Marin Independent Journal

SF debates whether to lift car bans from COVID

Some roads closed for safe socializin­g

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO » For Vanessa Gregson, the four-lane highway that borders the beach along San Francisco’s Pacific Ocean is now an automobile-free sanctuary where she can blissfully ride her bicycle and enjoy the quiet.

“You hear the beach. You hear the waves,” said Gregson. “You feel like you’re in nature, and you’re in San Francisco.”

Like cities from Paris to New York that shut roads to motorists when the coronaviru­s hit, environmen­tally friendly San Francisco closed miles of streets to automobile­s so people could exercise and socialize safely.

Now, pedestrian advocates want to keep some of San Francisco’s most prominent streets off-limits, like the main road into Golden Gate Park. Others are pushing back, saying they need to drive to work, drop off kids and get around.

The debate has been marked by dueling rallies and strident arguments over safety and climate change in the densely packed city. On social media, customers threatened to boycott a bakery whose owner expressed support for reopening the main oceanside thoroughfa­re known as the Great Highway to cars; others came to her defense.

Shamann Walton, president of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisor­s, was mocked for likening the closure of John F. Kennedy Drive in Golden Gate Park to the Jim Crow South, including by fellow African Americans who call his accusation­s of segregatio­n silly. Walton says he worries that closing the street and its free parking will affect low-income families that can’t easily bike or take transit to the park.

For Tim Boyle, who lives near the four-lane beachside highway, life has been anything but peaceful. Unable to use the main road, massive delivery trucks, gangs of motor bikes and impatient drivers now hurtle through his once-sleepy neighborho­od.

Boyle, whose son has cerebral palsy, says taking out their wheelchair­equipped van has become a nightmare. “Essentiall­y I’m stopping traffic on any given day, four to 10 cars backed up on each side just so I can pull my own car into my driveway,” he said.

San Francisco officials started turning streets into pedestrian-friendly promenades in April 2020 after the mayor declared an emergency. Officials closed more than 45 miles of neighborho­od corridors and are studying which ones could be permanent.

They also sealed off a 1.5-mile portion of JFK Drive, the main thoroughfa­re through Golden Gate Park, which sees more than 24 million visitors a year, and a 2-mile stretch of the Great Highway — now renamed by some as the Great Walkway — that carried more than 18,000 vehicles a day before the pandemic.

San Francisco’s streets are scheduled to reopen 120 days after Mayor London Breed lifts the COVID-19 emergency declaratio­n, which could come next month. Various agencies are navigating the public debate before deciding whether to fully reopen the Great Highway and JFK Drive, open them in part or keep them closed to vehicles. The Board of Supervisor­s will have the final say, said Tamara Aparton, a city parks spokeswoma­n.

Seattle and New York are also among U.S. cities looking to make temporary auto-free streets permanent. In Europe, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo announced plans to ban most vehicular through-traffic in the city’s center, with exceptions for public transit, delivery trucks and residents.

Pedestrian advocates say there are options to ensure that people who can’t easily bike or walk can still visit Golden Gate Park, including designated drop-off sites and programs for lowincome families. They also want more so-called street calming measures to slow traffic and improve safety on affected neighborho­od roads.

San Francisco is no stranger to shedding auto infrastruc­ture for green spaces. Leaders chose not to replace the Embarcader­o freeway after it was damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, replacing it with a boulevard that now doubles as a popular

tourist destinatio­n.

Despite the testy debate, most people are probably in the silent middle, wanting both open space and clear transporta­tion routes, said Connie Chan, a supervisor whose district is affected by the closures along the beach and in Golden Gate Park. “They just want to be able to go where they need to go, and not be stuck in traffic,” she said.

Katharine Lusk, co-director of the Boston University Initiative on Cities, said more than 90% of 130 U.S. mayors in 38 states surveyed last summer reported they created more space for outdoor dining by using parking spots or closing streets. Nearly half closed some streets to throughtra­ffic; a smaller portion shut streets entirely to autos. While only 6% said they plan to make those changes permanent, Lusk wonders if that might change with rising demand.

On a recent sunny weekday, a few dozen people organized by Walk San Francisco toasted the one-year anniversar­y of the street closure in Golden Gate Park. Charles Oppenheime­r said his daughter Olivia, 11, once feared riding through the third most-visited city park in the United States.

“There’s cars doublepark­ed and rage drivers through the park, honking at kids, and now that it’s shut down, it’s so much better,” he said.

Near the west end of Golden Gate Park, more than 100 people gathered before blockades on the highway earlier this month, waving signs calling to reopen the road. Passing drivers honked in support as a musician blew tunes on a bright pink sousaphone.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A surfer walks across the car-free Great Highway toward the ocean in San Francisco. At the start of the pandemic, San Francisco closed off parts of a major beachfront highway and Golden Gate Park to cars so that people had a safe place to run and ride bikes. Open space advocates want to keep those areas car-free.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A surfer walks across the car-free Great Highway toward the ocean in San Francisco. At the start of the pandemic, San Francisco closed off parts of a major beachfront highway and Golden Gate Park to cars so that people had a safe place to run and ride bikes. Open space advocates want to keep those areas car-free.

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