• To Preserve Ghettos, African American Councilman wants to remove pa

    From JQ@21:1/5 to Garrison Hilliard on Sat Dec 24 14:51:19 2016
    XPost: rec.bicycles.misc, soc.culture.african.american

    On 12/23/2016 11:23 PM, Garrison Hilliard wrote:
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    Chris Wetterich

    Staff reporter and columnist

    Cincinnati Business Courier









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    The Central Parkway protected bike lane is the first of its kind in
    Ohio.














    Cincinnati Councilman Christopher Smitherman wants nearly a half mile
    of the Central Parkway protected bikeway removed.

    Smitherman filed a motion set to be introduced at Wednesday’s City
    Council meeting directing the administration to remove a 0.4-mile
    portion of the bikeway roughly between Central Avenue and Liberty
    Street in Over-the-Rhine.

    That portion of the bikeway passes in front of Findlay Market, and on
    the weekends vehicles often are limited to two lanes because of cars
    parked on the street near the market. That portion of the bike lane
    also passes in front of the local Fraternal Order of Police lodge.

    “I remain concerned about safety issues related to the bike lanes in
    this designated area,” Smitherman wrote on his motion.


    Smitherman also submitted a letter from Robert Schwartz, a CUF
    resident, asking that the lanes be removed and listing 16 reasons why
    they should go.

    "The location of the Federal (sic) Order of Police building (1900
    Central Parkway), and other areas along the parkway, suddenly restrict traffic to one lane in each direction," Schwartz wrote. "That mile
    long area is probably the most dangerous of the whole stretch of
    Central Parkway. Many park in front of that building at any time with impunity."

    Motions are not binding by law, only ordinances are. Without a
    majority of council signing Smitherman’s motion, it’s unlikely City
    Manager Harry Black’s administration would act upon it.

    A majority of members of the Cincinnati City Council are staunch
    supporters of the city’s first bike lanes that are separated from cars
    using bollards. The Clifton and Over-the-Rhine community councils also
    wrote City Council members backing the idea of having a protected bike
    lane on Central Parkway. In the case of OTR’s council, it asked for
    the lanes' completion to Ludlow Avenue as was contemplated when the
    first phase of the bike lane was implemented.

    “Central Parkway is a perfect street for a protected bike lane because
    it links so many neighborhoods with a high percentage of people who
    ride bikes: Northside, Clifton, Clifton Heights, West End,
    Over-the-Rhine and the Central Business District,” wrote OTR Community Council president Ryan Messer. “There has not been an impact on
    traffic and ridership numbers continue to rise. When the bike lane is completed with a protected lane to and from Ludlow, we expect
    ridership to grow even more.”




    The bike lane has been a political football since it was installed in
    2014, in part by using a $500,000 grant. It is now seen as another
    front in the ongoing fight between progressive urbanists, who favor
    rail transit and want to see the city’s streets made more friendly for pedestrians and bicyclists, and Mayor John Cranley, who tried to kill
    the streetcar in 2013 and opposes on-street bike lanes, features that
    many cities are embracing as they try to attract businesses and
    millennial workers who don’t want to have to drive a car everywhere.

    Wetterich covers government and politics, transportation and downtown development.

    http://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2016/02/24/councilman-wants-to-remove-part-of-central-parkway.html















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    Your post title is misleading, has nothing to do with the article and racially inflamatoy! If you disagreed with the councilman you could give reasons why and which of his points didn't apply.




























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