Hope you weren’t counting on that California ebike rebate this year.
Calbike reports the program should launch sometime in 2023. Although we were told to expect it this year, too.
So maybe don’t hold your breath.
And the rebates, which are expected to be between $750 and $1,250 for a standard e-bike, and $1,500 or more for a cargo or adaptive bike, will be limited to Californians earning up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level.
Which is currently $18,755 for someone living alone, $25,268 for two people, and $38,295 for a family of four.
So I’m good, anyway.
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You still have time to demand protected bike lanes on Fountain Ave, which is stirring up a lot of opposition among drivers in West Hollywood — and at least some of the city council candidates.
Okay, maybe request is a better word.
Tell the City of West Hollywood you want protected bike lanes on Fountain! The survey has been extended to November 13 – https://t.co/u8hI1avs0u pic.twitter.com/Ok4AF3q2BD
— Streets For All (@streetsforall) October 23, 2022
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Montebello is presenting their new bike master plan at Wednesday’s city council meeting, which starts at 5 pm.
City of Montebello staff is delivering a presentation on their bike master plan and bike racks at their council meeting on Wednesday at 6pm. Please share with South East LA folks. Montebello currently has no bike racks at their library+city hall+city parks and only 2 bike lanes
— Slow down (@bikingaroundla) October 23, 2022
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The Port of Los Angeles wants to give your group funding to help get people out of cars, presumably to offset the harm they cause to the environment.
Although it’s unclear whether it applies to organizations outside of Long Beach.
Is your organization considering a project encouraging more people to bike or walk instead of drive? You may qualify for funding through the #POLB Community Grants Program. We're hosting a virtual workshop at 4 p.m. Wed., Nov. 2, to learn more & register: https://t.co/nV5C9flEX4 pic.twitter.com/p0mcAAgdhF
— Port of Long Beach (@portoflongbeach) October 20, 2022
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Santa Barbara officials will conduct a living experiment in what works, after removing green bike lanes separating bike riders from pedestrians on the city’s pedestrianized main street.
Meanwhile, a local newspaper complains about Complete Streets changes planned for the city’s streets, saying the original street grid laid out by a sea captain 170 years ago works just fine, dammit. And that no one can predict what changes will come in the coming years.
Sort of like bicycles, cars, trucks and SUVs did since 1850, which the farsighted the captain must have planned for, evidently.
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VanMoof meets Peter Max. Style-wise, anyway.
"Rethink the city. Reimagine the future" video promo for VanMoof urban electric bicycles
Illustrator: Jim Stoten
2021
?? pic.twitter.com/NElOOXmwcn
— Cool Bike Art ? (@CoolBikeArt1) October 21, 2022
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Mission Viejo city council candidates discuss ebike safety, with several going out of their way to demonstrate they aren’t familiar with California’s ebike regulations. Or bike law in general, for that matter.
Something is seriously wrong when a road raging Dublin, Ireland cabbie walks with a suspended sentence for deliberately brake checking, then crashing into a man on a bicycle, who wasn’t doing a damn thing wrong. As if anything could justify that, anyway.
In a brilliant display of windshield bias, a road raging Aussie tradesman gets out of his car and screams at a couple bicyclists for riding below the speed limit on a roundabout, apparently mistaking the maximum speed for cars with an imagined minimum speed for people on bicycles.
And nothing fits the category like a 37-second compilation of dooring’s greatest hits.
I can’t stop thinking about this video compilation of people on bikes getting doored by people with cars.pic.twitter.com/l5vZlWkF2o
— David Ho (@_david_ho_) October 23, 2022
We Love Cycling lists 14 bicycling faux pas to avoid, including littering, wearing threadbare shorts, and spitting into the wind. Although the item about wearing your glasses outside over your helmet straps so they fly off in a crash is BS; unless you’re wearing cheap breakable lenses, you want them to stay on to protect your eyes.
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LACBC is hosting their annual LA Bike Fest fundraiser at The Bike Shed Moto Co. in the Arts District this Saturday afternoon. General admission starts at $100, or get in free by raising $250 in donations.
San Diego bike advocates complain about plans for painted, door zone bike lanes through downtown La Jolla, saying it retains too much parking and little that would actually improve safety.
Maybe logic isn’t their strong suit. Three months after San Diego officials pledged to achieve carbon neutrality by 2035, they approved spending $22.5 million to widen the freeway through Carmel Valley, apparently concluding that massive highways don’t contribute to climate change.
The state has awarded the Coachella Valley Association of Governments over $36 million in active transportation funds to extend the CV Link bike and pedestrian path through the cities of La Quinta, Indio and Coachella; the completed pathway will run nearly 50 miles through the Coachella Valley.
A Modesto man was lucky to escape with a graze wound after he was shot by a man who then made off with his bicycle.
An op-ed from a pair of Santa Rosa advocates makes the case for reducing car traffic up to 25% by building protected bike lanes. Even a fraction of that would virtually eliminate congestion in Los Angeles.
UC grad student Megan Lynch has kept us informed about the lack of bike safety on the ostensibly bike-friendly UC Davis campus; she should be happy to learn the campus police with shift their focus to traffic safety after 22 crashes involving bikes or e-scooters so far this fall. Meanwhile, university police still haven’t released the results of their investigation into a 19-year old student killed in a collision by a campus employee five months ago.
The founder and CEO of EV truck maker Rivian says expects to see increasing reliance on ebikes in the years to come.
Good advice, as Cycling Savvy offers tips on how to maneuver your way out of a panic situation.
BestLife recommends the top ten US cities to visit on a bicycle, leading off with surprising choices in Spartanburg, South Carolina and Gulf Shores, Alabama. Although their #10 choice Seattle should move up soon, now that former LA Bureau of Streets Services head Greg Spotts is heading the city’s department of transportation.
Nearly 300 Arizona bicyclists turned out to honor a man who was killed by a 19-year old DUI driver as he rode down a local mountain five years ago; the woman who killed him was sentenced to three years earlier this month.
Awful news from Utah, where a five-year old boy was attacked by a husky while riding his bike to a friend’s home, requiring 2,000 to 3,000 stitches on his face and ear, as well as a skin graft; a crowdfunding page has raised over $11,000 of the $15,000 goal for his medical care.
An OKC paper says the city’s low bicycling death rate is deceptive, masking an unacceptably high rate of injuries.
After years of advocating for safer streets, a Cleveland bike shop owner was himself the victim of a hit-and-run; fortunately, he wasn’t seriously injured.
Joe Jonas is one of us, as he goes for a bikeshare ride in New York, sans his famous brothers.
New York Magazine recommends everything you need to go bikepacking, except a bike. Although that would seem to be kind of important, too.
Tragic news from Florida, where friends say they can’t understand why a kindhearted 49-year old man was murdered in a random attack with a tire iron, by a man who admitted the killing without showing any remorse.
A Florida sheriff called for prayers for a bike rider — and the deputy who killed him in what he termed an “unfortunate accident.”
A Winnipeg survey shows fewer people ride bikes compared to four years ago, but do it more often.
Maybe their moms were watching. A group of young men surrounded an English man on a bike and attempted to punch him before stealing his bicycle — then turned around and returned it ten minutes later. Because when a mom says “put that bike back,” you do.
No good deed goes unpunished, as a British man was mugged and his bike stolen while he was helping a family of Ukrainian refugees find a new home.
The UK driver who absurdly claimed his infant son was using his phone when he killed a 42-year old man on a bike was convicted of causing death by dangerous driving, after the jury quickly rejected his argument.
A Dublin research scholar looks to realistic group conflict theory to explain why nearly everyone hates bicyclists.
Ireland is attempting to encourage families to replace cars and SUVs with cargo bikes by increasing the amount allowed under the country’s Bike to Work program to 3,000 euros, equivalent to roughly $2,950.
About time. Spain is eliminating longstanding impunity for drivers who kill; any crash resulting in death or serious injury will now be considered a criminal offense.
A cat rescued in the mountains between Bosnia and Montenegro has traveled through 18 countries, accompanying a Scottish man bicycling around the world.
Cape Town, South Africa’s bicycle mayor wants to boost bike commuting from a lowly one percent to eight percent by 2030. Los Angeles isn’t much higher, but we still don’t have a bicycle mayor — or a goal for boosting ridership.
After a second model from Hong Kong ebike maker Fiido started having problems with broken frames, the company responded with a new five-year extended warranty and a $10,000 guarantee against breakage under normal use. Although that last phrase can be bent a long damn way to avoid paying claims, if they want.
An Aussie paper considers the push to replace second cars with ebikes.
VeloNews looks at the season-end cycling team directeur sportif merry-go-round.
Maybe pro cycling isn’t so green after all. Bicycling reports the recent five-day Tour of Luxembourg resulted in greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to around 226,000 miles in a passenger car, or nine trips around the world. Now imagine what it would be for one of the much larger and longer three-week Grand Tours. As usual, read it on Yahoo if the magazine blocks you.
It’s a sad commentary when we have to turn to Wikipedia just to get the results of the Paracycling Worlds. Thanks to the aforementioned Megan Lynch for the heads-up.
That's a wrap on the 2022 @UCI_paracycling Track World Championships.
Check out some of our favorite ? pic.twitter.com/QhZnpYs2Fj
— Team USA (@TeamUSA) October 23, 2022
Why settle for a mere tandem, when you could have a three-seater, complete with a nifty fringed canopy. Now you, too, can electrify your very own velomobile.
And chances are, this is a book we can all relate to.
I feel seen pic.twitter.com/A8IhYv7fi9
— Mary Pustejovsky (@mpusto) October 23, 2022
Thanks to Ted Faber for the link.
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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.
Oh, and fuck Putin, too.
Your Munich reporter here.
The Santa Barbara pedestrian bike street issue. The concept of having a walking mall where pedestrains can move about freely doesn’t work all that well with cyclists trying to get places, even if that is the other end of the block. I can’t say how touristic that area of Santa Barbara is but central Munich has a lot of tourists.
Munich has several pedestrian areas linked together in the center of the city. The grid has expanded a bit since I moved here. Cyclists are not allowed to ride through the area except after 10 PM and before 6 AM. However there are routes around the pedestrian areas and ways to cross, with care. This seems to work and there are the occasional police efforts to cut down on people riding. $15 spot fine. Plus because of the numbers of pedestrians it isn’t really worth trying to ride.
The solution for SB might be to ban riding except for late night early morning and have the streets on either side made safe for bike riders. This allows thru cyclist traffic to skirt the area along a safe route. Then, since it looks like you have cross streets, riders will at most have to walk in a half block to a destination. Also at those cross streets have adequate bike parking so cyclists don’t have to walk around with their bikes and park where they might be in the way of pedestrians.
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