Monday, August 4, 20141 Comment
How Brownsville, Texas, Is Using Bikes to Address Social Problems
This post is part of a series featuring stories and research that will be presented at the Pro-Walk/Pro-Bike/Pro-Place conference September 8-11 in Pittsburgh.
Brownsville, a Texas border town, is frequently cited as one of the poorest cities in the country. It also has one of the highest obesity rates.
But local officials have taken on some of the city’s health problems. And one of the key tools they’re using is cycling.
Planning Director Ramiro Gonzalez says it’s been about two years since the city of 180,000 people — 93 percent of them Latino — began its cycling push. City Commissioner Rose Gowen, a doctor, made health-based initiatives a key part of her agenda.
“It really started at the level of getting people active to improve [their] health,” Gonzalez said.
Since then, the city has implemented a complete streets policy and adopted the National Association of City Transportation Officials‘ Urban Bikeway Design Guide — which, unlike older American engineering guidelines, includes protected bike lanes.
The city has been putting that guidance to good use, adding about 30 miles of bike lanes in the last year.
But once you have bike infrastructure, how do you get people to use it? City leaders brought in livable streets expert Gil Penalosa, former director of parks, sports, and recreation for BogotΓ‘, Colombia. He got the idea of an open streets or cyclovia event percolating. This year, Brownsville has held eight open streets events, which it calls CycloBia, clearing major downtown avenues of car traffic and opening them to active play. The city is planning two more before the year’s end
The first few started out with about 2,000 or 3,000 participants, but attendance has grown steadily. The latest event attracted more than 12,000 people.
One unique aspect of Brownsville’s CycloBia is that because of high summer temperatures, the city holds its open streets events at night. Gonzalez said he’s not aware of any other city in the country doing it that way. But the 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. hours seem to be working well.
Lisa Mitchell-Bennett wrote in the Brownsville Herald that she always found it unpleasant to bike with her children in downtown Brownsville until this event.
“The streets belonged to the people — all kinds of people — and it was beautiful,” she wrote. “While we easily crossed International Boulevard, a friendly man in a uniform asked us how we were enjoying the day. My daughter, usually shy with police officers, shouted out ‘It’s awesome!’”
For each event, the city has rented about 75 bikes from BikeTexas, an advocacy group based in Austin. People wait as long as 45 minutes for a chance to rent one.
“People inherently want to be active,” said Gonzalez. “But there’s always an excuse — ‘Well it’s not safe.’ What we’ve learned is if you provide a safe environment, people come out of the woodwork with their bikes.”
The next goal for Brownsville’s bike initiative is to develop a “bike shop,” a low-cost modification of bike-share: a city-owned facility where people can rent bikes by providing an ID or credit card.
Despite the city’s sprawling footprint, Gonzalez says residents have embraced cycling in a way that has surprised even leading proponents.
“Every time I go to one of these events, I find someone who says, ‘I’ve been biking all my life,’ or, ‘I bike to work,’” said Gonzalez. “A year and a half ago we probably would have said nobody in Brownsville commutes to work on a bike.”
“We just want to keep the momentum going,” he said.
Funny how the writing is better on this post. LOL!!!
ReplyDeleteActually, it's the point of view that warms your cockles, Ramiro.
DeleteI think everyone is missing the true science involve here. Wee have discovered a machine that runs entirely on nothing but bullshit.It is an incredible breakthrough in energy independence.
DeleteNice PR package of total bullshit and lies. However, they did do one thing correctly. I think it is a great idea to get someone from Bogota to come and show the locals how things are done in Colombia. Brownsville and Bogota certainly have a lot in common. By the way, when I clicked on Gil Penalosca, I was sent to a page with a date of Monday, June 4, 2012 for an talk that took place in San Francisco.
ReplyDeleteHow the hell can these people lok in the mirror with such bull shit like 12,000 people?
ReplyDeleteThese morons are full of shit! What they do is run a counting line across the most traveled piece of the cyclobia track and as people ride over and over they are counted as different people. What Rose COWan forgets to mention is exactly how much money is WASTED on this stupid event.
ReplyDeleteWhile looking around for a health issue to promote in Brownsville, I understand that colon cleansing as a way to promote good health was looked at. It didn’t make the cut when someone pointed out that getting everyone downtown for a community event was, “Kind of gross”
ReplyDeleteTime to call Penn Jillette. This looks like a full hour episode of "Bullshit" to me.
ReplyDeleteSOUTH PADRE ISLAND — McAllen spent nearly $9,500 more than it did the year before - a 64-percent jump - for more city officials to gather at a hotel and talk about where they see the city going in the next year. The city doled out $24,260 on its annual retreat on South Padre Island, where elected officials and top-level administrators met last month for an overview on goals and projects they’ll face in the next 12 months. Last year, they spent around $14,700.
ReplyDeleteThe annual retreat on the Island resumed in 2013 after holding it at the McAllen Convention Center for a few years to cut costs during the recession.
McAllen Mayor Jim Darling said crossing the Queen Isabella Memorial Bridge allows commissioners to focus on the matters at hand rather than family and work back home because it’s far enough away that they stick around for the whole retreat.
“It’s to stop people from going to meetings and taking lunch and then they don’t come back,” Darling said.
The city paid for Darling, the six city commissioners and five other administrators to stay at the Hilton Garden Inn and two other city employees next door at the La Quinta Inn & Suites.
First of all, please explain to the idiot Mayor of McAllen the difference between a bridge and a causeway. If he is in need of empirical explanation, cross over to Reynosa, that is a fucking bridge. By the way, maybe they should have had their dip shit meetings in Reynosa. The bullets whizzing by their empty heads would surely keep them from falling asleep out of boredom.
DeleteYou're the idiot. Falling asleep is falling asleep, for whatever reason. Your ESL is showing, Maria...
DeleteHey, 3 dots (...). Is it HIM?
DeleteWhat the city of mcallen does has nothing to do with the post....as for the mayor calling it a bridge... two years after it's accident that claimed several victims ; the causeway was re - named Queen Isabella Bridge in memory of the victims.
DeleteWhat does misnaming the causeway have to do with a memorial? Why didn't they call it the Queen Isabella Memorial Causeway? Here it is spelled out for you.
DeleteA causeway is a road that is raised above something. A bridge is something that allows you to cross an obstacle. A bridge generally has a superstructure which supports the lanes, like the Golden Gate Bridge. Key West is an example of a COMBINATION of bridges and causeways. You can drive along highway one, hopping from island to island over hundreds of bridges and causeways, until you reach Key West over 100 miles southwest of the Florida mainland. The length between Port Isabel and South Padre Island is a CAUSEWAY, not a bridge.
Don't matter how many definitions you post. that's the official name.
DeleteNice to know that local ignorance is "official". Keep up the good work and be the laughing stock of the world. It does follow a pattern. The "Valley" is not a valley. It is a delta, only named a valley by the original land speculators to dupe the settlers from the Mid-West into thinking it was like California. The "Valley" began its history on a note of duplicity and continues the fine tradition today. Oh, by the way, be sure the to read the history where the local land sharks dropped blocks of ice into shallow, muddy wells to fool the buyers into thinking they were "Artesian" deep water wells. While you are at it, why not rename Jackass Flats the "Painted Desert"?
DeleteRose Gowen, Hillary Clinton: Different women, same load off total bullshit.
ReplyDeleteNeed to include MOOOOOOOOOOOOOCHELLE LA BECERA NEGRA too LMAO
DeleteWell, at least the guys from McAllen deserve a good nice stay at the Island, they have done a pretty good job in McAllen a City growing every day and attracting new business daily, comparing to Brownsville's self serving, arrogant, stock up, good for nothing bunch.
ReplyDeleteThis looks like a big old push to get the Appendix of Planning shooed in as the BCIC Director.
ReplyDeleteSo, the the Appendix of Planning become anointed by that Bike Crazed Bitch to become the Foreskin of BCIC?
Delete