The former ED of EBBC, Robert Rayburn is now a BART director.
Is there an angle to pursue here of dealing with Robert?
I would think he would be highly sensitive to this issue...
Paul Wendt
Bob Mack
<BMack@CycleCalif
ornia.com> To
Sent by: pat giorni <
hog...@yahoo.com>
bikesmc@googlegro cc
ups.com "
bik...@googlegroups.com"
<
bik...@googlegroups.com>, mself
<
mat...@mself.com>, Ellen Fletcher
05/22/2012 01:39 <
ellen....@gmail.com>
PM Subject
Re: [BikeSMC] BART Bike Plan--DRAFT
Comment Letter
Please respond to
BMack@CycleCalifo
rnia.com
Good points, Pat.
Sounds like we need a petition drive or letter writing drive, like what we
did at the Caltrain stations. I'm sure there is time for this with the
short public comment period.
Maybe EBBC, SFBC, and Bikes OnBoard could do an e-mail blast with a sample
letter ASAP to drive up the response rate to pubic comments.
Bob
On 5/22/12 1:29 PM, pat giorni wrote:
Thanks for the input.
To the point: the letter IS snarky, or negative in tone because the Plan
does everything to state that cyclists are not welcome at any time with
their bikes onboard BART cars. It is specifically geared to welcome
http://www.bart.gov/docs/BART%20bike%20plan_DRAFT_05-05-12_appendices.pdf
it is evident that the conversation needed to eliminate the blackout will
never happen...they will only talk about modifying it. I do remember when
the blackout lasted for almost 3 hours every weekday morning AND evening;
so this is progress?
And they don't give a hoot how you get your bike to the platform other
than using urine-reeking, too small elevators, often 2 per station(1 to
access the station/street, and the 2nd to access the platform)
inconveniently located in outer Mongolia. The reason those elevators in
stations built before the late 90's are so small is because they were never
meant to fit more than 1 wheelchair and 2 on-foot companions, or someone
with heavy over-sized luggage,or a family with a baby stroller. Back then
there were no bikes on trains.
And they will not rescind the escalator ban nor retrofit stair
channels...so they figure we'll stop bringing our bike onboard when we get
tired of lifting and carrying our bikes up and down those long staircases.
This Plan gives us nothing other than parking. Any of those amenities that
are off station property are suggestions to the local municipalities to
provide. This is not a Bike Plan...it is a BART Station Bike Parking Plan.
If you look at the acknowledgements on the opening pages of the plan you
will see my name because I was a member at the table of the Consultant
meetings while the Plan was being written. Most of our time was spent with
developing the Investment Tool....and what is that for? Determining the
value of attended and unattended Bike Stations and bike racks
installation. Period.
As to an Executive Summary...I am happy to have someone take a shot at
composing it. However, it is unnecessary because it's doubtful that the
letter will ever be read by the Board of Directors unless it is
specifically brought to its attention. It will end up in the
correspondence packets, but that doesn't mean the Directors will read them,
especially since they are not obligated to provide a written response.
What will happen with this letter is that the Consultants will read it and
every other letter received on the Plan. Then they will make a Summary of
Responses check sheet of every point raised with a tick for each letter
that raised it. This is what the Board will read. My guess is that unless
a lot of individuals send letters noting that the BO is "off-limits" the
topic won't score very high, and that becomes another reason for the Board
to ignore it.
The reason old history is brought into the letter is because this is the
exact scenario that played out when Caltrain started writing its Bike
Plan. That's why the language in BART's Plan is sensitively evasive...E/L
learned its lesson w/ Caltrain. And the history is a reminder to the
Directors of what could/will happen at their meetings and in the press
if/when the cycling public brings organized pressure to end the BO.
It's time to play hardball, and Bikesmc should stand tall and proud on the
mound and throw the 1st pitch.
From: Bob Mack <BM...@CycleCalifornia.com>
To:
bik...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2012 7:44 AM
Subject: Re: [BikeSMC] BART Bike Plan--DRAFT Comment Letter
This is great. Good job.
I think that using the conclusion as an intro, or executive summary, would
be good a good idea as most BART board members will not have (or take) time
to read the whole letter.
Bob
On 5/21/12 8:19 PM, pat giorni wrote:
The end of the Comment Period for the BART Bike Plan is fast upon us.
Below is the DRAFT comment letter BikeSMC plans to submit. Please give
feedback no later than bedtime Wednesday so that we can incorporate your
ideas and get the letter submitted before deadline.
Bike San Mateo County welcomes the opportunity to provide comment on the
Draft BART Bicycle Plan and appreciates that the Public Comment Period
extension enabled time for a more detailed reading in order to produce
cogent critique.
What is immediately evident is that the Plan authored by Eisen | Letunic is
the same consultancy firm that produced the Caltrain Bicycle Master Plan in
2008. Comparison of both Plans, with the commonality of like strategies
recommended to encourage bicycle-to-station wayfaring and enhanced bicycle
parking accommodations to decrease automobile station access and its
attendant parking costs, demonstrates the avoidance of substantive policy
challenge to the additional increase of onboard bicycle carriage which is
the real incentive to leave the car at home, and has been subsequently
shown in Caltrain’s case to significantly garner higher weekday ridership.
Eliminating the peak hours onboard blackout period is the most effective
tool BART has to meet the Plan goal to double the share of BART passengers
system-wide who access stations by bicycle by 2022.
To its credit, Eisen | Letunic offers suggestions in Chapters 3 and 5,
employing qualificatory terminology that their employer, the BART Board of
Directors, might “revisit” policy decisions regarding elevator, escalator
and stair channel platform access. However the glaring oversight in these
chapters is that they present no argument nor make recommendation to
eliminate the blackout period. Rather these chapters offer only limited
suggestions to make the peak hour commute blackout more palatable and
manageable.
.
Unlike the Caltrain Bicycle Master Planwhich had to be later recast as
Caltrain Bicycle Access and Parking Plan because it truly did not address
any bicycle related issues other than wayfaring and station bicycle
parking, the BART Bicycle Plan Modeling Access to Transit, in 40 point
font, boldly announces that “BART welcomes cyclists at every step of their
journey” (pg. 45), so long as it does not include peak hour commute
blackout elimination.
It is apparent that Eisen | Letunic has produced the best possible Bicycle
Plan within the dictates and constraints placed upon it by a Board of
Directors whose desire is to justify expenditure for enhancement and
amenities that masquerade its recalcitrance to increase onboard bicycle
carriage during the time when commuters most need it. And to this end, it
appears that a lot of time and expense went into the development of the
Bicycle Investment Tool “to help BART staff determine the optimal amount
and type of parking at each station.” The Bicycle Investment Tool
blatantly ignores the most important and beneficial investment of all – to
allow bicycles onboard trains at all times.
Bike San Mateo County recognizes that an adopted Bike Plan is de rigueur
for agency application for State and Federal funding opportunities. We
applaud the BART Board of Directors for updating the 2002 Bart Bicycle Plan
because we appreciate the forethought of capturing monies for bicycle
infrastructure. We are of the mind that the employment of the data
provided by using the Investment Tool will give BART a “step up” in its
funding application requests. However, we are highly doubtful, despite the
analysis in the appendices, that increased bike parking facilities will
achieve the goal to double BART bicycle access, to 8% of all trips, by
2022. The obvious way to achieve the goal of doubling bicycle access to
stations is to allow bikes onboard BART at all times with no blackout
period. A Bike Plan that ignores the most important issue is woefully
inadequate, and the final Plan must include the objective to eliminate the
bike blackout periods to lend merit to the overall Plan.
Bike San Mateo County is also cognizant that within the next ten years BART
expects significantly increased weekday ridership which will oversubscribe
existent vehicle parking facilities. There is precious little, if any,
real estate remaining for parking lot or garage expansion. Therefore it is
prudent now to focus on effecting the behavior change needed to entice
passengers to access the stations by bicycle. Every eight station-parked
cyclists remove the need for one parking space. Again, we are highly
doubtful that enhanced world class bicycle parking facilities are the
panacea to remedy a future vehicle parking crisis. In 2010 Caltrain’s
bicycle lockers were filled to 45%, that being 2% of its daily bicycle
ridership parking at the station while 5% took their bikes onboard. After
Caltrain increased its onboard bicycle carriage capacity in 2011 locker
usage dropped to 43%, while bicycle-onboard passengers increased to 7%.
Today locker usage is at 46% with bicycle-onboard ridership above 8%.
Bicycle users account for over 10% of Caltrain’s daily ridership with just
2% of them leaving their bikes at the station. Therefore it might be
concluded that the increase of bicycle-onboard passengers during peak
commute hours effects little or no change in station bike parking rates.
It also is evident that those who bring their bicycles onboard need them at
both ends of the trip. If cyclists were unable to bring their bikes
onboard during peak commute hours they would return to driving their cars
and forego public transit altogether.
In conclusion, Bike San Mateo County offers the following recommendations
to be included in the Final BART Bicycle Plan:
· Immediately initiate discussion with intent to eliminate all bicycle
blackout periods;
· In every station retrofit at least one conveniently located staircase
leading to platforms with stair channels;
· All newly constructed stations will have conveniently located
staircases for platform access fitted with stair channels;
· Use the Investment Tool to determine whether retrofitting stair
channels is more cost effective than liability litigation;
· Revoke the “No Bicycles on Escalators” ban;
· Use the Investment Tool to determine whether revoking the “No Bicycles
on Escalators” ban is more cost effective than liability litigation;
· When the above recommendations have been incorporated in the text
change the title of the document to BART Bicycle Master Plan.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Steve Vanderlip
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