I'd be hard-pressed to put a good spin on this, though mayoral candidate Smitherman is certainly trying his best. Smitherman is jumping on the rhetoric bandwagon and is calling for a 'moratorium' on bike lanes in Toronto. In the meanwhile the 2011 money for bike lanes will go to repaving the bike lanes that are deteriorating such as Sherbourne.
Smitherman is reading the polls and figures that it's better to appease the loud car-centrists who are getting a lot of play in the media, rather than accommodate the needs of 8-years and 80-years old folks on bikes.
One the one hand, Smitherman certainly understand the importance of bike lanes on arterials and isn't promising to remove them, but on the other hand, it becomes increasingly hard to maintain the already very slow progress on bike lanes and infrastructure when a moratorium is put in place. And it certainly begs the question: if this is mainly a communication problem, why not just communicate better (or work better at winning the rhetoric war in the media) while improving the cycling infrastructure?
Someone needs to call Smitherman on this bullshit approach. Mothers, children, elders and all, are you willing to get in the face of Smitherman and Rocco to let them know you exist and want to feel safe cycling on the roads?
I usually prefer to maintain some degree of decorum on this blog, but this pisses me off to no end. So I'll float this slogan as a rallying cry:
Say no to the moratorium on safety!
Toronto needs a "time out" from the creation of new bike lanes - and mayoralty candidate George Smitherman said that if elected, he'll pause the city's Bike Plan to give the city a chance to come up with a more comprehensive transportation strategy.
"What's necessary is for everyone to take a time out here," said Smitherman in an exclusive interview with Toronto Community News. "Obviously we have a lot of people on tenterhooks around these issues overall. It's appropriate to have a mature conversation about it."
Smitherman, widely considered a front-runner in the 2010 mayor's race, maintained that he is supportive of continuing to create bike lanes on city roads - and unlike candidate Rocco Rossi, he's fine with putting bike lanes on major arterial roads.
"In terms of suggesting bicycles should be relegated to crescents and cul-de-sacs, this is akin to saying you're not in favour of the City of Toronto being a modern city," said Smitherman. "I don't think it's leadership to take the language of the war on the car and flip it on its head and say, 'the war on the car has had its go at city hall, I'm going to advance the war on the bike.'"
Smitherman maintained that Toronto's Bike Plan, which was first approved by Toronto Council, has not been adequately communicated to Toronto residents - and it might be better applied in the context of a broader transportation plan.
He offered no timetable for how long it would take to devise such a plan.
"I'm not sure what the appropriate length of time is," he said. "But we have a good skill set among the people who are able to help do this stuff. This is a moratorium, but it's not a moratorium as a strategy for death - it's to stop, have an appropriate conversation and make sure the plans are integrated. When you surprise people the first instinct of a surprised community is to dig its heels in."
Smitherman said he'd put what money there was for the creation of bike lanes in 2011 into road repairs along existing bike lanes - particularly Sherbourne, which he called "practically a corduroy road."
Smitherman has earlier in the campaign questioned other bike lane projects, notably the controversial plan to put bike lanes on a reconstructed Jarvis Street.
The current Bike Plan aims to build 500 kilometres of on-road bike lanes across the city. Cycling advocates have been pushing hard to have the creation of new bike lanes accelerated.
This year, the city will paint bike lanes on Jarvis Street as it's being reconstructed, and there are plans in the works to put bike lanes on University Avenue.
Yvonne Banbrick of the Toronto Cyclist's Union said there's no reason to slow down the plan now.
"I think (a time out) would be a huge mistake - we have waited too long," said Banbrick.
"The bike plan was approved by city council in 2001 and we have had snails-pace progress on implementation. The idea of waiting some more is irresponsible on the part of any government. That's no way to accommodate massive growth in commuter cycling in our city."
Banbrick said she understood that the argument about the "war on cars" has created tensions.
"The rhetoric around the war on cars is a waste of everybody's energy and it's causing unnecessary friction," she said. "There's never been a war. We're talking about how we move people in our city, and more and more taxpaying Torontonians are choosing cycling as their main mode of transportation."
Comments
jamesmallon (not verified)
&%$# Toronto
Tue, 03/09/2010 - 18:01This is the moment where I have decided to take that job out of province. Goodbye Toronto; good riddance.
Mitch (not verified)
Take care
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 00:55You were too erratic to be of use here, anyway.
Goober McFly (not verified)
*Rolls eyes*
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 09:16This is the longest farewell on several forums, jamesmallon, Hope your adopted utopia never lets you down.
dances_with_traffic (not verified)
Get your priorities straight idiot.
Tue, 03/09/2010 - 18:34This man is all sizzle and no steak, if elected he is promising to dither, stall and gamble with Toronto's future.
To be honest, we've had a moratorium on bicycle lanes for a long time now anyways. If this man manages to destroy cyclists hopes then maybe it is time for the kinder side of toronto to start looking at moving to other cities like montreal or vancouver.
He basically lost my vote and maybe i'll also vote with my feet/tax dollars if nothing positive happens for cyclists...
Tom Flaherty
One
Tue, 03/09/2010 - 23:30Smitherman gets exactly one vote in City Council, so just as Miller couldn't mandate the implementation of Bike Lanes, neither will Smitherman be able stop such work on his own.
With 2010 being an election year, my expectation for new Bike Lanes is flat. My guess is that Smitherman knows this and is trying to leverage some much needed attention out of a touchy subject.
The best thing to counter commentary like this is to organize and educate people in your own neighbourhood (e.g.: the Bike Union’s Ward Advocacy). Then when somebody makes a ridiculous statement it works to label them as a fool and not some hero of a misguided public.
anthony
Smitherman's Imagination is equal to Oates'
Tue, 03/09/2010 - 23:25Smitherman sounding like he's taking a page out former Councillor Case Oates' play book; he is searching for a diplomatic way to delay, or even kill, the implementation of the Bike Plan. Smitherman is also sounding like he is reacting to Rossi rather than being proactive on this issue, as well as on other issues.
If there were truly a war going on, then it sounds like he's asking for a ceasefire; just at the very time that we've making some, albeit slow, progress -- Is this because cyclists are actually (being perceived as) a threat?
We are nine years into a ten year plan, but we only have 40% of the infrastructure completed. This year we're expected to get another 30km of trails, and at most 30km of new bike lanes approved. We still have 600km to go... A moratorium is not that different than the snail's pace we already have.
In addition, other cities, like Chicago, stole Toronto's Bike Plan and actually started implementing it. Now other cities look around and see Chicago doing stuff with cycling, and they think that the plan actually came from Chicago. Back in 1995 the city of Toronto was a leader in cycling, now we're not even a player with the big boys. Yet we're the ones who invented the Bike Plan that the leading cities are using; we just never got around to doing anything with it.
Year after year City Council has repeatedly decreased and/or suppressed the cycling promotion budget. Is Smitherman looking to put out some short-term propaganda to promote the idea of bike lanes? Or is he earnestly going to promote the idea of year-round urban cycling for transportation and recreation, including its bike lanes and the rest of the bike plan, with proper and sustained cycling promotion funding?
A plan provides both a goal, or destination, as well as something to deviate from. The City's Bike Plan has been more of the "something to deviate from" kind of plan. In some ways the Bike Plan has been opportunistic about the placement of bike lanes (like Jarvis). At the same time this flexibility has allowed itself to be delayed or diverted (like Horner). A more firm plan would lose all of these opportunistic opportunities, but it really could help put the implementation on track; the risk here is that it would be totally the wrong track.
Every Council would like to make it's own plans. But the reality is they never have enough time to work with all of the city's divisions, react to day-today matters, and budget for the existing plans. In the three or four years that a Council sits, it is really lucky of they get to make one plan for one division during their term. The reality is that staff do most of the planning and the Councillors take most of the credit. The other reality is that all of the City's plans are constantly evolving.
One thing that Smitherman really sounds like he is really attempting to articulate is increasing the integration of the Cycling Program and Bike Plan within Transportation services, and in particular, it's planning department. What I find fascinating is how Dan Egan said last night that this integration is already happening, and is continuously increasing, within Transportation Services. Dan mentioned two specific examples of this increased integration last night when he and Lukasz were talking about the state of good repair and the timing for installation of approved Bike lanes, specifically the integration with construction (ie Capital Works) and operations. Transportation planning staff are already including cycling infrastructure in their plans.
Another consideration to realize here is that the TTC does it's own public transit planning, and these plans are only sometimes in sync with the city's larger transportations goals and plans. This is largely a budget constraint issue, but there are other factors and priorities that the TTC has to manage.
The one criticism that I have of our own bike plan, and the only thing that I would change about it immediately, is its modest goal of wanting to only double the number of trips made by bicycle. This goal was achieved long ago, and we should be looking at regional and city-wide targets of the ratio of bike trips, that is modal share. That is I'd like the bike plan to have an ambitious goal of trying to get 20% of all trips in the city made by bicycle in ten years, with 50% of all trips in the core done by bike. And if this is what Smitherman's talking about then I'd be all for it. But I'm not sure that he's articulating this well right now, or if this is even within his understanding yet.
Me, I can't be sure what to make of Smitherman. He wants to position himself as being different than Rossi; yet his proposed 'moratorium' would have exactly the same effect as Rossi's.
One thing is sure to me. Few, if any, of the outside candidates truly seem to understand how cycling fits into our transportation system, or into our communities. My last question: Is the point he's trying to make simply that he doesn't understand the value of cycling to our community and to our city?
Ed
Bicycling as transportation? Poorly known!
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 18:07One thing is sure to me. Few, if any, of the outside candidates truly seem to understand how cycling fits into our transportation system, or into our communities. My last question: Is the point he's trying to make simply that he doesn't understand the value of cycling to our community and to our city?
I think that's pretty much true in general for the non-cycling population. They don't have to be the "raging caroholics" often mentioned here to be touchingly clueless about what should be done to make cycling a greater part of transportation. There are so many people who sincerely believe that all cyclists want to have places to bicycle pretty much away from any cars. They are genuinely surprised that anyone would want to cycle on an arterial street. The fact that arterials are direct routes, and businesses are on the arterials, doesn't seem to penetrate.
I complained to Pam McConnell about the lousy pavement on Sherbourne when I lived in St. Jamestown, five years ago. The pavement still hasn't been fixed???
jamesmallon (not verified)
Enjoy
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 11:37Whatever, dudes. Enjoy your city with so much potential, missed... and missed... and missed.
hamish (not verified)
Smitherman's BS performance was bad...
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 14:37For me, the new BS is Bloor St. Even though two provincial rules/policies were/are being flouted by the Bloor St work in Yorkville, Mr. Smitherman never bothered to respond, and it seems didn't care, like the rest of the province about their green legislation.
So yes, to Tom's points about organizing, and part of the process of doing outreach is being willing to actually listen to other people (maybe it's hard for folks to be thinking of me saying that...)
And yes, TO has sooo many failed opportunities and shortcomings James - I don't follow things enough to catch all your comments, but I've sensed sense.
Safe trips.
kevcomm (not verified)
Maybe he's talking nonsense to get votes
Wed, 03/10/2010 - 20:03Maybe he's talking nonsense to get more votes, and then when he wins, he'll open up to the BikePlan and steadfastly implement it. Or is that illegal; do mayoral candidates have to take an oath against false promises?