Word on the Streets

March at the Minneapolis BAC


On March 26th, the Minneapolis Bicycle Advisory Committee (BAC) held a meeting in City Hall. We heard updates from the engineering and encouragement subcommittees, and then many BACers left to meet with Kelley Yemen, Hennepin County's new bike-ped coordinator, for a happy hour.



Engineering

The engineering subcommittee reported that they’re working with the city to improve bicycle-detection at stop lights. There are a lot of different options! The cheapest option is a battery-powered detector that they bury under a few inches of pavement. It doesn’t work very well. Video cameras are better at detecting cyclists, and not as expensive as you’d expect. Beg buttons get a bad rap, but a new generation expedites bike and pedestrian traffic after the button is pushed. The one at Park Ave. and 27th St. gives the “walk” sign just five seconds after initiation. You can find these cool new beg buttons at 27th St. and Park Ave., 40th St. and Cedar Ave., and 5th St. NE and Broadway.



The engineering subcommittee also talked about the goal of connecting the bike path on the Stone Arch Bridge to the Dinkytown Greenway. Apparently there are problems getting the railroad owners to go along. Regardless, the Dinkytown Greenway will get “wayfinding” enhancements, like new map kiosks and stairways to enhance access to the street level.



Encouragement

The encouragement subcommittee reported on the six Open Streets events that will happen this summer, the first of which following the route of the (prospective) North Minneapolis Greenway on May 31. The other streets to be opened are Nicollet Ave S, Lyndale Ave S, Franklin Ave E, Central Ave NE, and Lowry Ave N. Get involved!



Of course, if you can’t wait until Open Streets to volunteer, there’s Bike Week, which will kick off at the May Day Parade in Powderhorn on Sunday, May 4th (Star Wars Day). 



How else can we encourage cyclists? Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition executive director Ethan Fawley gave the subcommittee a wishlist that included a downtown bike center and a way to designate and encourage bike-friendly businesses.  



Come back in a month for another BAC update.


New Hennepin County bike ped coordinator brings pragmatic approach


Hennepin County’s new bicycle and pedestrian coordinator Kelley Yemen stressed pragmatism at her presentation at a March 26th Happy Hour Q & A event hosted by the Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition.



“We cannot let perfect be the enemy of good,” Yemen said.



Yemen, who replaced Rose Ryan as the county’s bicycle and pedestrian coordinator on February 10th, brings four years of experience with the New York City Department of Transportation to the job. A native Minnesotan, Yemen shared some examples of scrappy solutions when full blown bicycle facilities are not feasible or in the budget.



She said the NYC DoT would use just about any tool to improve the bicycle and pedestrian experience including bollards, paint, intersection treatments, unorthodox striping, signage, planters and shrubbery.



Incremental Change



Yemen acknowledged that reducing vehicle congestion and allowing greater driving speeds have dominated transportation decisions for too long, but cautioned against trying to take too much away from vehicular traffic in just one project.



“If you incrementally work on [these projects], you can take care of some of the traffic problems [but you shouldn’t try] and take it away all at once,” she said, “because you’re just going to lose your political leverage.”



Near the end of her speech,Yemen spoke briefly about the Hennepin County Bicycle Plan. After the initial outreach of the previous fall and winter, Yemen said that they are at a phase where they are completing their analysis and composing a draft of the plan. Yemen said Hennepin County will be seeking comments its county-wide Bike Map and other draft documents it will release on the Hennepin County website. The official public comment period will start in June.



Takeaways from the Q & A



In the Q & A session which followed, Yemen addressed the concerns from the audience while admitting she is stilling getting up to speed after about six weeks on the job. Here are a few of her comments:




  • On the situation at Franklin and Lyndale Avenues: “An important lesson is to study [the vehicle counts] so that you know how to deal with the traffic. [We are] looking at what we can do … to create a better intersection there.”


  • On how to change motor vehicle driving patterns: “Banning [right turns] is a hard one. It was amazing in New York [because turning] right on a red is universally banned in New York City, and it’s the one traffic law that everybody follows for some reason. Everything else they ignore, but no one turns right on a red.”


  • On converting four lane streets into three lane streets: “We’re working with [the City of] Minneapolis right now on a four-to-three conversion on Cedar Avenue between Riverside and Sixth Street. Hennepin County is open to doing it where the volume allows.”


  • On finding alternative solutions to traffic problems: “County roads are the major traffic roads for a lot of Minneapolis and the rest of the county. Something we can maybe work within the county is how we’re doing our traffic studies with our signal timing. Some of that [involves] working with Minneapolis because Minneapolis controls the signal timing for all the roads [within it], including county roads.”



In closing, Yemen said she welcomes input and the best way to contact her would be by email at [email protected].



Reactions from the audience



The bicyclists in the crowd may have grilled Yemen with some challenging questions, but their reaction to her presentation was mostly positive.



Tim Donahue said that he came to the event with a very open mind, and joked that he would have loved to hear that “we were going to just bump cars out of the way.”



Speaking more seriously, Donahue said he was glad that members of the Minneapolis Bicycle Advisory Committee were in the audience and asking Yemen the “tough questions” as well as continuing to represent his interests in as cyclist and that he was excited to see more riders around. “You can see the increased ridership. I don’t need to look at studies; you can tell that ridership is increasing,” he said. “And especially along the greenway I’m seeing new people on bikes.”



University of Minnesota grad student Kelsey Fogt and her friend Lauren Johnson were impressed by Yemen’s stories about the difficulties they faced in New York City and how they were able to solve their problems creatively, citing a story Yemen told about how bit by bit, the NYC Department of Transportation was able to transform the major thoroughfare of Broadway from serving predominantly cars to serving pedestrians and bicyclists with minimal capital.



Johnson was impressed that Yemen wanted to study traffic data before giving her recommendation on Franklin Avenue. At the same time, Johnson agreed with several other audience members that numerous areas on Franklin Avenue need a great deal of improvement in order to make it safer for bicyclists, because the current reality on Franklin is not good.



Minneapolis Bicycle Advisory Committee (BAC) member Paul Frenz asked Yemen if she would attend a BAC meeting to discuss areas for bicycle improvements. Yemen welcomed the idea and promised to seek the BAC’s input.

 


Hennepin-Lyndale project needs improvement from starting point

On March 25, the City hosted the first of three public open houses about a $9.1 million project to fully reconstruct some parts of the Hennepin-Lyndale commons area in front of the Walker Arts Center. (Picture at left shows comments from last night; image from Matt Brillhart.) The open house included significant details about the plans for the driving parts of the project, but surprising little about walking and biking improvements. (Details will be online soon; my pictures didn't turn out great.)

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