Portland City Council S&T Comm Agenda, Wed July 8, 2026 Bike Ped Presentation

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Scsmedia

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Jul 5, 2026, 5:40:11 PM (9 days ago) Jul 5
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I just noticed that we have been put on the S&T committee agenda for Wednesday, July 8, 2026.  See the attached Agenda.

Has the committee leadership been advised of this?

Steven Scharf
Portland City Council Sustainability & Transportation Comm Agenda, Wed July 8, 2026.pdf

Lucy Climer-Kennedy

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Jul 6, 2026, 12:26:09 PM (8 days ago) Jul 6
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Yes Leadership input would be great!

As far as talking points go the goal is to give the why, what and how of the twenty is plenty campaign. Right? Anything else? I am willing and able to put together a little slide deck for this if desired.

Best,

Lucy


From: 'Scsmedia' via Portland Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee <PB...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, 05 July 2026 17:40:05
To: Bike List -- Google Google Group <pb...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [PBPAC] Portland City Council S&T Comm Agenda, Wed July 8, 2026 Bike Ped Presentation
 
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Zack Barowitz

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Jul 6, 2026, 12:45:13 PM (8 days ago) Jul 6
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One point that I would like enforced (and maybe I should submit this as written comment) is that society has become increasingly bureaucratic. The amount of forms, surveys, and administrative work in our lives is constantly increasing and unfortunately, it slows down the execution of actual work  (Consider, for instance, that Franklin arterial was built in like a year and a half, Whereas we are 20 years into the planning phase of the restoration with no shovel in sight). 
So when it comes to pedestrian and bicycle safety, plans, studies, resolutions are all fine but what actual on the ground projects are going to get done in the next six months, one year, five years?
Zack 


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Winston Lumpkins

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Jul 6, 2026, 1:08:09 PM (8 days ago) Jul 6
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We are aware and working on it, though we only found out by looking at the agenda that this was really happening & not just a request made by Councilor Sykes.  

I think the plan is to make a case for transparent crash response & 20 is plenty, making sure to present the legal way we can make that happen. 

 I will let you know if we need help!  

-Winston





Winston Lumpkins IV (he/him/his)

Past Chair, Portland Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Committee
https://www.portlandbikeped.org/

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George Rheault

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Jul 7, 2026, 10:14:47 AM (7 days ago) Jul 7
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No disagreement about public projects being a lot harder to pull off today than in decades past but THEY WERE STILL HARD EVEN BEFORE THE 1970s.

The genesis of the Franklin Arterial was in the mid-1950s and arguably as far back as the early 1940s.  A lot of pieces had to fall into place and since the federal government funded most of the cost (via highway funding and its handmaiden "slum clearance" programs), it took quite a while for the various "local matches" to get proper sign-off to get the eligible federal investments.   

This time lag and foot-dragging was a major reason why the "blight" of certain parts of central downtown (cynically redefined as "Bayside" so as to set them off from the rest of downtown that was to be preserved and enhanced at the expense of "Bayside") got much worse and REAL NOT JUST IMAGINED between the 1950s and by the time the full length of I-295 finally opened to thru traffic in 1974/1975.  Lots of Portlanders trying to decide to "hang on" for a brighter Portland peninsula gave up especially if they had the resources to decamp for the suburbs.    

Actual construction of Franklin Arterial was fairly swift BUT one of the legacy's of that is any reconstruction of Franklin now requires a lot more civil engineering and subsurface preparation because the initial building was shoddy and cut corners that today cannot be overlooked (drainage, etc.).  That has for sure elevated the price tag and made it all but impossible for any local effort to succeed without a massive federal or state contribution which is not easy to come by (even if the Biden years gave us more hope than at any recent time).

The only way for Portland to pull off this project mostly by itself in the next 15 years or so is to encourage a VERY high density all along its length and create a TIF improvement district that directs new tax revenue and infrastructure investment from big new buildings into a fund that pays for much of the new road plan and reconnecting of the original urban grid.  Unfortunately, the possibilities here have been severely reduced with so much land already given over to affordable housing tax credit projects which themselves need big public subsidies that leave nothing with which to help subsidize a reinvented Franklin corridor.   

Instead of being a catalyst for a new Franklin, the work of the Portland Housing Authority over the last 20 years has probably made it impossible to renew Franklin into anything much different from what is now there (the consolation prize is that the PHA has created some new housing along Franklin's edges though a fraction of what could have been built had a more aggressive vision been applied).


Zack Barowitz

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Jul 7, 2026, 10:52:07 AM (7 days ago) Jul 7
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Thanks for the background George. Franklin should be lines with 12-story housing with no side setbacks. Aside from everything else
It would look better. 

Myles pointed out that it’s taken 3 months to replace the curb ramps/aprons  on Deering Ave and they are still far from done. 


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Scsmedia

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Jul 7, 2026, 11:18:34 AM (7 days ago) Jul 7
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The ramps in Bracket and Walker Street and Brackett and Neal Street are being finished this week.  They woke me up at 8 am with brick cutting.  It has also been several weeks and I was about to send a message to Mike Murray about it.

Very illogical way of proceeding.  Tear up the sidewalk, leave it for weeks and then comeback and finish in a couple of days.  Could it all not be done together?

BTW, there was no neighborhood conversation about this, they just came in and picked random corners to add tipdowns to.

Inline image

Also, Walker Street got paved.  Funny thing is the street work to just two days while the sidewalks several weeks.  And did they add tipdowns to the Congress Street end?  No.

Steven Scharf





Derek Pelletier

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Jul 7, 2026, 11:28:07 AM (7 days ago) Jul 7
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The same thing happened out here on Woodford St this spring. The sidewalk was impassable for anyone in a wheelchair or pushing a stroller for several weeks between when the ramps were ripped up and when they were eventually replaced. 

Cary Tyson

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Jul 10, 2026, 8:56:37 AM (4 days ago) Jul 10
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It'd be great to get some Greater Portland area input. Linked above. 

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Zack Barowitz

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Jul 13, 2026, 9:43:50 AM (23 hours ago) Jul 13
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I took the survey. I'm not sure how useful it is as a tool for telling me my comfort level typology but I assume they'll put the data they collect to productive use.
Zack

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