Cycle Task Force Look For Bike Racks and Come Up Empty

posted: January 12th, 2010 07:55 am | 8Comments

bikeyBike racks are so few and far between in Newport Beach that cyclists use anything they can find to stash their bikes — even at popular outdoor destinations like Big Corona State Beach, members of a cycling safety task force reported at the group’s fourth meeting Monday afternoon.

“There’s not a single bike rack at Big Corona,” said Frank Peters, a Corona del Mar resident and member of the Newport Beach Task Force on Cycling Safety. “I’ve lived here 11 years and just discovered that.”

City Councilwoman Nancy Gardner said that surprised her, but the general lack of bike racks throughout the city was something she was well aware of.

“I’m always chaining my bike to a palm tree, and I keep waiting to get a ticket,” she said. “There should be bike racks as many places as we can put them.”

The task force discussed bike rack styles, whether restaurants should be required to provide racks, and then decided to come up with a list of places that need racks and currently don’t have them.

The group also discussed an email that a resident sent to Gardner, saying that “sharrows” would be better than bike lanes. The group discussed sharrows — marked lanes for areas where cars and bicycles share the road — at the second task force meeting.

One task force member, however, said he would “go to Vegas” that county transit officials would not permit sharrows to be painted along East Coast Highway. Members discussed whether it would be a better idea to add sharrows along Seashore Drive on the Balboa Peninsula, where there already is a popular bike lane.

The task force will hold its next meeting at 4:30 p.m. Jan. 25 in City Council Chambers.

Read our earlier cycling task force stories here, here, here and here.

8 Responses to “Cycle Task Force Look For Bike Racks and Come Up Empty”

Comments

Leave a comment