Royal Oak accepts non-motorized proposal
Wednesday, August 12th, 2009
On August 3rd, Royal Oak’s City Commission awarded the non-motorized planning project to the Active Transportation Alliance (ATA) out of Chicago. Developing a non-motorized plan is a major first step towards making Royal Oak more bike and pedestrian friendly.
This is great news, especially in light of the recent bad news regarding non-motorized crashes.
There were ten proposals submitted. Clearly four of the submitters had little to no understanding of what a non-motorized plan entailed or what the national guidelines are for developing bicycling facilities. Not surprisingly, they were also the four least expensive proposals.
Fortunately there were many other very solid proposals. And in reviewing them, it’s quite clear that non-motorized planning has risen to a new level over the past few years within Metro Detroit. The bar has been raised.
But for Royal Oak, the Bicycle Task Force and city staff recommended a planning team that is new to Metro Detroit. The Active Transportation Alliance (formerly known as the Chicagoland Bicycle Federation) has been very integral in Chicago’s non-motorized planning and implentation. And, they’ve taken those years of experience and are expanding beyond Metro Chicago.
When do we start? At this time it’s a matter of waiting for the Energy Efficiency Community Block Grant (EECBG) monies to arrive.
The city of Royal Oak has a copy of ATA’s non-motorized planning proposal on their web site.

