Antelope Valley Press

Is the bike-lane fever finally breaking?

- Jeff Jacoby is a columnist for the Boston Globe.

Seattle is one of the most bicycle-friendly cities in the United States — by one reckoning, the most bicycle-friendly. It’s also a city in which bike commuting is rapidly losing its appeal. In 2017, according to recent Census Bureau data, a mere 2.8% of Seattle’s workforce commuted to work by bicycle. That was down from 3.5% in 2016, and from 4% in 2015. The

Seattle Times reports that bike commuting in the Emerald City has fallen to its lowest level in a decade. In raw numbers, the number of people cycling to work in Seattle has plunged from a peak of 16,000 to fewer than 12,000 — a decline of onefourth.

It isn’t only Seattle where the bloom is off the cycling rose. Between 2016 and 2017, bicycle commuting dropped by 12.1% in Boston, by 13.7% in Atlanta, by 19.9% in San Francisco, and by 24.1% in Austin. Nationwide, the average number of Americans using a bike to get to work fell to just 836,569, a decrease of 3.2% over the past year. It was the third consecutiv­e annual decrease — at a time when the number of US workers is climbing. (Note: The Census Bureau asks about biking only in the context of commuting.)

Considerin­g the billions of dollars that federal, state, and local government­s have poured into bicycle infrastruc­ture over the past decade, the steady drop in cycling amounts to a sharp vote of no confidence in bicycles as the much-touted wave of transporta­tion’s future. So maybe it’s time for public officials and policy makers to turn their backs on the militant, self-righteous bike lobby and its fantasy of a world in which drivers defer to cyclists as the rightful kings of the road. Bicycles — nimble, healthful, nonpolluti­ng, cheap — have many advantages. But they don’t belong in crowded urban traffic.

There could be a number of reasons for the drop in bicycle commuting. Americans overwhelmi­ngly prefer to travel by car, and lower gasoline prices make it easier for them to do so. More Americans are working from home, and so don’t commute at all.

Plainly, however, tens of thousands of Americans have had second thoughts about cycling to their jobs. And that’s despite the recent mania for inserting bike lanes into city streets, which has everywhere disadvanta­ged the majority of commuters who drive in order to accommodat­e the tiny minority who bike.

Subtractin­g or squeezing already-crowded car lanes for the benefit of cyclists is a terrible idea. As bicycle lanes have worsened traffic congestion, they have led to a “bikelash” in communitie­s as disparate as Los Angeles, Memphis, and Boise, Idaho. The doctrine that cars, buses, and trucks should “share the road” with bicycles sounds egalitaria­n and green, but it’s as impractica­l as expecting motor vehicles to “share” urban thoroughfa­res with skateboard­s and strollers. The chief function of those roads is to keep people and goods moving as rapidly, efficientl­y, and safely as possible. Bike lanes unavoidabl­y impede that function — often to the detriment of bike riders themselves.

“Cyclists are at high risk when they’re on the road,” observed environmen­talist Lawrence Solomon in Canada’s Financial Post. Citing data from Canada and Europe, he noted that the accident rate for bicycles is at least 26 times the rate for cars, explaining that dedicated bike lanes are more likely to cause accidents, especially when cyclists and drivers turn or cross at intersecti­ons. Within the European Union, cyclists accounted for 12% of all urban road deaths as of 2017. In the almost obsessivel­y bike-friendly Netherland­s, wrote Solomon, a whopping two-thirds of individual­s seriously injured in road accidents were bicycle riders — the majority of them hurt not by cars but by poor road conditions or the cyclist’s own negligence.

In the United States, meanwhile, the Transporta­tion Department reports that the number of annual cyclist fatalities climbed 20% between 2007 and 2016.

For drivers and cyclists alike, the roads can be a challenge, clogged and dangerous. Where street space is scarce and traffic is heavy, bicycle lanes simply don’t work. They may initially have seemed appealing, but Americans know better now. Commuting by bike is not the wave of our urban future. It’s just another overrated utopian scheme.

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