Wednesday, October 10, 2007

National Media Noticing the Urban Bicycling Trend

Apparently unaware of New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn's assertion that "human-powered vehicles are never going to be the answer," USA Today reports that several large U.S. cities are accelerating their efforts to encourage commuting on two wheels. The article cites New York for the new separated bike lane, and for putting bike racks where cars once parked.

"There's never been so much attention from cities collectively for cycling as a mode of transportation," says Loren Mooney, executive editor of Bicycling magazine. "Cities are recognizing that it is a realistic and inexpensive solution to a lot of different problems - to the traffic issues, to pollution issues, to personal health issues because instead of sitting in cars for an hour you have people out burning calories."

The Associated Press also noticed that cycling is on the rise in New York. But despite the 130,000 daily bicyclists on the road in New York City (more total cyclists than any other U.S. city can claim), less that 1 percent of the total population ride a bicycle to work: more here

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