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Miami Beach Throws Wrench (and not a spoke wrench) in Bike Plans

Mon May 05, 2008 at 09:23:48 AM
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As reported in the Herald (which is so stingy with its online news that the link will be dead by tomorrow - what's up with that?), a majority of Miami Beach City Commissioners voted in the city's neighborhoods committee not to recommend a plan that would put bike lanes on Alton Road and instead endorse one that would feature super-wide sidewalks.

(If this were Canada, we might see bands of renegade bikers painting their own lane.)

The recommendation will be taken into consideration at the next City Commission meeting on May 14.

Of course, the ultimate decision isn't the city's to make -- it's the Florida Department of Transportation's, and that makes things more interesting.

FDOT is obligated by state statue to include bike accommodations where possible. They were recently sued by a Boca Raton bicycling group for refusing to put bike lanes on A1A. They lost - a decision which we hope will scare FDOT into taking bicyclists more seriously.

But right now, the immediate culprit is the city. Miami Beach commissioners have argued the usual litany of nonsense - Alton Road is too busy, there's not enough room on the street, they'd have to remove parking, etc.

The problem is that the city is missing the forest for the trees - or, if you will, the wheel for the spokes. The Beach is packed to capacity with cars, plagued by traffic, and - in case city commissioners haven't noticed - the days of cheap gas are over.

Bicycling, meanwhile, is on the rise: it's on the rise in cities across the country, and it's on the rise here. Whether the city likes it or not, people will use bicycles to get around the beach, and they will (and should) ride in whatever streets they damn well please.

The question is how safe those streets are going to be -- the committee's opinion that bicycles should share the sidewalk, however wide it winds up, is absurd. On a bike, every alley, storefront, driveway, and door is a blind corner; and every pedestrian is an accident waiting to happen.

The Beach can give bikes a lane and ask them to stick to it, or they can sit back and let bikes and cars duke it out for space.

But look out -- one of these days, the bikes might win.

-- Isaiah Thompson

Category: Bike Blog

4 Comments:

Scofflaw says:

I've ridden in SB for a while, bike lane or not - I always take the lane. The drivers are just too crazy and unpredictable to trust. The sidewalks are not ridable by bike > too many pedestrians make it unsafe!

Thanks for the article Isaiah. I'll stick to the roads where I belong.

Kevin Cerino says:

An important fact was left out of this article. The city wants to put a bike lane on West Avenue. That road is has much less traffic and would be a far safer place for bicycles, considering how people drive in South Florida.

Ryan says:

Kevin,

Three problems: 1) Cyclists need access to Alton Rd because it is a commercial street. Putting a bike lane on West Ave makes cyclists second class citizens by forcing them to dismount a block away from the street they actually want to access. Cyclists shouldn't have to do that. 2) Using traffic volumes and a lack of driving skills as arguments not to put a bike lane on a street is a slippery slope because it gives NIMBYs leverage against bike lanes in virtually any scenario. 3) Most of the population is clustered east of Alton Rd, which means if a cyclist wanted to go somewhere on Alton Rd using bike lanes, they'd have to travel out of their way beyond Alton Rd to West Ave, then they'd be faced with problem #1 I mention above.

Alton Rd is absolutely right for bike lanes -- I've ridden my bike on lanes much more heavily trafficked and virtually had no problem (except for pesky, arrogant double parkers, which will always be a problem unless you physically separate the bike lane).

eric machado says:

anyway i am going to alton thats easy ,i like to bike all over miami and do it perfect, any road any speed,people get upset and don't respect bikes so you have to show no fear,bike lanes anyway does not solve the problem of people reckless driving,i think it all starts with respect ,otherwise it is going to keep on this way cars and bikes strugling for space.

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