Chicago Sun-Times

THE WALK OF THE TOWN?

Citing ‘dozens upon dozens of complaints,’ alderman wants to force cyclists from pedaling along Riverwalk

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Cyclists riding along Chicago’s downtown Riverwalk, endangerin­g pedestrian­s and moms pushing strollers, may soon be forced to get off their bikes and walk them.

Downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) proposed the “walk-your-bike” requiremen­t at Thursday’s City Council meeting to avert what he views as a disaster waiting to happen.

The Riverwalk has become a victim of its own success — so much so that a “tremendous number” of cyclists are flocking to the riverfront, riding with impunity and ignoring new signs that urge them to “Share the Riverwalk: Walk your bike.”

“What we’ve had is dozens upon dozens of complaints about pedestrian and bicycle conflicts down there. It’s one of the most popular tourism destinatio­ns in the city. It’s drawing some of the largest pedestrian volumes of any sidewalk in the city. For the same reasons why we don’t allow people to ride bicycles on the sidewalks, that applies here,” Reilly said Thursday.

“Common sense would dictate you don’t ride a bicycle through a big crowd of pedestrian­s. Unfortunat­ely, common sense is not prevailing on the Riverwalk. I’m a big fan of keeping Chicago bicycle-friendly. But we can’t have pedestrian­s and people with strollers or in wheelchair­s being forced off a pedestrian path that close to the water.”

Reilly said he has received a slew of emails and phone calls from people, “especially families with strollers, having to dodge these guys.”

“Signs were installed on the Riverwalk already telling folks to walk their bikes. And some folks in the bicycle community argued, ‘There’s no city law that says that.’ This is to make sure people understand, ‘No. this is a code violation,’ ” he said.

“We’re not looking to write tickets to people. We want to allow the security personnel on the Riverwalk to tell folks, ‘It’s a law. Please walk your bicycle.’ I don’t see us assessing fines for this.”

The Active Transporta­tion Alliance agreed that bikes should be walked when the Riverwalk is crowded.

But the alliance argued that a mandate to walk bicycles was legislativ­e overkill.

“There are many hours and times of the year when it’s safe for people biking and walking to share the path,” spokesman Kyle Whitehead wrote in an emailed statement.

Unlike a typical sidewalk, the Riverwalk was “conceived from the beginning as a multiuse path for both bicycling and walking,” and remains an important job connector, Whitehead said.

Reilly attempted to bring some sanity to the Riverwalk conflicts during the first City Council meeting to follow Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s decision to choose political retirement over the uphill battle for a third term.

The mayor’s lame-duck status is certain to embolden aldermen. Still, Emanuel had no trouble convincing aldermen to approve “pop-up licenses” to allow restaurant­s and retailers to test their concepts in vacant storefront­s and nearly double the city tax on e-cigarettes while mandating that all tobacco, vaping products and accessorie­s be placed behind the counter.

Reilly argued, as he has in the past, that e-cigarettes help people quit the habit. He also argued that the ordinance was being rushed through in record time when the Emanuel administra­tion has not done all it can to enforce the city’s 21-year-old smoking age.

Still, the mayor got his way. “The tobacco companies … have lied knowing full well what the products are. They sell products that actually kill you and harm you, and they knowingly do it. And then they try this other trick, because there’s been such regulation around regular tobacco products, to introduce new products and lure teens into a lifetime of addiction and a lifetime of health risk,” Emanuel said.

“This will make it harder for kids going into pharmacies and other places to buy these products.” Also during Thursday’s meeting:

♦ Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), chairman of the City Council’s Hispanic Caucus, proposed a pair of tax increases that could be used to embark on a cost-sharing plan to replace lead service lines threatenin­g Chicago with a drinking water crisis akin to the one in Flint, Michigan.

The first would increase the real property transfer tax to defray the cost of replacing lead service lines. The other would impose a “lead abatement transfer tax” at the flat rate of $50 per title transfer.

♦ Aldermen granted final zoning approval of a hotly contested Jefferson Park apartment developmen­t plan that includes affordable housing supported by Ald. John Arena (45th).

♦ Ald. Edward Burke (14th) joined six colleagues in introducin­g an ordinance that would make it a crime for teachers at any public or private school in Chicago to communicat­e with students through personal cellphones, texts, emails or social media accounts.

♦ In the wake of the Little Village fire that claimed the lives of 10 children, Burke joined forces with Ald. George Cardenas (12th) on an ordinance that would reduce the time building owners have to resolve building code violations, including missing or malfunctio­ning smoke detectors.

“COMMON SENSE WOULD DICTATE YOU DON’T RIDE A BICYCLE THROUGH A BIG CROWD OF PEDESTRIAN­S. UNFORTUNAT­ELY, COMMON SENSE IS NOT PREVAILING ON THE RIVERWALK.’’ ALD. BRENDAN REILLY, on proposing a ‘‘walk-your-bike’’ requiremen­t at Thursday’s City Council meeting

 ?? SUN-TIMES PHOTO ?? According to Ald. Brendan Reilly, a ‘‘tremendous number’’ of cyclists are flocking to the Riverwalk and ignoring these signs.
SUN-TIMES PHOTO According to Ald. Brendan Reilly, a ‘‘tremendous number’’ of cyclists are flocking to the Riverwalk and ignoring these signs.
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