The photo shows a portion of General Jim Moore Boulevard near my
house that is under construction. Two-way traffic is temporarily
being accommodated on what will be one of the two roadways of a
divided highway.
I had nothing to do with the City of Seaside's dropping plans for a
sidepath along this road. But a local bicycle advocate is not happy.
“They should think of the families and the kids,” he says.
Bob Shanteau
<http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/archives/2010/2010-Oct-14/city-scraps-rec-trail-plan-for-general-jim-moore-boulevard/1/>
Seaside shifts gears on bike path
City scraps rec trail plan for General Jim Moore Boulevard.
Posted October 14, 2010 12:00 AM
By Kera Abraham

Tight with Traffic; Cyclist advocate Keith DeFiebre cruises the
shoulder along General Jim Moore Boulevard, near Seaside’s Broadway
Avenue. He’d prefer a Class I path, separated from cars. Photo by
Nic Coury
Monterey Peninsula Recreation Trail is a poster child for
eco-friendly planning. The popular hiking and biking path passes
through Seaside and Monterey safely buffered from the whizzing cars
on Del Monte Boulevard.
Fort Ord Reuse Authority plans called for another Class I path to
separate pedestrians and bikers from vehicular traffic along General
Jim Moore Boulevard in eastern Seaside. The path would connect upper
Canyon Del Rey Boulevard with the sprawling recreational trails of
the former Fort Ord.
But the city of Seaside ditched that plan and is instead
constructing a 10-foot-wide sidewalk and a marked shoulder, known as
a Class II bike lane, along General Jim’s east side.
Keith DeFiebre, president of the Central Coast Cycling Club and
co-founder of Fort Ord Recreational Trails Friends, isn’t happy
about the change.
“They should think of the families and the kids,” he says. “If you
want to highlight your city as biker-friendly and
pedestrian-friendly, you’ve got to have a Class I lane.”
FORA’s plans actually called for a triple play—a Class I path, Class
II lane and sidewalk—along the entire length of General Jim,
according to Seaside Deputy City Manager Diana Ingersoll.
But in the first phase of General Jim’s realignment—the northern
stretch from Normandy Road to Coe Avenue—military housing parcels
limited the slope that could be cut into the road’s east side,
making it impossible to build both a Class I path and an extra-wide
sidewalk, she says. So city planners scaled back to a sidewalk and a
Class II path.
General Jim’s second phase, from Coe Avenue to Del Rey Oaks, is
designed with same right-of-way width in order to cut costs,
Ingersoll says. That means a 10-foot sidewalk and a Class II lane,
but no Class I.
However, that could change. City officials intend to ask a future
developer to build the rec trail, Ingersoll says. And the sidewalk
could be converted into a Class I path, at least until east Seaside
development starts.
In this economy, when new construction seems about as far off as
hover boards, that last idea could have traction.