because I don't trust most of the drivers in our country to pay proper attention on the road. But accidents do happen and bicycle has a bag-of-dicks chance against a car.

        I'm not sure what drinkypoos point was exactly, but I didn't think of it as any kind of attack against biking. I might be wrong though, idk.

        • Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)

          by MrL0G1C ( 867445 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @08:30AM (#59361426) Journal

          It often comes down to the modal share, I don't like cycling around so much on the suburban roads nearby where not many people cycle, even a 1st class segregated cycle lane doesn't keep you safe from idiots that think they have priority simply because there are in a motor vehicle. Here the drivers often will cut you up to turn in to a side road regardless of road markings explicitly showing the priority.

          In central London OTOH, drivers are far more aware because there are so many more people cycling around all day and the drivers on the roads in central London tend to be delivery / taxi / bus etc - drivers who are working and doing a lot more miles and have a lot more experience.

          From what I've seen in media / on forums, UK is middling, US, Aus are bad, Continental Europe is pretty good with regards to driver and authority attitudes to wards cyclists. In bad countries when a cyclist gets hurt, they get blamed, in good countries the driver and infrastructure are more likely to get the blame. Unfortunately the UK is now in retrograde, more pedestrians and cyclists are getting hurt and more people are driving around in SUVs, climate warming, what climate warming? Ubiquitous smart phone usage likely isn't helping accident rates either.

      • Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Jhon ( 241832 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @10:30AM (#59361720) Homepage Journal

        "What problem do bikes cause? Less Traffic? Faster journey times? Or is it that you don't think people shouldn't have to pay proper attention to where they are driving? Same for buses, a bus takes up much less space than 90 cars."

        Let me address bike LANES in my area (Los Angeles)

        o Shorter (2-3 car lengths) on right turns vs. rush hour stretches of more than a half block. Modest traffic in AM and PM will turn a 2 lane road in to an effective 1 lane road with all the right-hand turns dramaitcally increasing traffic -- not "less traffic". City touts "we didn't remove any lanes!" while ignoring the impact the new layout.

        o LONGER journey times, not shorter (see above)
        o Spill over traffic in to resendital streets as folks attempt to avoid the high traffic corridors dramatically impacted by bike lanes.
        o increase deaths -- yes. LA has managed to spend hundreds of millions of dollars with vision zero to ELIMINATE road deaths and INCREASE those deaths dramatically.

        Bike lanes may make sense for some cities and in some areas for specific purposes -- but in a city like LA -- it's not DESIGNED for high, modest or even LOW bike commutes. The average commute to work in LA is about 10 miles -- and in LA there's very few distances where you dont end up hitting a mountain pass in about 10 miles. My own is 35 miles one way. It used to be 6 (and I biked to work most of the time). Far too many have long car commutes to work and we're still a LONG way away from the promise of "telecommuting".

        With the exception of bike lanes around major park areas, bike lanes are very VERY under utilized where they are installed and have caused increases in traffic. As someone who used to bike to work -- the safest route for me was to avoid high traffic corridors and bike through side streets only crossing major streets when necessary. THATS where bike lanes should go -- at least in LA. But good luck -- because one necessarily needs to remove at least 1 parking lane for bikes.

        All that said, if planned better -- like from the core of the city OUT it could be planned out better over time rather than the "blind folded dart board" method my town appears to be using.

        • Your post shows an incredible lack of historical knowledge.

          LA was designed as a city with huge light rail (Trolley) network. They were called street cars, and were incredible. It was incredibly successful, having almost a monopoly on inner city travel, with few if any buses or cars.

          GM, Firestone Tires, Standard Oil of California and others actively worked to destroy this system. They were caught, arrested and convicted of monopoly attempts on 'supply', but not convicted on attempts to monopolize control.

  • Ditto (Score:3, Insightful)

    by RussellTheMuscle ( 2783037 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @11:57PM (#59360762)
    Having biked, driven, and ridden busses and rail in SF, the least happy way to get to work was in my car. If more would get into the habit of having a driver while they read a good book, or talk to a neighbor, the world would be a better place. I also wonder how much of a mortality effect Uber/Lyft have created?
    • >> Having (used transportation) in SF

      SF is like the suburbs compared to NYC traffic. I happily drive through downtown SF in my rented SUV when I visit with my family but wouldn't dream of trying to drive through Manhattan.
    • I've done all those things too, and driving was by far my favorite. But it's been almost two decades since I lived there. I gave it up when my car was stolen from under my open window while I slept. I'm not fighting that kind of competence in crime.

      I haven't seen any signs that traffic has gotten amazingly worse, though, since there's still such a housing shortage. It's hard to move more people into the city where they can become a problem.

      I lived in bernal heights and worked in potrero hill, so maybe that'

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @01:13AM (#59360886) Journal

    I can't count the number of times I've watched cyclists plainly ignore traffic signs or obligations to yield to pedestrians at controlled intersections or the like. As much as I think this is great for reducing the number of cars that need to on the road, I feel like the last thing that the city will need is more cyclists who don't actually have a clue about how to behave on public roads.

    Require cyclists on public roads to get a license to do so, which proves they have at least passed a basic competency course for respectable road safety.

    • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @01:25AM (#59360900) Homepage
      I can't count the times I've seen drivers break the rules, running red lights, parking and driving in bike lanes, not yielding to pedestrians in crosswalks. The difference in pedestrians have sidewalks. Bikers are forced to share the road with cars, which oftentimes don't appreciate the feeling of vulnerability bikers have as drivers squeeze by 10 inches or less away from them. Protected lanes will help dramatically, especially if they are long routes so that bikers can avoid narrow side streets.
      • "the feeling of vulnerability bikers have as drivers squeeze by 10 inches or less away from them"

        Is it not illegal to "share the lane" as it were? It most certainly is here.

        • Sharing the lane is fine, so long as there's enough room for the motorist and the cyclist with 0.9 m or 36 inches of space between them. But often it becomes more difficult to fit motorist, 0.9 m, cyclist, 0.9 m on the other side, and a parallel-parked vehicle on one side of the street.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        Oh, I fully agree that dedicated lanes are ideal.

        But I wish to hell that some sort of course was still required for people to go out on a public road, because I'm 90% sure that the idiots I will spot or that nearly plow right through me when I'm legally crossing at a crosswalk don't have a friggen clue

        • by robsku ( 1381635 )

          Oh, I fully agree that dedicated lanes are ideal.

          But I wish to hell that some sort of course was still required for people to go out on a public road, because I'm 90% sure that the idiots I will spot or that nearly plow right through me when I'm legally crossing at a crosswalk don't have a friggen clue

          That's actually quite reasonable suggestion - as long as it's not turned into an overpriced driving school money making scheme. I think that passing a simple (and free) course about good road behaviour and traffic laws would be ideal.

    • I can't count the number of times I've watched cyclists plainly ignore traffic signs

      I'm willing to bet you never even bothered to start counting the number of times cars do all the things you mentioned because you knew it would be futile from the onset, but thanks for trying with the cyclists.

  • Boring (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jodka ( 520060 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @01:16AM (#59360890)

    from the /. summary:

    ...Bill de Blasio and the City Council have agreed on a $1.7 billion plan...

    When you create corridors for bikers you leave less space for cars, creating traffic congestion. Spending money does not solve the fundamental problem that there is too much traffic and not enough space. It's closed-sum because you can't move skyscrapers.

    Unless...

    Elon Musk estimates [citylab.com] the price of Boring Company tunnels at $10 million / mile. So for $1.7 billion, you he could build 170 miles of tunnels. For reference, Manhattan is 13.4 miles long.

    It is not necessarily the bikers who should be shunted underground, tunnels could relieve above-ground traffic in any form, making space for bikers.

    • by Njovich ( 553857 )

      Simple, just add very expensive toll booths to reduce congestion, increase use of the bike lanes, and pay for the project. Wish I was joking.

    • by mvdwege ( 243851 )

      too much traffic and not enough space.

      Well, obviously, the ones taking up the most space should be penalised for it. That's cars, in case you hadn't noticed. In both absolute numbers, and space per passenger.

      Also, the hard rule: the more infrastructure you create for cars, the more people will drive. This is not contestable. So it is time the drivers start sacrificing; the rest of us have been paying for them for 75 years, and now the bill is due.

      • by robsku ( 1381635 )

        too much traffic and not enough space.

        Well, obviously, the ones taking up the most space should be penalised for it. That's cars, in case you hadn't noticed. In both absolute numbers, and space per passenger.

        Excellent point.

        Also, the hard rule: the more infrastructure you create for cars, the more people will drive. This is not contestable. So it is time the drivers start sacrificing; the rest of us have been paying for them for 75 years, and now the bill is due.

        Indeed.

    • that 10 million a mile was for a tunnel only 12 foot across. tunnels that small are not going to have much effect on congestion.
    • When you create corridors for bikers you leave less space for cars, creating traffic congestion.

      I hate traffic congestion. If traffic gets any worse I may start cycling to work.

    • It's a good point, but IMO the wrong direction.
      For probably less money, less risk, and ultimately a nicer NY they could go UP.
      cf https://www.thehighline.org/ [thehighline.org]

      Minneapolis and St Paul (for weather reasons 8 months of the year) are entirely connected at the first+ level above ground (1st floor for Euros, 2nd floor in US parlance) by skyways. NY has a milder climate so using the principle (and hell, probably some of the existing foundations still buried in the pavement) they could build some significant park/bi

    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      So tunnel under NYC??? They already did that. You know the subway system?
  • by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @02:06AM (#59360948)

    Every one of these articles that talks about safer cycling devolves into people with cars discussing why its OK to be an asshole to people on bikes. I just don't get it. If a bike hits your car, the biker gets hurt. If a car hits a biker, the biker gets hurt.

    The entire idea that cars should "own the road" needs to go. It's time to give the streets back to people.

    --
    Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience. - Mark Twain

    • by robsku ( 1381635 )

      It's about selfish car owners being selfish, and literally nothing else. Even with projects that help bicycles and don't take anything away from cars they raise their voice, because it seems that they believe that any increase in cycling means less cars, and less cars makes them afraid that bikers are gonna take their cars away - so in their mind they already have justification to be total assholes to cyclists, but in the internet they need more than their own selfishness to justify their thinking, and that

    • It's time to give the streets back to people.

      There are more people in cars on the road than people on bikes.

    • "The entire idea that cars should "own the road" needs to go. It's time to give the streets back to people."

      You have to offer people in cars a reasonable alternative. Neither bicycles nor chevrolegs are adequate automobile substitutes. And for many, nor is any form of mass transit. We built this nation (as we know it today) around the car, and we'll have to rebuild it once more if we want to end the dominance of the automobile. Those roads were literally built for cars.

      "Every one of these articles that talk

  • NYC is 50 times bigger (population-wise) than the town where I live.
    And even with this expansion they'll still only have about 5 times as many miles of bike lanes.

    I should probably check area too: (NYC is between 5 and 6 times bigger) Okay, by that comparison I guess they're not much different.

    The comparison is ridiculous anyway.and I didn't even consider the surrounding area.

  • by dasunt ( 249686 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @02:12AM (#59360956)

    Protected bike lanes, if done correctly, can probably improve safety.

    But around here, we have a lot of poorly designed protected bike lanes.

    For example, how many drivers look behind them when making a left hand turn? Not many. Yet we have designed two-way bike protected bike lanes that run along one side of the road, meaning that every left hand car driver is going to cross the path of a bike coming from behind them. Or we put a two-way offstreet bike lane where a sidewalk would normally go, which leads to the same problem. Not a smart design.

    We also put protected bike lanes between the curb and the line of parked cars. This leads to a situation where turning vehicles have to be looking for bicyclists behind parked vehicles.

    Quite frankly, any bike infrastructure that puts bicyclists where drivers aren't expecting them is dangerous. It doesn't matter how "protected" the lane is - surprises lead to crashes, and due to the speed and weight of most motor vehicles, such crashes will end badly for cyclists.

    Ideally, there should be a multi-prong approach - teaching drivers to respect bicyclists. Teaching bicyclists to respect traffic control. Teaching traffic control systems to recognize bicyclists. And finally, for routes that have a large amount of bicyclist traffic, building dedicated infrastructure, which may include protected bike lanes.

    • Part of the problem are also (dumb) pedestrians who just outright ignore the bike lane:

      Wheelie across the Brooklyn bridge [youtu.be]

      You are right though -- education is the second step towards changing the problem. Motorists, Bicyclists, and Pedestrians need to respect one another. Sadly it is just a few that give a bad name for everyone else.

      • > Motorists, Bicyclists, and Pedestrians need to respect one another.

        They do, but it's important to note that there is an asymmetry here. The pedestrian is in charge of under 100kg of soft flesh at 6kph, the cyclist in charge of the same plus 10kg of metal at 15kph, the driver in charge of 1000kg at 100kph.

        So the respect needs to reflect this and the onus needs to be on the person in control of a car, rather than the person on their feet. It's the same logic that we apply to say that ownership and use an

        • You have that very backward. The person walking and the cyclist are both more manoeuvrable while being less visible (while being significantly less regulated and less likely to be punished for breaking laws).

          Respect needs to be both ways but a canoe always yields to a grain tanker.

    • by eepok ( 545733 )

      I and every other bicycle professional out there would agree with you. Physically separated infraestructure protects against collisions from over-taking vehicles, but they make intersections much, MUCH more dangerous.

      Education and enforcement by far outweigh engineering in the realm of bicycle safety. However, education is so difficult and time-consuming for most to imagine that people would rather throw billions of dollars at an engineering solution because they can understand physical barriers.

      Many of the

  • Will the reduction of trucks, buses, and cabs reduce revenue from taxes on fuel, tires,and registration? Fuel taxes are high in my state. Bikes and cyclists don't generate use taxes.
    • Engineers estimate road surface wear as proportional to the fourth power of axle weight. This means a 200 pound (90 kg) bicycle with cyclist causes an estimated one ten-thousandth of the wear and tear on the road surface compared to a 2,000 pound (900 kg) automobile with motorist. At that rate, road use tax for cyclists becomes too cheap to meter.

  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @07:32AM (#59361308)
    All across the US, if a car driver "accidentally" kills somebody on foot or bike, they rarely see jail time. I think that's outrageous. Car drivers need to be held to appropriate standards: no matter how common it is, every car driver needs to be held to standards such that if they kill or hurt somebody, even accidentally, with their vehicle, they need to go to prison. In the US, we take car driving not nearly as seriously as we should, probably because we have no mass transit, whatsoever. I know that would make driving a car scary. Driving a car SHOULD be a scary thing, not something to do while eating/shaving/looking at a phone/doing something unrelated/under the influence of anything, distracted/tired, etc.
  • That seems like a strange way to celebrate, but I guess they know what they're doing.
  • I don't know about anyone else but local cops have all but given up on enforcing traffic laws. Ghetto rules now apply so blow through all the stop signs and red lights with impunity. Remember that the car with the most dents has the right of way. I'm not saying I want Virginia style laws where speeding is like manslaughter or towns that exist solely to generate tickets. But seeing people ticketed for dangerous driving would be nice. Black drivers have a new move now at red lights. They creep along the curb

  • by fedos ( 150319 ) <allen@bouchard.gmail@com> on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @08:14AM (#59361396) Homepage
    is that they encourage the attitude that cyclists don't belong in the primary lanes and can further endanger cyclists who are not in the protected lanes.
  • Did anyone else notice that the picture in the article is of a cyclist turning to head the wrong way down a one way street?
    I ride my bike to work almost every day and the number of fellow cyclists who do not follow any rules of the road bothers me just as much as the cars that don't. I have almost been hit by fellow riders who were shocked that I stopped at a stop sign. As far as the barriers, I think it will help, you would not believe the number of people that are unable to stay out of the bike lane. Bar

  • It won't stop a terrorist in a rented truck from mowing down everyone in a "protected" bike lane though.

  • by conquistadorst ( 2759585 ) on Wednesday October 30, 2019 @10:21AM (#59361702)
    Drivers definitely are guilty of harassing bicyclists, I've seen it with my own eyes. It's awful to see it happen and it should be reported as a crime. However, where I live in NY I'd say it's very common to see bicyclists disregarding rules of the road. They blow through stop signs, red lights don't exist, and don't yield to traffic that has right of way... forget signaling when they turn. I consider signaling bonus credit and in past ~10 years I think I've only seen that performed once or twice. Just *yesterday* I had to beep a bicyclist for running a red light, it would have been a collision if it wasn't for the fact I was driving below speed limit (because it's a dangerous intersection). The dude flew past all the stopped cars right through a red light. Not a care in the world. He waved at me. Really!? These offenders are ruining it for the bicyclists that actually follow the rules of the road by giving the whole group an undeserved terrible reputation. If they have a death wish or just plain stupid and wreckless, fine whatever, but do it some other way. Their behavior not only has severe repercussions. People die. People get crippling injuries. Even drivers, at least normal people drivers, will be traumatized for life when they unintentionally hurt someone else at their hand. It's just stupid.
  • Only lunatics rode bikes in midtown or below; then Citibike appeared and over a few years gained critical mass. Now LOTS of people ride bikes. Of course the odds of incidents is higher. Asshat drivers are also a problem.

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