Council Member and bicycle advocates begin Bike Week NYC by taking aim at would-be cyclists' biggest obstacle--secure parking
Thursday, May 1st, 1pm, City
Hall
On Thursday afternoon, New York
City Council Member David Yassky (Greenpoint, Williamsburg, Vinegar Hill, DUMBO,
Brooklyn Heights, Boerum Hill and Park Slope) will announce his recently
introduced bill (Intro 458-2003) that would allow New Yorkers to bring bicycles
inside the buildings where they live and work. Transportation Alternatives-NYC's
advocates for cyclists, pedestrians and sensible transportation-will join Mr.
Yassky.
Intro 458 would require all
building owners and managers to make "reasonable provisions" for
tenants, lessees or employees who wish to bring bicycles in their buildings. In
most simple terms, it would require buildings to allow bike commuters the use of
freight elevators to bring their bicycles to their offices.
The New York City Department of
City Planning's 1999 Bicycle Survey Report cites the lack of secure bicycle
parking as the biggest reason more New Yorkers don't bike to work. Over 50% of
non-bicycle commuters who responded to the question, "What is your primary
reason for not commuting by bicycle?" answered, "Nowhere to store my
bike safely."
Council Member Yassky's bill
would guarantee building access for bicycle commuters.
"Bicycles are no more
obstructive than strollers, dollies or other carts people wheel into buildings
everyday," said Council Member Yassky, "but building owners and
managers routinely ban tenants with bicycles from bringing their bikes inside
with them, even when storage space is available," he added. Bicycles are
easy to store, and neither City nor State building regulations, nor fire codes
prohibit people from bringing bicycles inside buildings. Allowing bicycles
inside buildings does not effect liability or insurance or exact excess wear and
tear on building interiors.
Bicycles are unobstructive and
should be allowed on freight elevators and in buildings.
"Allowing tenants to bring
their bicycles indoors is the most effective way to get New Yorkers to bike to
work," said Noah Budnick, Projects Director for Transportation
Alternatives. "The whole city benefits when buildings open their doors to
bicyclists. Bicycle commuters help reduced traffic, noise and air pollution, and
arrive at work energized."
- 45% of Manhattan office
workers living within 5 miles of their job would bike to work if secure
indoor bike parking was provided (NYC DOT, 1990).
- 51% non-bicycle commuters
who responded to Bicycle Survey Report (NYC City Planning, 1999), sited
"nowhere to store my bike safely" as the number one reason for not
biking to work.
Bike Week NYC, presented by
Transportation Alternatives and the NYC Department of Transportation, rolls from
May 1-11. This is the twelfth annual celebration of cycling in NYC. The
week-long celebration honors the bicycle as a convenient, quick, quiet, clean
and community-friendly form of transportation.