Search The Tattler

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Bike Plan Reinterpreted: 45th & 53rd Street Bike Blvds Languish


Bike Plan Unilaterally Reinterpreted

City Hall’s New Vision Means Traffic Calming Must Wait for Bike Boulevards

1,143 Cars Per Day Over the Allowable Limit

City Council Refuses to Protect Bicyclists

Level Four Goalposts Moved 


The City of Emeryville Public Works Department has announced it is unilaterally reinterpreting its Pedestrian/Bicycle Plan, adding additional procedures and making it more difficult to protect designated bike boulevards from excess vehicle traffic.  Elucidated in a recent letter to the Tattler, the City Hall staff generated reinterpretation changes the traffic calming ‘level’ system in the Bike Plan, adding many more steps to each level before a designated bike boulevard can move forward to the next level of traffic calming.
The new policy, revealed by the Public Works Department, states that “multiple iterations”, of a particular traffic calming level should now be conducted before the Council would be advised to consider raising the street to the more rigorous next level, theoretically adding decades before a bike boulevard would reach the highest level of protection (Level Five).

At stake is bicycle safety on our Bike Boulevards as the new interpretation hamstrings the City in effectively dealing with an unsafe amount of vehicle traffic sharing the road with bicyclists that the Bike Plan was formulated to protect against.  By adding new steps for each level of traffic calming, the staff presumes to speak for the Bicycle/Pedestrian Advisory Committee (BPAC) and the City Council that certified the Plan (without the stringent new metrics) in 2009.  It is informative that before the new staff interpretation, bike boulevards were moved up in level without these extra steps for each level. 
Indeed, several streets in our town have moved up from Level One to Level Three traffic calming over the years, where they now appear to be stuck, as is the case with the 45th Street and 53rd Street Boulevards. The new tougher policy now effecting these two streets will require more iterations of Level Three traffic calming elements be installed before they can move up to Level Four. 
If the City Council really wanted to implement
the Bike Plan, they could do it.  It's the

'stick to it' step they can't seem to accomplish.
It's either Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) or 
Developer Surplus Disorder (DSD) indicated.
Symtoms are the same.
Remedies would be Ritalin or 
Electorate Reckoning respectively.

A recently conducted traffic count reveals those two streets are shown to have 1,143 (45th St) and 638 (53rd St) too many cars in Average Daily Trips (ADT) to be considered bike boulevards by the Plan.  But regardless of the excess traffic on these specific streets, the staff has ruled neither street is ready for a level ‘upgrade’ because of the new metric of “[up to] five elements” of Level Three traffic calming measures have not yet been installed.  
For a complete description of each traffic calming level, please see the chart below. 

The 45th and 53rd Boulevards join the former Horton Street Bike Boulevard in languishing; all three hitting a wall at Level Three traffic calming regardless of their excess vehicle traffic.  Notably, the previous head of the Public Works Department Maurice Kaufman and the previous City Council member Nora Davis both declared Level Four calming for any Emeryville street a ‘no go zone’; being too onerous for vehicles as described by developers wishing to build auto-centric projects near the Boulevards.  Accordingly, an earlier traffic count conducted by the developers of the Sherwin Williams project that also showed too much existing traffic on all three streets, was ignored by Ms Davis and the rest of the City Council.  Later, Mayor Dianne Martinez steadfastly and unilaterally refused to move the two streets, 45th & 53rd, to Level Four as the Tattler reported in 2016.
On Horton Street,  the City Council refused to institute Level Four traffic calming elements and instead issued a ‘Statement of Overriding Considerations’, stating the Sherwin Williams project is more important than the Horton Street Bike Boulevard and that the City would ignore the Bike Plan remedy for excess vehicle traffic.  The Statement of Overriding Considerations signaled to the community that the City Council has no intention of supporting bike boulevard status for Horton Street.  Regardless, before they were elected, both Dianne Martinez and Scott Donahue promised Level Four traffic calming for Horton Street.

The 45th and 53rd Street Bike Boulevards have not been subjected to a statement of overriding considerations but the City Council is continuing to let them languish, unrealized as bike boulevards.

The Bike Plan calls for traffic counts to be conducted every two years, a fact the Public Works Department now acknowledges even though the Department was caught lying to the City Manager about that in 2014.  The Tattler uncovered an internal document by use of a Public Records Request that showed how the Department was going to extraordinary lengths to prevent a street moving to traffic calming Level Four by attempting to get the newly hired City Manager Carolyn Lehr to ignore the Bike Plan.  In the memo, the Public Works staff told the new City Manager the Bike Plan says traffic counts are not to be conducted every two years, but rather only if a substantial construction project happens on the street in question or if a large number of citizen complaints are registered; an outright falsehood.  The Bike Plan is very clear that traffic counts must be conducted every two years without conditions.


The new interpretation of up to five required applications of Level Three elements (up from one) being ‘required’ may be the latest attempt by the City to stall implementation of Emeryville’s Bike Plan.  The City has felt no compunction against moving any Bike Boulevard speedily forward through Levels One to Three but they haven't thus far been able to make the breakthrough to Level Four, forwarding different reasons that change over time as to why it can't be done.  The latest prohibition against Level Four in the form of the unilateral Public Works reinterpretation seems to be just the latest blockage offered up by an ignominious City Hall.  It would seem the admonitions against Level Four traffic calming by the assailing Maurice Kaufman and Nora Davis made years ago are still the modus operating principles at City Hall.  

Bike boulevards are supposed to be "cars allowed but bikes preferred" streets meant to maintain bicycling as a safe and convenient form of transportation by discouraging motor vehicle use.  Developers and the business community have long tried to dissuade the City Council from enacting effective traffic calming on Emeryville's Bike Boulevards.


From the Emeryville Pedestrian/Bicycle Plan
Level Four=street narrowings, Level Five= full and partial closures
Level Four (and Level Five) have been determined to be too effective 
so the City has resisted implementing them on any street.  The City Council however has not 
seen fit to amend the Plan to remove these two highest levels they don't like, probably because 
they don't want to be perceived by the public as anti-bike.







From the Bike Plan
53rd Street is at the top of the photo, 45th on the bottom with Horton Street to the left.

North is up, east right, south down and west is left.
The Average Daily Trip (ADT) is supposed to be no more than 1500 for the eastern sections of
45th and 53rd Streets.

53rd Street From the Latest Traffic Count
The eastern section of 53rd Street has 2138 Average Daily Trips or
638 over the maximum allowable amount.  Since the street is now at Level Three, 
that should mean 53rd Street is a candidate for Level Four traffic calming elements.
The Public Works Department says NO however.




45th Street From the Latest Traffic Count
The eastern section of 45th Street has 2,643 Average Daily Trips
or 1,143 over the maximum allowable amount.  A City Council
that cared about bicycling would impliment
Level Four traffic calming elements for the street.
A traffic count from years ago east of San Pablo Avenue
showed 45th Street with more than 3000 cars per day.
Note the vehicle speeds are too high also.



Earns Two Smiling Nora Davis's
Nora Davis smiles down on
the Public Works Department 
and the City Council!

6 comments:

  1. Oy! You've buried the lede. The story is the huge amount of traffic on these two streets that are supposed to have only 1500 per day. It's time for the city to do something about it is the story, it isn't this opinion from the public works dept. That's a minor point. You've got a good story, you should have run with it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. As an outsider looking in, I can see how one would think the lede is buried here. However, the story of the City ignoring too much vehicle traffic on a Bike Boulevard has been told over and over. More newsworthy I think, is the new hoop the City has jumped through to justify ignoring Level Four traffic calming if only because they've come up with fewer such hoops than their ubiquitous inaction on too much traffic. The squirming and justifying being done is more interesting.

      It IS most likely true the City Council will also ignore this newest traffic count and I suspect they won't even do the work of installing a new iteration of Level Three traffic calming that they now say they need to do. After all they ignored it after the last traffic count on 45th and 53rd as I indicate in the story.
      Both stories are good, perhaps I could have done two separate pieces so as not to dilute either one.
      Thanks for commenting.

      Delete
  2. I wonder what's behind these actions that make biking more dangerous in Emeryville. In the past, the city has made some remarkable to make biking safer. An example was replacing a second lane in both directions on Adeline with a bike lane in its place.

    That was years ago, and since then problems on other streets have worsened--auto traffic backed up for blocks in some places, speeding way over the limit in others, cyclists' safety ignored.

    I wish someone--anyone--from city hall would report either on what's being done or on why they're doing nothing as things get worse.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well I think it’s pretty obvious the City Council in Emeryville doesn’t care very much about bikes. Neither the current Council or the previous more conservative one. I don’t think the current Council is actively hostile to bikes, like the previous one was; the newbies just don’t care (even as they say they do). If they cared, the Bike Plan would be implemented and people like you wouldn’t be making observations like the one you did here.

      Regarding Adeline Street; the improvements you mention were brought about because of one lone City Council member: John Fricke. Mr Fricke actually cared about bike transit and he put in a lot of work to advance it in Emeryville. The Adeline bike facilities are an example. FYI: all his colleagues on the Council fought him on this as did the majority of the Bike Committee (inexplicably). The fact that the improvements are here today are a testament to Council member Fricke’s tenacious will power. We need somebody like that on the Council now.

      I will forward your comment to Council member Ally Medina, the current member who has expressed the most interest in bike issues. I certainly wouldn’t bet on a positive outcome: the business community is wholesale against Level Four traffic calming on our Bike Boulevards (or of course Level Five as well). That passion is what has gotten the City Council’s ear I’m sorry to say. Shockingly (or maybe better said, not) , the current Bike Committee also hasn’t shown much interest in the Bike Boulevards. It’s a critical one two punch against the Bike Boulevards in the Council’s estimation. So again; they don’t care.
      Regardless, the Tattler reports. Thanks for commenting Will.

      Delete
  3. I left Emeryville for 4 1/2 years and now I'm back and you're still going on about bike blvds. Change the subject dude.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wholeheartedly agree! Let's change the subject- change your message to: "I left Emeryville for 4 1/2 years and now I'm back and you still haven't implemented the General Plan's Bike Boulevards." Then send that off to the Emeryville City Council and the Emeryville City Manager. Helpful hint; throw in a few expletives for better effect. And you might want to mention the upcoming election as well.

      Thank you in advance for your letter to City Hall on behalf of the people of Emeryville Mr Anon!

      Delete