Posts Tagged ‘Livonia’

Suburban Updates: Royal Oak & Livonia

Friday, October 8th, 2010

Royal Oak Bike and Dine

A kickoff planning meeting for a progressive bike and dine event in Royal Oak is tomorrow, October 9th at 6pm.  The Bike and Dine itself would be held on Thursday, October 21st.

The brief 30-minute meeting is being held at the bar of Lily’s Seafood, 410 S. Washington in Downtown Royal Oak.

There is a Facebook event page set up for this meeting.

Livonia to look into planning

The city of Livonia is determining what is involved in creating a non-motorized transportation plan. From the Livonia City Council minutes of September 22nd.

On a motion by Brosnan, seconded by Toy, and unanimously adopted, it was:

#322-10 RESOLVED, that having considered the report and recommendation of the Infrastructure and Community Transit Committee, dated September 1, 2010, submitted pursuant to Council Resolution 20-10, regarding the City developing a connectivity plan for non-motorized transportation, the Council does hereby refer the subject of outlining the elements necessary to create a master plan for non-motorized transportation, including the estimated costs of engaging in the process, to the Administration for its report and recommendation.

This is very promising step for Livonia. Of course estimating the costs is perhaps an easier task than finding the funding.

Large cities like Livonia receive enough state road funding allocated to non-motorized transportation to pay for such plans. However, it’s fairly safe to assume that this allocated money is being spent on sidewalks and crosswalks.

Livonia to consider non-motorized plan

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

The Free Press is reporting about a non-motorized planning proposal before the Livonia City Council this evening.

Tonight, a Livonia City Council committee will consider a proposal from [Frank] Kalinski, a city resident since 1993, to create a non-motorized transportation plan for the city.

Kalinski’s proposal includes designated biking and walking paths that would not only cross the city, but also would connect Livonia with surrounding communities such as downtown Farmington. Because it would connect the two communities and presumably add economic benefits, the plan would be in better position to help the city secure federal transportation funds, he said.

Livonia Councilwoman Maureen Miller Brosnan sees merit in the effort, and wants her city of almost 99,000 to become one of 10 communities in the state with a non-motorized transportation plan. She cited the timing of Gov. Jennifer Granholm’s signing on Aug. 1 of Complete Streets legislation. Although it lacks a funding component, the legislation is designed to make future transportation projects in the state consider all transportation users, not just motorized vehicles.

It’s unexpected but much welcomed to hear Livonia discussing a non-motorized transportation plan. This is the best first step for communities to become more bike friendly and more walkable. As noted in the article, Detroit has done this, as had Troy. Novi and Royal Oak are currently developing their plans.

It’s unclear from the article whether Livonia would hire an outside planner with experience in non-motorized plans. The “plan” shown in the Free Press diagram is not a non-motorized plan.

Hiring experienced planners would clearly be preferred. Expecting a workable plan from city staff not familiar with non-motorized planning (beyond sidewalks) is prone to fail.

And, a good non-motorized plan is more than just engineering. It should include action plans for education, encouragement, and enforcement.

Afterall, the goal is not to build a bunch of cycling facilities. It’s to get a city to bike more.

Rules of the Road: Stop Sign Mania

Monday, October 12th, 2009

A Detroit stop signA common message from bicycle organizations and advocates is bicyclists must follow all the rules of the road.

We believe that those who stand firm by that message (a) aren’t doing as they say, or (b) don’t live in urbanized areas with stop signs on every other residential block, which makes cycling impractical. This message is the easy way out since it puts the burden on bicyclists.

Instead, that message needs to be turned around. It should be that we need to change the rules of the road and our road infrastructure to better accommodate bicycling. This message requires more effort and puts the primary burden on bicycle advocates and local governments.

We’ve already highlighted one change to the rules of the road that would be highly beneficial to bicycling: rolling stops. Rolling stops could improve cycling safety according to a recent BBC article, which notes that “an internal report for Transport for London concluded women cyclists are far more likely to be killed by lorries because, unlike men, they tend to obey red lights and wait at junctions in the driver’s blind spot.”

And, you can’t have group bike rides without rolling stops.

Stop signs don’t calm traffic

One beneficial change to the road infrastructure includes removing unnecessary stop signs in residential neighborhoods.

Most of these signs were installed because there was a perception that it would slow speeding motorists. Studies show that that perception is wrong. Motorists actually speed more between stop signs to make up the time lost to stopping — actually only slowing in most cases. These stop signs are not warranted according to state and federal guidelines. They waste fuel, create more pollutants, and help create more noise.

And in most cases, these stop signs are irrelevant for cyclists. We’re not the ones speeding through the residential streets and putting children, pets, and pedestrians at risk. Cyclists, pedestrians, horses, and street cars were doing fine for 36 years without any stop signs. Stop signs were invented in Detroit in 1915 to deal with the mass adoption of motor vehicles.

Removing stop signs

Yesterday’s Free Press has an article on cities removing stop signs in residential areas. Livonia has removed an estimated 1,500 stop signs. Other cities are doing the same, though to a lessor extent.

Grosse Pointe Woods has removed 18 stops signs since November, and Livonia police Sgt. Dave Studt, the person in charge of his city’s traffic bureau, said Farmington Hills and Novi have expressed interest in Livonia’s efforts.

“By removing these stop signs, we’ve just made it safer for a pedestrian to cross the road,” Studt said. He noted that drivers tend to roll through intersections without stopping completely when a street is oversigned or they speed between stop signs in order to make up time.

He said signs are removed only where they are unwarranted because of traffic flow and other factors.

As a member of the Traffic Safety committee in Royal Oak, we see a half dozen requests for new residential stop signs annually. What the residents really want is a means for slowing speeding motor vehicles while reducing cut-through traffic and noise. On some streets, the majority of motorists are speeding. Royal Oak does not have the resources to police this. The residents need real traffic calming solutions, like neckdowns and roundabouts. Those can be implemented in ways that accomodate bicycling.

Livonia may allow bicycles on main roads

Thursday, June 29th, 2006

From the Detroit News:
The City Council may amend an ordinance that prohibits cyclists from riding on main roadways.

The council approved a recommendation this week to review the ordinance, which requires cyclists to ride on sidewalks or bike paths, if available, and not on main roads.

The request was spurred by Livonia resident Ken Pumo, who frequently commutes about 10 miles to and from his retail job in Novi by bicycle.
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