Arab Times

Free wheelin’ in NY

Big Apple sees bike boom

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NEW YORK, Nov 23, (AFP): Expanding bike lanes, handing out free helmets and making lessons free: New York is making great strides in encouragin­g pedal power at the expense of exhaust fumes, even if some cyclists are still nervous about navigating bottleneck traffic.

For years, the city of 8.5 million — which has the most extensive public transport network in the United States — stood and watched the bike boom take off in European capitals.

In 2013, then billionair­e mayor Michael Bloomberg launched the Citi Bike sharing scheme and since then, New York has seen the fastest growth rate in cycle use of any big US city.

“The city has come a long ways in terms of having a much stronger commitment to promoting bicycling,” says Rich Conroy, education director for Bike New York, a nonprofit organizati­on that encourages safe cycling.

“People realize we can’t grow as a city by building more streets and adding more cars,” explained Conroy.

“A lot of it is accommodat­ing a growing city in a way that is economical­ly and environmen­tally sustainabl­e, making the city more attractive to a younger workforce.”

The city’s department of transporta­tion says 778,000 New Yorkers — 12 percent of the adult population — have biked regularly in 2017, more than triple the 250,000 of five years ago.

Citi Bike mirrors that progress: its annual membership has risen steadily, reaching 245,000 in the year ending September, compared to 200,000 a year earlier.

In the last five years, the city’s department of transporta­tion has expanded and enhanced the on-street bike network by nearly 300 miles (480 kilometers).

Around 86,000 New Yorkers — 2.5 percent of the population — now use a bike to get to work or school.

One of them is Soe Thi Ha, 29, who rides 12 miles a day between Manhattan and his Brooklyn apartment.

“All my friends were doing it. I saw all the bike lanes. I said if they can do it, I can too,” says the Burmese New Yorker, who works in marketing psychology.

“It changed my life,” he says. “Now I want to go around the world with my bicycle!”

Yet however enthusiast­ic riders may be and however much an increasing­ly dilapidate­d and unreliable subway encourages people to pedal, cyclists worry about safety.

Cycling in parts of Manhattan is not for the faint-hearted. Eighteen cyclists were killed and nearly 5,000 injured in 2016. Bridges, tunnels

Carey’s previous managers include her exhusband Tommy Mottola, Randy Jackson, Kevin Liles, Red Light Management and Jermaine Dupri, among others. (RTRS)

Shakur

Progress

Carey

and avenues are packed with buses, trucks, SUVs — and potholes.

“I’ve been riding all my life, I have never had a car but I’m very frightened on New York City streets,” says Ilene Richman, 53, who works in health care.

“Everyone I know who rides a lot has had an accident. It’s frightenin­g.”

When eight cyclists were killed in a Halloween truck attack carried out by an apparent Islamic State sympathize­r in TriBeCa, it was a reminder of other fatal accidents on the same Hudson River bike path easily accessible by cars from the road.

To conquer her fear, Richman signed up for free lessons from Bike New York, given to 17,000 people last year.

Supported by the city, the organizati­on teaches safety — ring your bell, observe traffic lights or even yell “yo” to signal your presence to drivers and pedestrian­s.

But in a country that runs on the car, Conroy says it’s drivers who need better training.

There’s also another drawback: electric bikes are illegal in New York.

If that’s surprising in a city that considers itself at the forefront of progress, many fear the danger posed by delivery persons — ubiquitous in a city where preparing dinner often means dialing for take-out — on electric bikes.

The city has put the brakes on legalizing electric bikes, says Morgan Lommele from the associatio­n “People For Bikes,” who is also an e-bikes campaigns manager.

Fining e-riders is also a lucrative source of income for the police department — a $500 fine or confiscati­on of the bike are risks disproport­ionately borne by delivery men, often recent immigrants on poor salaries.

With controvers­y growing, Lommele hopes Mayor Bill de Blasio will make good on his commitment to the bike and eventually change his mind.

“Fining all e-bike riders will not make e-bikes go away, especially in an industry where e-bike sales are growing by more than 80 percent year over year,” she says.

PARIS:

Also:

Paris councillor­s on Wednesday voted to axe the city’s prominent riverside Ferris wheel, the French capital’s version of the London Eye.

Run by “fairground king” Marcel Campion who has also seen his Christmas market on the ChampsElys­ees scrapped because authoritie­s deemed it too tacky, the attraction will be closed from July 2018.

City councillor­s voted almost unanimousl­y against granting him a fresh licence for the “Grande Roue”, which has sat intermitte­ntly on the Place de la Concorde near the Louvre museum since 1993.

LOS ANGELES:

Steven Soderbergh’s interactiv­e story-telling project “Mosaic” has arrived on Android: HBO released the free “Mosaic” app for phones and tablets running Android version 5.0 or higher this week, following a release in iOS earlier this month.

“Mosaic” is scheduled to debut as a six-part series on HBO in January. The sixhour plot centers around a murder mystery, and allows users of the app to slowly piece together who killed the victim. “Mosaic” stars Sharon Stone as well as Garrett Hedlund and Frederick Weller, and has been developed by Soderbergh and former Universal Pictures head Casey Silver as well as “Men in Black” writer Ed Solomon. (RTRS)

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