Los Angeles Times

Bike-share plan corrects course

Improvemen­ts are underway in Portland after bumpy start with no options for people with disabiliti­es.

- By William Yardley william.yardley@latimes.com Twitter: @yardleyLAT

PORTLAND, Ore. — Cities know the protocol for taking a stand for sustainabi­lity on the West Coast: Calculate your carbon footprint, set a bold goal for reducing emissions, ramp up public transit and maybe even pass a resolution banning the export of fossil fuels.

Few places have pursued these ideas with more passion or success than this earnest urban stage in the Pacific Northwest. Yet last year, when Portland elevated its environmen­tal game once again — starting a new bike-sharing program as part of its climate action plan — it also stumbled into a delicate and vexing question: Can everyone participat­e?

In a city where cycling is celebrated nearly as much as inclusiven­ess and acceptance, the deployment of 1,000 bright-orange bicycles was alluring — but their uniformity was viewed as exclusive.

“It’s exciting to finally be getting a bike-share program, but I was disappoint­ed to find out that the program excludes people with mobility challenges,” Chloe Eudaly, a Portland city commission­er who has a child with disabiliti­es, wrote on her electoral campaign’s Facebook page in May. “How is a 1,000 bike program without a single adapted bike equitable or inclusive?”

Jeremy Robbins, who rides a hand cycle because he is quadripleg­ic, said he and others were “disgusted and upset that there was zero provision at all” to help people with disabiliti­es participat­e.

“This is the way that a lot of these kinds of programs go,” Robbins said. “But I would have thought that the city of Portland would have a greater vision of inclusivit­y and equality.”

Now the city is trying to expand that vision.

On Tuesday, the Portland Bureau of Transporta­tion will host an open house to promote its new “adaptive bicycle rental pilot project.”

Scheduled to start in June, the program will look very different from the existing self-serve Biketown system, which was started with a $10-million grant from Nike and features the company’s signature swoosh at the 100 stations scattered across the city.

The new program will instead include as many as a dozen adaptive bikes of varying styles — hand cycles, recumbent tandems, specialize­d trikes — and there are plans to hire a contractor to help riders who may need assistance finding the right one and getting on and off it.

While Biketown is intended largely for commuters and people making short trips, the adaptive program will be limited at first to a few locations where cyclists can ride on relatively smooth trails, away from traffic, largely for exercise and recreation.

Leah Treat, the city’s transporta­tion director, whose online bio had promised that Biketown would be “the smartest and greenest [bike-sharing system] in the country at its launch in July 2016,” acknowledg­ed that she and the city had plenty to learn about adaptive cycling.

“It’s kind of ‘duh,’ but you just don’t think about it unless you have a mobility challenge,” Treat said.

The department created an advisory committee that includes disabled cyclists, people who hope to start riding and advocates for the disabled, with Treat telling colleagues “to think about what the customer wants.”

Their early work revealed a divide.

“The first time they wanted to speak to us, they were like, ‘Give us a list of disabiliti­es, and give us a list of the bikes that work for them,’ and that’s just not the way it works in the world of disability, because there’s just so much diversity,” said Jennifer Wilde, a committee member who works for Incight, a nonprofit that assists people with disabiliti­es.

But the city’s commitment proved genuine, she said.

“We are definitely learning the nuances of what a program like this will accomplish,” she said. “It certainly won’t include everyone, but the fact that they’re doing it, with the goal of getting more people on bikes, more people active, is ultimately positive.”

Portland is not the first city to add adaptive bikes to its bike-share program. But its effort is notable because it falls under the city’s ambitious effort to increase the percentage of trips people make by bike as a way to reduce carbon emissions.

Even if the earliest adaptive riders are not commuters or shoppers, city officials and cycling advocates say, the effort could persuade some to expand how they use the system.

The initial tensions here reflect concerns far broader than cycling, said Victor Santiago Pineda, the founder of World Enabled, another nonprofit that advocates for people with disabiliti­es, including in urban design.

“What you’re really talking about is how do you make all aspects of the built environmen­t responsive to all people, yet at the same time support values of sustainabi­lity,” Pineda said.

One challenge for Portland’s new program may be overcoming the sense among some disabled people that certain public programs are not intended for them.

Jerry Pattee, a board member of the United Cerebral Palsy Assn. of Oregon and Southwest Washington, sat in his motorized wheelchair at the back of a recent meeting of the Portland Commission on Disability.

Asked whether he would be interested in adaptive cycling, he first said he would not be capable of pedaling. When the prospect of a hand cycle was mentioned, however, he paused.

“I hadn’t thought about it,” Pattee said, “but, yeah, I guess I would be.”

 ?? William Yardley Los Angeles Times ?? SHERMAN COVENTRY works on a hand cycle at Different Spokes, a Portland bike shop. Adam Amundsen, left, co-owns the shop and has been active in the effort to add adaptive bikes to the city’s bike share program.
William Yardley Los Angeles Times SHERMAN COVENTRY works on a hand cycle at Different Spokes, a Portland bike shop. Adam Amundsen, left, co-owns the shop and has been active in the effort to add adaptive bikes to the city’s bike share program.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States