Sat, 01/15/2011 - 13:55 - community bicycle network ©community bicycle network

For those out there who are interested in learning and working on their bike in a community environment, you might consider attending CBN's annual membership meeting coming up next week Monday. It's not too late!

The Community Bicycle Network would like to announce our Annual General Meeting. It will
be held on Monday February 13th, 2012 at 6:30 pm. The meeting will be held in the CBN shop at 761 Queen St. W. All CBN members are invited to attend and vote on the next board of directors. CBN will be open from 4:30-6:30 pm on February 13th for anyone interested in joining to purchase a membership. The suggested donation is $5.

CBN has a lot of important planning to do in 2012. Our lease is up in December and we'll be
looking for a new space. We continue to expand our workshop programs (teaching bike mechanic skills as well as safe cycling) and divert hundreds of bikes and bike parts from landfill. There will be spaces on the board opening up, and lots of other volunteer opportunities such as outreach at community events, updating the website and other media, designing a t-shirt, stripping bike donations and much, much more.

We are requesting that you share this press release with your community contacts including
posting it on your website, calendar, list serve, bulletin board etc. Please consider attending yourself or recommending it to someone you know. If there are any questions please contact
board@communitybicyclenetwork.org.

Thank you,

Kathleen Banville
Board member
Community Bicycle Network
761 Queen St. W.
416-504-2918

In this Globe and Mail produced interactive map of cyclists collisions from 1986 to 2010 there is a sea of pins representing reported collisions by cyclists and colour-coded for injury severity. It's a thing of beauty and nice to zoom in and out. But that soon gets old once you realize that there is little else that we can currently conclude from it. Can we tell if my route or neighbourhood is safer than another? Can we tell if cycling in Toronto has gotten safer over time? Not really. We are missing a key denominator - bike traffic. Not surprising since the City has only begun to collect this data in a more systematic manner. At the very least, the authors could try to explore some of the other interesting data in the dataset that they've hosted.

That doesn't seem to stop them from trying to reach some broad conclusions without all the information.

They claim: "Toronto falling behind pack in averting bicycle collisions, data reveals". Well, the data doesn't reveal that since you haven't compared the number of cyclists and bike trips over time and between cities. What are the cycling populations in each city? Have the number of bike trips grown or not?

The Globe and Mail claimed that 1987 is the "most dangerous year" at 1600 collisions, 1996 had about 1000 and since then it has averaged about 1200 per year. Maybe Toronto's bike collisions haven't dropped because we've got more and more cyclists. From 1999 to 2009 the percentage of cyclists grew from 48% to 54%, according to a cycling survey by the City. Since we know there has been a gradual growth in cyclists over the last decade and the number of collisions has stayed steady since 1996 it seems that the number of bike trips is increasing faster than the number of collisions. So I come to the opposite conclusion from the authors: the risk to Toronto cyclists - averaged out across the whole city - has gone down. I even dare say that over the last 10 years Toronto has gotten a little bit safer.

Comparing to other cities can make us feel better or worse about ourselves. It may even help to turn on the heat on politicians, but it doesn't help planners determine how or where to make things safer. Some streets or neighbourhoods might be safer, some more dangerous. We don't know until we get a breakdown of collisions and bike trips.

They are a bit more circumspect about the bike lanes on Jarvis: "In the Globe’s data, reports of cyclist injuries actually went up slightly in the six months following the installation of the Jarvis Street bike lanes – slated to be removed this year. However, the lack of complete data makes it nearly impossible to understand what caused the increase." It would have been helpful if they had at least also included the City's bike counts before and after the installation of bike lanes on Jarvis where they found that the number of bikes tripled. Stuart Thompson kindly responded to me with a tweet stating that injuries were slightly less than double on Jarvis after the installation of the bike lanes (I think he might have meant collisions).

If the number of cyclists tripled on Jarvis, but the number of injuries only doubled I would say that we are on to something good and it wouldn't be too much of a stretch to say that the bike lanes have actually reduced the risk of injury for cyclists on Jarvis.

What may be more useful is if someone compared other recorded characteristics of the collisions found in this dataset (presumably from the police): weather, time of day, crash type, injury severity, road surface (dry/wet) and road type. It's still a bit too generic, but it is more helpful. Transportation Services is already compiling some of this. Perhaps the authors will have time to explore the more interesting and helpful comparisons, and not make conclusions that aren't very conclusive.

City Transportation staff are developing a trails report and asking the public to review the proposed trail connections for Toronto before the report is submitted to Public Works and Infrastructure Committee. The open house will be in North York, 40 Orchard View Blvd (1 block north of Eglinton and west of Yonge), Monday February 6, 2012, 5:30 to 7:30pm) or comment via Facebook.

Our new mayor made the bike trails the primary focus of bicycle infrastructure. It's exciting that we might have more bike trails in our City! But let's not give the mayor too much credit. The vast majority of these connections were identified in the 2001 Bike Plan. What the mayor did was make these trails a priority over the rest of the bikeway network. In fact, the mayor has supposedly scrapped the Bike Plan because he claims that the roads are no place for bikes (or streetcars for that matter).

So we may see a bunch of new trails and connections throughout the City which will be great for increasing active transportation and recreation. We may finally have a complete Humber Trail from the lake right up to Steeles. We will see a major expansion along the Waterfront in Scarborough, though there is still a lot missing there. And the trail following the Finch hydro corridor will be mostly complete. We may see the completion of the Railpath so it will travel from north of Dupont down to King and Strachan. These are all great to have. It will be tough to complete them all given that there will be issues with land ownership, cost of building bridges or tunnels in some parts, and the challenges of dealing with steep grades.

This plan will still leave out most of downtown without any improvements. And there are still going to be plenty of holes in the suburbs unless some sort of bike lane grid is implemented on main roads. Much like what was originally proposed in the Bike Plan.

Still we are moving forward with this, in jumps and starts.