One of the highlights this week was the Connecting Columbia
presentation that the Columbia Association held in Oakland Mills. The Connecting Columbia website
states that:
“CA is developing an Active Transportation Action Agenda to create a more interconnected and comprehensive bicycling and walking circulation system for health, recreational and transportation purposes.”
I was not able to attend, but I have talked with several
people that did, and the response has been very positive. To date, Sarah Says has
the only rundown on the meeting.
It is a great read, and I encourage everyone to take it in.
All this local multi-modal love is juxtaposed with two
articles that came across my feed this week. These reports describe how the car became king (with descriptions of the origins of “jaywalking” and “America’s love affair
with the automobile). Yes, the
automobile industry is implicated, but so are some unlikely participants (AAA,
Groucho Marx).
As a testament to AAA’s messaging comes another report from
Michigan,
where high school students were punished for riding their bikes to school.
Taking all this into account, I can only hope that Connecting
Columbia reaches out to Talking Heads founder David Byrne. Mr. Byrne is a lifelong bicycle
enthusiast and not too long ago wrote the book The Bicycle Diaries. During a presentation at the Newseum,
Mr. Byrne characterized Columbia in a not so positive light. hocoblogs@@@
1 comment:
Thanks for the link!
I couldn't get through Bicycle Diaries when I tried reading it a few years ago; maybe it's time to revisit.
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