Archive for the ‘National’ Category

Rails to Trails Petition to the AAA

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Southern California has several successful rail to trails conversions, with the potential for many more.  You can see existing Southern California Rail-Trails at http://www.trails.com/stateactivity.aspx?area=14932

The president of AAA Mid-Atlantic recently advocated for the elimination of existing federal programs that help build bicycle and pedestrian trails and sidewalks from the trust fund that finances transportation. These funds have helped create more than 19,000 miles of trails, walking and bicycling facilities across the country—including some in Southern California.

There are 19,872 miles of rail-trails around the country—with 9,232 more in the planning stage. Very few of these would have been built if AAA’s position had taken hold decades ago.

AAA Mid-Atlantic suggests that an $89 billion annual highway fund shortfall can be blamed on investments in walking and bicycling. But those investments total less than $1 billion annuallyand produce tremendous benefits for everyone, including drivers.

CORBA is joining with the Rails to Trails Conservancy in calling for the for the AAA to retract the statements made by the AAA Mid-Atlantic region President.  We ask CORBA members and supporters to sign the Rails to Trails Conservancy petition at http://www.railstotrails.org/AAA

To prepare for that delivery, the petition will be closed at midnight on Wednesday, Dec. 8.

Thank you for having already signed the petition. We’ve asked this of you a lot lately, but since it’s so important, please forgive us: would you spread the word however you can, one last time? Just ask a friend or two to visit www.railstotrails.org/AAA.

Postscript (December 27, 2010): 51,000 people signed the petition. See the full story…

CORBA’s Kurt Loheit Receives National Award

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

Kurt Loheit

CORBA and IMBA founding member and Mountain Bike Hall Of Fame Inductee Kurt Loheit was recently the recipient of American Trails’  Lifetime Service Award as part of the 20th American Trails National Symposium.

From the American Trails website:

The National Trails Awards is one way American Trails recognizes the exemplary people across the landscape of America who are working to create a national system of trails to meet the recreation, health, and travel needs of all Americans.

Lifetime Service Award: Kurt Loheit

This award recognizes an individual demonstrating long-standing, significant, and exemplary service to trail planning, implementation, and recreation.

Kurt Loheit has more than 20 years of experience as a passionate outdoorsman, who has been instrumental in organizing and leading trail programs with the Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy and numerous other organizations across the nation, including the California Trails and Greenways Conference, founding the Los Angeles Chapter of Concerned Off Road Bicyclists Association, and being the Resources Director of the International Mountain Bicyclist Association. Kurt has been a leader of the hiking and mountain bike community’s efforts to contribute to the design, construction, and maintenance of sustainable trail systems. He has supervised trail projects and trail building schools around the country, he’s written about trail building issues in a number of mountain biking and land management publications, and he’s presented many times at national, state, and local trails conferences. In 2004 he was inducted into the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame.

As one of CORBA’s “elders,” Loheit continues to provide guidance on trail related topics, from maintenance projects to advocacy concerns on both a local and national level. A resident of Rancho Palos Verdes, he has been instrumental in the ongoing transformation of the open space trails into cooperative shared use. Says CORBA Palos Verdes member Troy Braswell, “When cyclists in Rancho Palos Verdes were on the verge of being completely shut out, Kurt stepped forward to put us on the right course. He guided us from a disorganized bunch of ignorant bikers to a band of pretty effective CORBA PV warriors.

“The foundation for everything we have gained was paid for with his years of advocacy experience and countless hours of volunteer work. His position as a nationally recognized trails expert and committed volunteer has given him a highly respected voice in Rancho Palos Verdes. When the city or land conservancy has a question about trails, they go to Kurt. When we need direction through the political battlefield of advocacy, we go to Kurt.”

Loheit had this to say about the honor: “It really isn’t so much what I have done, its more about what others have done along with me. Everyone has a part to share in this award.”

We congratulate Kurt on this lifetime service award, and express our sincerest gratitude for his ongoing contributions to CORBA, mountain biking and trail user communities around the nation.

Rim of the Valley Study Comments

Friday, October 29th, 2010

As we reported back in August, the National Park Service has been holding public hearings on the Rim of the Valley Special Resource Study.  The public meetings have provided an opportunity for many to voice their support and/or concerns for the concept study.  Until midnight tonight, you can email your comments to the National Park Service.

Rim of the Valley Study Area Map

Rim of the Valley Study Area

The Rim of the Valley is comprised of the open spaces that surround the San Fernando, La Crescenta, Santa Clarita, Simi and Conejo valleys. This area spans both Los Angeles and Ventury County, and a bevy of land managers from different agencies. CORBA fully supports the prospect of having these various land managers come together under the direction of the National Park Service, with the goal of permanently protecting this vital ecological and recreational resource.

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Outside Mag: The Ban on Bicycles in Wilderness is Dead Wrong

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

Outside Online, the online companion site to Outside Magazine,  recently published online an excellent article about the ban on Bikes in Wilderness areas. The article originally appeared in print in March. Echoing the arguments put forth by IMBA, CORBA and mountain bike groups across the country, the article lays out the reasons that lifting the ban could lead to more land being protected. If wilderness did not exclude bicycles, millions of mountain biking Americans would join with environmentalists to support new wilderness designations.

IMBA is working with agencies at the Federal and local level to incorporate alternate designations that allow mountain biking while still offering similar environmental protection.

You can read the article on Outside Online, or see the full text of the article is after the break.

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The Great Outdoors Initiative Comes to L.A.

Friday, July 9th, 2010
On July 8th CORBA volunteers attended a “listening session” with such dignitaries as Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Secretary of the Department of the Interior Ken Salazar, E.P.A. Administrator Lisa Jackson, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy Sutley, Undersecretary of the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Harris Sherman and Asst. Secretary of the Army (Civil Works) Jo-Ellen Darcy.  Also represented were Los Angeles City and County department heads, and leaders of hundreds of NGO’s all gathered for this“listening session” by Obama’s environmental “dream team” on-stage.
Each panel member spoke about the challenges in providing recreation, conservation and appreciation of the great outdoors. The speakers discussed how Los Angeles is continually misrepresented as the capital of sprawl, a car culture, a place lacking in the great outdoors. Many Angelenos already enjoy the great open spaces that surround us in the San Gabriels, Santa Monicas, the Arroyo, the LA River and Griffith Park. Most people in the city, however, are unaware of just how much open space is so close by.

An inspiring video outlining the challenges and achievements of the nation’s public lands was shown. The video is available on the DOI web site.

In the audience, local government officials sat side by side with advocates, educators, non-profit directors and conservationists to share their experiences and express their views to the federal representatives. The room was packed to capacity, with over 800 people in attendance.

These high-level Administration officials and White House Cabinet members listened to comments from the audience for about an hour, after which a more intimate opportunity for feedback was offered by way of break-out sessions.

During the public comments, many pointed out the noticeable absences from the panel: Transportation and Education.
Many contended, and CORBA agrees, that getting people outdoors can be achieved by either bringing the people to the outdoors by providing a  better public transport network that reaches the surrounding open space as well as existing city parks; and walkable, livable streets where bicycle transportation and recreation is encouraged and welcomed.

The second option is bringing the outdoors to the people. This is exemplified by grass-roots movements like Ciclovia where several city streets will be closed on September 12th to create a one-day 13 mile long playground for riding, walking and just being outside. The initiative seeks a better balance in zoning and utilization of park land, development and infrastructure: building more livable communities. It encourages urban parkland development and recreation.

Much was said by panelists and public about the need to protect natural resources. In CORBA’s opinion not enough was said about the need for access to those protected resources as recreational opportunities. During breakout sessions CORBA board member Steve Messer brought up the need for alternatives to wilderness designations which exclude user groups and make public land more inaccessible for the majority. Access and conservation are synergistic in many ways: when people can’t or don’t experience these lands, they don’t develop a sense of stewardship or understand the need to conserve.

CORBA’s mission includes preservation, stewardship and access for mountain bikers and the trail systems they ride. Our Youth Adventures, Introduction to Mountain Bike Skills clinics, and Trail Crew programs give people a sense of those values.

Messer also brought up the fact that bicycling is a life-long health-promoting recreational activity. He talked about the Interscholastic Cycling League and the collateral long-term changes it will bring about. Unlike more traditional high school team sports, high school mountain bikers are much more likely to continue to participate in this health-promoting activity well beyond their high school years. He stressed the need to support youth programs, high school programs, and trail access for all users in our City Parks (bringing the outdoors to the people).

For such a diverse group, the breakout session in which CORBA participated went very smoothly, with all the participants tending to agree on most things: The need for funding; The inclusion of alternative transportation; The need to coordinate agencies; The need to bring the classroom outside. Equestrian representatives talked about their youth programs in Compton that allow kids the opportunity to experience a ranching lifestyle. A science teacher talked about his inability to take kids out into the field because of budget cuts. Others referred to “every child left inside, AKA no child left behind.” Other salient points were expressed: the lack of communication and cooperation between government agencies; the need for federal governments to work more at the local level while allowing locals to have a bigger hand in managing lands.

In all, the process went well and–at least in the breakout session CORBA attended–all felt they were heard, and all had something to say. There was no animosity between any of the groups present, from the Sierra Club, to CORBA, to the equestrian community, OHV community, to educators and local government representatives.  If anything, there seemed to be a subtle acknowledgement that all those present have a love of the outdoors, despite the differences in how we experience it.

The goal of this initiative is to produce a set of recommendations expected to be ready in November. All of the comments were recorded and will be considered. The recommendations that result from these listening sessions will help shape policy that will see us through the next hundred years of management of public lands.

Though the term “mountain bike” is relatively new, bicycles are an integral part of America’s history, and have been used in the outdoors since the late 1800’s. Mountain bikers are now part of that history and deserve the same respect when it comes to decisions about outdoor recreation. We need to make sure that we are considered in those decisions.

For those who were not at the listening session, you can make comments online at http://ideas.usda.gov/ago/ideas.nsf/. You can also vote down or vote up the comments of others, or respond to others’ comments. It is a lively discussion, and currently there are anti-mountain biking comments that have been voted down. We need to flood their system with comments supporting mountain biking and access.

The initiative asks individuals and organizations to express what they see as the Challenges, What Works, The Federal Government’s Role and the Tools needed to make it better. Submit your comments and be heard.

CORBA’s preliminary thoughts (our official statement will be made public soon):

Challenges: We face an obesity epidemic and declining participation in outdoor activities. We have mismanaged lands for hundreds of years, allowing sprawl, poorly designed cities and a lack of open space. We need to find, connect to, allow access to and protect public lands. Bicycles, both on and off-road, are a part of that solution.
What Works: We have found that getting access to trails, whether in mountains or city parks, encourages park use and outdoor participation. Mountain Bikes blur transport and recreation lines, and entice people out of doors with healthy exercise disguised as fun. Cycling should be encouraged in all its forms.
Federal Role: The federal government needs to expand trail networks and access for everyone. It should utilize alternative land protection designations that allow for more recreation and more jobs while protecting the land, instead of wilderness designations which by their nature are exclusionary and decrease opportunity.
The Tools: The NEPA and CEQA processes must be overhauled and streamlined; alternative protective designations to wilderness, and establishing better ratios of trail miles to user populations on federal lands. Fund projects at the local level. Fund jobs that expand access to open spaces. The NPS needs to adopt the proposed 2008 rule change (36 CFR 4.30, Federal Register E8-29892) that makes it easier for NPS unit superintendents to open off road facilities to mountain bikes. The current rule is onerous, burdensome and expensive. It deters NPS units from offering off-road cycling opportunities.
Please submit your comments, or take those we’ve suggested and modify them as you see fit.
Comments can be submitted right now at http://ideas.usda.gov/ago/ideas.nsf/. You can have your say and it will be counted.

America’s Great Outdoors Initiative

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

The Obama Administration has announced a second round of Listening Sessions for the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative.  These listening sessions will be crucial opportunities for the trail users to bring the Trail issues and the nation’s trail systems into the spotlight as a priority for the Obama Administration.

CORBA volunteers will be in attendance, and we hope that a large mountain biking contingent will attend the Los Angeles meeting on Thursday, July 8, 2010, 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm.

In the event you are unable to participate in person, please submit your comments and stories via the America’s Great Outdoors website at http://www.doi.gov/americasgreatoutdoors/.

Below is the official announcement

NOTICE OF A PUBLIC LISTENING SESSION ON

THE PRESIDENT’S AMERICA’S GREAT OUTDOORS INITIATIVE

Please join senior representatives of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the White House Council on Environmental Quality, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of the Interior and the U.S. Department of Defense for a public listening session and discussion in Southern California on conservation, recreation, and reconnecting people to the outdoors. The session will be held July 8 from 3:00 pm to 7:00 p.m. at Occidental College in Los Angeles.

This past April, at the White House Conference on America’s Great Outdoors,President Obama launched the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative to developa 21st century conservation agenda and to reconnect Americans with ourgreat outdoors.  The President asked his leadership team to engage the fullrange of interested groups, including State and local governments,community-based organizations, recreation and conservation groups, sportingorganizations, youth groups, and others.

This Los Angeles-based listening session, one of several being held around the country, offers an opportunity to hear and describe the challenges and opportunities we face in land and water conservation, in improving recreational opportunities for a large urban population, and in restoring and conserving our vital natural and cultural resources to enable access to a broad array of outdoor recreation.  The July 8th public listening session and discussion is an opportunity for the leaders of the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative to hear from you and other voices in the region about solutions for building a 21st century conservation and recreation agenda and for reconnecting people with the outdoors.

Here are the details:
Listening Session and Discussion Information:

  • When:  Thursday – July 8, 2010, 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm
  • Where:  Thorne Hall, Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road, Los Angeles, CA  90041  (See map at http://www.oxy.edu/x6307.xml)
  • Who:  Senior national and local leaders from US EPA, CEQ, USDA, DOI and DOD will be present to hear your recommendations and to participate in a conversation with you about America’s Great Outdoors.
  • Register: This event is free and open to the public.  For planning purposes, please register by Thursday, July 1st by sending an email to sun.nelly@epa.gov with your name, the name of the organization with which you are affiliated, if any, your telephone number and email address.  We will endeavor to accommodate everyone.

In the event you are unable to participate in person, please submit your comments and stories via the America’s Great Outdoors website at http://www.doi.gov/americasgreatoutdoors/.

If you have questions, please call Nelly Sun at (415) 947-4237.  We look forward to your participation – please join us!

Nature Valley donates 10¢ per wrapper to support the National Park Service

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

When you buy specially marked Nature Valley products, keep the wrappers and mail them back. They’ll donate an additional 10¢ per wrapper to the National Parks Conservation Association, up to $250,000. And all wrappers will be recycled.

Stuff an envelope with any specially-marked Nature Valley Granola Bar wrappers with the National Parks Program logo and mail them to:

National Parks Project
PO Box 450328
El Paso, TX 88545-0328

For more details, and to see other ways that Nature Valley supports our National Parks, visit their Preserve the Parks, Get Involved web page.

Setback in Montana

Monday, April 12th, 2010

According to a story in the Billings Gazzette, as of May 1st it will be illegal to ride 150 miles (0ut of 170) of trail in Montana’s Hyalite-Porcupine-Buffalo Horn Wilderness Study Area, which includes the Gallatin Crest Trail. A judge has declared that mountain biking ruins the opportunity for solitude for others, and has interpreted that as grounds to restrict mountain bike access to this Wilderness Study Area.

Read more on Dirt Rag‘s blog and the Billings Gazzette story.

If you’re ever wondering why it is important to support mountain biking advocacy, consider the challenges Montana mountain bikers are currently facing. This legal decision could be precedent-setting, resulting in trail closures around the country in areas deemed “eligible” for wilderness designation, even though they have not yet been designated wilderness.

Report on the 2010 National Bike Summit

Monday, March 15th, 2010

League of American Bicyclists National Bike Summit 2010, March 9-11 in Washington, DC.

by Jim Hasenauer

The Summit was a great experience.  700 + advocates, 75+ of whom were mountain bikers attended.  It was intense and exhausting, very well organized, and extremely motivating.  Days went 8 AM-10 PM. 
 
Here’s the scoop.  Feel free to send questions:
 
Major announcements included:
1.  Google unveiled its new bike routes on Google Maps.  It’s customizable.  (Point and click on the route to change it to your needs.)  Google wants feedback.  If you’ve got it, click on “report a problem” to suggest routes, correct errors, etc.  They’ll check out your comments and route should be changed in 30 days.  Their algorithms tried to avoid traffic congestion and hills
 
2.  Bikes Belong announced a new initiative to bring ordinary cyclists to advocacy.  They’re trying to get one million bike advocates signed up.  Take the pledge at http://www.bikesbelong.org/peopleforbikes
 
3.  Washington DC announced it was building dedicated bike lanes on Pennsylvania Avenue.  They will be open by summer.
 
4  IMBA announced that its 5 year old Memorandum Of Understanding with the National Park Service (NPS) has been renewed for another 5 years.  It promises new pilot projects and a continued commitment to work together.
 
Bikers of all stripes were there and you can’t imagine a more unified, pro-bike context.  Very exciting.
 
Over the two days, we had tons of speakers including Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and pro-bike Congressmen Oberstar (MN) and Blumenauer (OR) and great sessions. 
 
On Wednesday, there were panels all day.  I  attended the “IMBA Track”. 
 
The first session was on “Youth  Cycling”.  Mike Eubank reported on Valmont Bike Park in City of Boulder.  The Boulder Mountain Bike Alliance raised 1/2 million dollars and they also got a grant from the CO lottery.  While its still under construction, they’re already doing youth cyclocross, after school rides and weekend recreational riding.  They see it as an extension of Safe Routes to School.  All the programs are free for kids.
 
Dave Secunda has a for profit business Avid4Adventure  that gives kids outdoor experience focusing on mountain biking, rock climbing and kayaking.  He has a contract with 12 school districts for on-campus events and also runs summer camps and family trips.  During peak season he’s got 65 staff.  He says start them young and actually runs programs for pre-schoolers as young as 3, 4 & 5 all the way to high school.
 
Julie Childer spoke about Trips for Kids DC .  Besides the basic TFK, they run a kids category in the Northern Virginia MTB Race Series. They also run learn to ride & learn to race classes and camps and NPS Interpretive Bike Tours of DC monuments.  Their mission:  “Teaching kids to overcome obstacles on trail and in life.”
 
Gary Burlanger spoke about the new National Interscholastic Cycling Association.  They hope to have 50 state high school racing by 2020.  Now there is NorCal, SoCal, Colorado, and Washington.  Wisconsin, Michigan and Texas are coming soon.  Others are in the pipeline.  There is great industry support.  I think hs racing is going to take off.  The vision is student athletes (required 3.0 gpa), inclusivity ( a no bench policy-everyone races), family participation, and attention to safety and risk management.  Their “Coach’s Manual” is a rich “how-to”  ($12. @ www.norcalmtb.org)
 
The Second IMBA session was “Entrepreneurial IMBA”.  Jenn Dice told the sad story of mountain bikers’ relations with the US Forest Service (USFS) in Montana, but it prompted the growth of a 1000 member Montana Mountain Bike Alliance.  She stressed the need of being proactive in developing model trail systems, bike parks, jump parks and pump tracks.
 
Ben Beamer spoke about the Oakridge Ride Center  They began trying to connect out of town forest trails, but public input stressed connecting those trails to and through town as well.  They were able to secure a $400,000 earmark to build the project.  Their goal is to be the MTB Capital of the northwest.
 
Ann, an owner of the Bike Lane in DC spoke about what retailers can do to support advocacy.  MORE, the DC IMBA club now has 300 miles of trail and 32 separate place to ride in and near the metro area.  There are 6000 registered users on the MORE site .
 
Ryan from IMBA pitched the new Chapter Program where clubs will have the opportunity to become IMBA Chapters and will share membership and revenues with IMBA.  IMBA will do the data processing, fulfillment and marketing.  It looks like this year is the big rollout with the World Summit in Augusta, GA the place to get the details https://www.imba.com/summit/2010_World_Summit.html
 
My panel was on the urban transportation/recreation connection.  Jill Van Winkle of IMBA hosted.  I spoke about the LA City Parks process and CORBA’s hard work over several years.  After explaining the current status of the plan, our adversaries’ attempts to thwart us,  and our letter writing campaign to keep mountain bikes in the plan and secure a stronger commitment to mountain biking, I emphasized that all cyclists, regardless of discipline need to work together and support one another.  Most agreed that a mountain bike element in bike plans would become more common.  There are several already including:  Portland, Bend, Flagstaff and Park City.  There are urban mtb trails in Philadelphia, NYC, Seattle, Chattanooga, Albuquerque, Louisville, Bozeman and probably several other places. I emphasized how bikes in urban parks was an important goal for all cyclists and how several of our Summit Political Asks (see below) are intended to improve these opportunities.  Our work was well received
 
Vivian Neal from Oxford Mississippi talked about how their city connected bike paths to mountain bike trail systems outside town.  They’re now building BMX and cyclocross facilities as well. 
 
Several audience members spoke about their town’s accomplishments and/or needs. 
 
This was followed by a plenary session of a panel discussion with several bike advocates and representatives of the Federal Highway Administration talking about reauthorization of the transportation bill.  “Livability” is a key word for the Obama Administration and the Department of Transportation.  Many of our issues are directly related to this goal and the administration is extremely supportive. Highway safety is another important goal and improving the safety of cyclists and pedestrians is high priority.
 
We then met in our state delegations to review talking points and coordinate our meetings.  CA had about 70+ advocates, riders, retailers, industry.  We had the most representatives of any state.  It was terrific.  A committee led by Jim Haggen-Smit of FATRAC and Dorothy Leu of LACBC put together our assignments. 
 
Our ASKS:
 
The League of American Bicyclists and IMBA had six asks for our meetings with congressional staff.
 
1.  Ask the representative to co-sponsor HR 4722 The Active Community Transportation Act of 2010 (Blumenauer).  It would appropriate $400 million for grants to local and regional governments (5-15 million each) to create “active transportation networks”. 
 
2.  Ask the representative to co-sponsor HR 1443  &  S 584  the Complete Streets Act of 2009.  This would require that transportation planners consider all users when planning highway facilities.  20 states including CA already have this as state policy already.  These laws would make it national policy. 
 
3.  Ask the representative to co-sponsor HR 4021 and  S 1156 Safe Routes to School.  Both bills would expand the highly successful Safe Routes program to include eligibility for high schools.  The Senate bill provides higher funding as well. 
 
4.  Ask the representative to co-sponsor HR 3734 The Urban Revitalization and Livable Communities Act which would provide $445 million or urban park and recreation facilities .  The target is facilities for at risk youth in urban areas and these grants would be administered by HUD on a 70-30% federal/local match.  Facilities could include urban trails, bike parks, jump parks etc. 
 
5.  Ask the representative to support full funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund .  This fund goes back to the 1950’s and is authorized to provide up to $900 million for purchase of parkland and building facilities.  For the last 20 years or so, the money has not been fully appropriated and while its supposed to be split between federal agencies and local agencies, recently only the feds have received funding.  The two bills that would provide full funding each have their own problems.  The Senate Bill S 2747  changes the funding formula which not everyone supports. The House bill HR 3534 is a gigantic, controversial energy bill.  We were instructed to push the principle, not the specific bills. 
 
6.  Protect Public Lands but allow for continued bicycling .  This ask was IMBA’s and there was no particular legislation involved.  We want members of Congress to be alert that when they consider public lands bills, especially those creating Wilderness, they should consider companion designations like National Recreation Areas, National Scenic Areas, National Protection Areas, National Conservation Areas, etc. so that mountain bikers don’t lose trail opportunities. We emphasized our commitment to protecting wild places, but being unfairly hurt when Wilderness is the only designation.
 
On Thursday, I  had three productive meetings with staff from the offices of Congresswoman Linda Sanchez, Henry Waxman and Grace Napolitano.  No staff member made commitments but they were generally supportive on all counts.  Waxman and Napolitano were already co-sponsor of HR 3734.  Napolitano was already a co-sponsor of HR 1443.
 
During the day, Jenn Dice of IMBA testified before the House Subcommittee on Parks, Forests and Public Lands  and was terrific in explaining how a proposed CO Wilderness Bill (HR 4289) would affect mountain bikers .  She explained that we could support 13 of the 34 proposed areas in the bill, but needed adjustments and consideration in the rest.  She took a very high road, “let’s work together” approach.  At the end of the hearing, Congresswoman DeGette the bill’s sponsor offered to meet with IMBA, go for a ride and  even identified 3 places where she was willing to make changes.  All very positive.
 
On Thursday night, the California Bicycle Coalition  had a reception for the CA advocates at the Summit.  They are intent on revitalizing the CBC and raised several thousand dollars at the event.
 
All in all, this was a great event with serious networking, information sharing and the opportunity to really affect pro bike policies on the road and in the dirt. 

Google Maps adds bike routes

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

The mapping tool, added after bicyclists petitioned the company, provides turn-by-turn directions and even figures out routes that help cyclists avoid ‘unreasonable exertion.’

From the Los Angeles Times

After a long wait and more than 50,000 signatures on an online petition, cyclists will be happy to know that Google Inc. has finally added bicycle routes to Google Maps.

In Google Maps, users can now find “Bicycling” in the tool’s “Get Directions” drop-down box. After choosing the option, bikers can input two addresses and find the bike route that will get them to their destination. The mapping tool provides turn-by-turn directions and an estimated travel time.

The new Google Maps bicycling feature is available in 150 U.S. cities, including Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York. The tool features more than 12,000 bike trails. When users look for directions, the company’s mapping algorithm weights trails more heavily than roads for safety reasons. If cities have bicycle lanes, those are also weighted more heavily than roads without them.

One of the more useful features built into the Google Maps bicycling tool is its power-exertion calculation. According to the company, biking directions “compute the effort [bicyclists] will require and the speed [they will] achieve while going uphill.” Based on those calculations, the tool provides bicyclists with a route that eliminates areas that would require “an unreasonable degree of exertion.”

Google said its tool even keeps bicyclists away from busy intersections and areas where bicyclists would need to brake too often.

The Google Maps bicycling tool is in beta testing, which means it might have some bugs. Google plans to add more routes and trails in coming months.