Brett Jarolimek memorial ride and event

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A service to pay tribute to the life of Brett Jarolimek and a memorial ride through Forest Park has been planned.

Memorial ride: Meet at NW Thurman St. entrance to Forest Park at 4:30. Ride starts at 5:00. We will ride out and back on Leif Erickson Drive. This is a gravel road that might be muddy and impassable with narrow, slick tires. Equip yourself accordingly.

Memorial service: The event is open to the public and will be held at 6:30 pm in the commons area of Pacific Northwest College of Art (1241 NW Johnson), where Jarolimek graduated in 2003.

Crusaders remember Brett with silence, spirit, and a good party

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We wore race number 800
in honor of Brett Jarolimek.
(Photo © Jonathan Maus)

Wearing white t-shirts emblazoned with the words “No Blind Spots”, Cross Crusade founder Rick Potestio and race director Brad Ross said losing Brett Jarolimek was like losing “a member of the Cross Crusade family.”

Also speaking before a memorial lap was Bike Gallery’s Kris Schamp. He said,

“The Halloween Cross was one of Brett’s favorites, we’ll miss him here…but he’d want us to ride on, race on, and have fun while we’re at it.”

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Stolen Benotto converted fixed gear

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Stolen orange/red benotto road bike converted to a fixed gear. the rims are spray painted black the rear is flaking badly the hubs are silver bianchi. It has a rare colgnago stem the top has little diamond cut outs painted in different colors. all the rest of the components (headset, pedals, cranks) are old school campy. it has black caddle horn bars the saddle is an old regal.

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Education Coordinator (Free Geek)

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Job Title – Education Coordinator
Company/OrganizationFree Geek

Job Description
Do you have what it takes to be Free Geek’s Education Coordinator?

Do you enjoy walking chaos around on a leash? Do you love teaching in a hands-on environment? Do you thirst to help bridge the digital divide?

Free Geek is a 501(c)(3) not for profit community organization that recycles used technology to provide computers, education, internet access and job skills training to those in need in exchange for community service. We’re looking for a passionate and motivated individual to update and expand the educational curricula available to Free Geek volunteers. A full description of the position is available at http://www.freegeek.org/jobs

Compensation is approximately $20,000/yr + full benefits (medical, dental, vision, alternative care) + 3.5 weeks paid vacation/yr

How to Apply
If you have think you have what it takes, please visit our website for details, including instructions on how to apply: http://www.freegeek.org/jobs

Weekend open thread: Share your bike fun

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It’s beautiful outside so I hope everyone gets out on a bike this weekend.

The girls and I are headed up to Astoria for the Cross Crusade Halloween Weekend.

What do you have planned? A ride to see the gorgeous fall colors? An excursion to Sauvie Island? Or maybe you’re just running errands and pedaling around the ‘hood.

Share your two-wheeled adventures in the comments below…

Press Release: PDOT; Action Plan to Improve Bicycle Safety in Portland

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CITY OF PORTLAND OFFICE OF TRANSPORTATION

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
October 26, 2007

Contact: Cheryl E. Kuck at (503) 823-5552
Or: Tom Miller at (503) 823-1121

Committee on Policy, Engineering, and Enforcement for Bicycle Safety Develops Action Plan to Improve Bicycle Safety in Portland

(PORTLAND, OR) – Representatives from Portland’s bicycle and freight communities, safety advocates, traffic engineers, Police, Multnomah County, and other stakeholders met Friday, October 26, to discuss a bicycle safety action plan developed by Commissioner Adams and the Portland Office of Transportation. Commissioner Adams formed the Committee on Policy, Engineering, and Enforcement for Bicycle Safety in response to the recent bicycle fatalities in Portland.

The Committee convened at City Hall to discuss solutions to Portland’s bicycle safety problems – with particular emphasis on bicycles and trucks – and to develop both a short term and a long term safety action plan. The Committee discussed potential engineering, enforcement, and education measures.

So far in 2007, Portland has seen six bicycle fatalities – the highest number of bicycle fatalities on record for one year. Two of them involved a cyclist and a large truck. On October 22, a cyclist collided with a garbage truck on N. Interstate as the truck was making a right turn onto Greeley. On October 11, a cyclist was run over by a cement truck on SW 14th Avenue as the truck was turning right at Burnside. By contrast, in 2006 Portland had zero bicycle fatalities and 203 reported bicycle crashes. Reported crashes for 2007 will not be received until next year from the Oregon Department of Transportation.

“Despite this year’s surprising and alarming fatalities, bicycling in Portland has become safer,” says Commissioner Adams. “With reported crashes increasing only slightly and ridership increasing exponentially, our bicycle crash rate is decreasing.”

Even with that good news, however, Commissioner Adams recognizes the public’s concern about bicycle safety. “Studies show that over half of Portland residents limit their bicycling due to traffic safety concerns. Obsolete designs and increasing traffic have contributed to a system that is unsafe. The type of crashes that occurred in the past two weeks should never happen in a city with a well-integrated focus on promoting increased bicycling.”

The Committee’s short-term plan is to identify problem intersections that have conflicts between bicyclists and motorists making right turns. That part is easy, as 100 such difficult intersections have already been identified by participants at the June 2006 Portland Bike Safety Summit, by the Portland Bicycle Advisory Committee, and by City staff.

Potential infrastructure solutions
* Treating 14 of the city’s top difficult intersections, which will include N. Interstate at Greeley and SW 14th Avenue at Burnside, with a “bike box” to reduce bicycle crashes referred to as a left and right “hook”

* Bike box at stop bar at intersection

1 Skip-stripes, with or without color, through intersection with bike box
2 Widen bike lane at intersection
3 Bike warning sign activated by bike loop
4 No right turn on red lights with bike boxes

Potential equipment solutions

Equipping trucks with mirrors to eliminate blind spots
Equipping trucks with side guards to prevent people from being pulled under the vehicle
Equipping bicycles with mirrors and noisemakers

Potential enforcement and crash investigation solutions

Police enforcement and crash investigation policies
Jail time for drivers with suspended licenses

Potential education solutions

Department of Motor Vehicles supplemental urban driver’s guide and testing
Enhanced truck driver education for urban truck drivers
Enhancements to existing programs like Share the Road, See and Bee Seen (Light the bike, see the bike), and I Brake for People

Commissioner Adams stressed the need for everyone to “share the road and practice safe travel behaviors whether you’re driving, biking, walking, taking transit, or using some other mode to get around Portland.”

Commissioner Adams reported that toward promoting the safety of Portland citizens and its City workers, the City of Portland has installed many safety devices in its heavy equipment fleet. These include additional mirrors, side signal lights, backup cameras, reflective tape, and frenzel-optical lenses that allow drivers to see through the passenger-side door. These safety items, combined with extensive operator training, significantly improve safety for pedestrians, bicyclists, other vehicle operators, and City workers.

The City has also reviewed its dump trucks, street sweepers, aerial tower trucks, boom trucks, vacuum trucks, and equipment trailers to determine if a side guard retrofit would keep a person from getting in front of the rear wheels. Fortunately, most of the City’s equipment already includes a side protection between the axles. The protection comes from the tool bins mounted to the body or frame of the truck, or, in some cases, the space between the axles is filled with a fuel tank and tool bins.

An assessment of the fleet made this morning, Friday, October 26, shows that about 12 pieces of equipment could benefit from the installation of the side guards. The cost is about $4,500 per side, and includes design, fabrication, installation, and wiring of the new lights. Adding one side guard to each of these 12 pieces of equipment would cost the City approximately $54,000.

Commissioner Adams emphasized that his “Safe, Sound and Green Streets” initiative is one solution to the growing backlog of maintenance and safety projects that make Portland’s transportation system unsafe for all users. “With a growing population,” says Commissioner Adams, “there is more demand being placed on the transportation system. Deferred maintenance adds an estimated $9 million annually to the $425 million transportation backlog that exists. Too many Portlanders are being injured and killed on those roads.”

Given the current transportation funding situation, the money does not exist to adequately address these issues. In order to cover the funding gap, it would take a seventeen-cent increase in statewide gas taxes, which is unlikely to happen in the immediate future. Oregon’s last gas tax increase occurred in 1993 and the Portland metro region receives only forty-six-cents out of each dollar paid through gas taxes and vehicle registration fees. Additionally, there are no allocated local funding sources for basic maintenance.

Two more Town Hall meetings are scheduled in Portland to provide residents an opportunity to review the proposal developed in collaboration with the “Safe, Sound and Green Streets” Stakeholder Committee, discuss proposed projects that address safety, paving, and bridge needs, and learn about a possible local funding package to deliver the projects.

Southwest Portland Town Hall
Monday, October 29, 7-9 pm
Wilson High School
1151 SW Vermont

Southeast Portland Town Hall
Tuesday, October 30, 7-9 pm
Sellwood Middle School
8300 SE 15th Avenue

All Portland residents are invited and encouraged to attend these discussions with Commissioner Adams and Multnomah County Chair Ted Wheeler.

For more information and to provide input about the effort underway to develop a bicycle safety action plan, visit www.commissionersam.com. For information on the Safe, Sound and Green Streets proposal, visit www.safeandsoundstreets.com.

###

Cheryl E. Kuck

Stolen Kona Explosif

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1993 17.5″ gold kona explosif mtn. bike, black non-suspension fork, avid disk front brake
BTA ID sticker on back of seat tube

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Report from the bike safety meeting and press conference

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A large crowd in City Hall.
Slideshow below
(Photos © Jonathan Maus)

Just four days after the second fatal bicycle crash in as many weeks, City Commissioner Sam Adams called together an “emergency meeting” to discuss the issues and brainstorm solutions to improve bike safety in our city. Following the meeting was a press conference that was jam-packed with concerned citizens and the local media.

Around the table of the closed-door session were close to thirty people from a variety of backgrounds. Below is a partial list of attendees:

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Stolen Trek 7300

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2001 Trek Hybrid Model number 7300, wheel size 700. Stolen at 7:50 pm on Wednesday evening, 10/24 by 2 men who cut lock (theft is on video). Accessories are front and rear light mounts, water bottle mount, bell, and rear rack. Bike has sticker from store of purchase (Bicycle Outfitters, Los Altos, CA). Bike is mostly white, tall and very upright — it’s fairly noticeble. Picture is manufacturer picture of model.

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