Join a Salmonberry Trail planning advisory committee

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

From our friends at Oregon State Parks:

Would you like to help make the Salmonberry Trail successful in Washington County?

Members of the Salmonberry Trail Intergovernmental Agency are excited to announce the opportunity to apply for membership on the Valley Segment Planning Ad-Hoc Advisory Committee. There are 10-15 seats available for committee membership for a term beginning in January 2018.

Learn more: http://salmonberrytrail.org/

About the Ad-Hoc Advisory Committee
The committee will advise the Co-Conveners (Oregon Department of Forestry, Washington County, and the Washington County Visitor’s Association) on all matters related to development of the Salmonberry Trail in Washington County, including trail alignments, trailhead designs and funding priorities. The committee will be comprised of a cross-section of stakeholders, including representatives of local governments, adjacent landowners, community members, local business interests, potential trail user groups, and motivated and knowledgeable trail enthusiasts.

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Jobs of the Week: Safe Routes, Bike Clark County, Ride with GPS, Axiom Events, GO Box

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Seven great job opportunities have been listed on BikePortland in the past two weeks. If you’re looking to start 2018 on a new foot, have a look at them below…

–> Northwest Regional Policy Manager – Safe Routes to School National Partnership

–> Bike Shop Operations Manager – Bike Clark County

–> Backend Software Engineer – Ride with GPS

–> Mobile Software Engineer – Ride with GPS

–> Frontend Software Engineer – Ride with GPS

–> Operations and Volunteer Manager – Axiom Event Productions

–> Bike delivery/Waste Reduction Ninja – GO Box

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BikeCraft 2017 vendor profiles: Market Mule, Ivalieu, and Clodine Crafts

In case you haven’t heard, Portland’s bike-centric holiday gift fair is back! BikeCraft 2017 is December 15-17 at the Bike Farm (1810 NE 1st Ave.) and it’s powered by Microcosm Publishing.

To get you ready, our friend Elly Blue (Microcosm’s co-owner and marketing director) has been profiling the fantastic people behind the crafts (see the previous ones here, here and here). Below are the latest three BikeCrafters you’ll get to meet at the big event…

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Weekend Event Guide: Sandy Ridge, Oregon City, fat bikes on the beach, and more

Alan Koch in Oregon City-2

Ride Oregon City’s Municipal Elevator during the Puddlecycle ride on Saturday.
(Photo: J. Maus/BikePortland)

It’s December! Whether that makes you elated or depressed, it’s worth knowing what your ride options are. And when it comes to that, we’ve got you covered.

The Weekend Event Guide is sponsored by Abus Bike Locks. Thanks Abus!

If the wet and cold weather has you riding less, spend some time perusing our winter weather riding archives for all the best tips and tricks.

Friday, December 1st

BikeLoud Lincoln-Harrison-Ladd Greenway Subcommittee Meeting – 5:00 pm at SE 12th and Hawthorne
Portland’s project-focused bike advocacy group BikeLoud PDX is ramping up focus on the Lincoln-Harrison project. Come and learn more about the greenway and how to make it better. More info here.

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Job: Bike delivery/Waste Reduction Ninja – GO Box

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Job Title *
Bike delivery/Waste Reduction Ninja

Company/Organization *
GO Box

Job Description *
Do you get excited by the challenge of working on your bike, pulling a hefty trailer and helping reduce waste?

We’re a small, mission-driven company that provides reusable take out containers to downtown food vendors and their customers. So far we’ve eliminated the use of nearly 120,000 disposable containers, and we’re hiring a new bicycle delivery person to help us achieve our mission of doing away with throw away!

We’re looking for an energetic, upbeat and strong-legged person who can brave the winter rains of Portland and still be smiling when they deliver and pickup reusable GO Boxes to and from customers.

Here’s what we’re looking for:

A safe and courteous cyclist (respects drivers, uses hand-signals, wears helmet, etc).
Responsible, reliable, detail-oriented and self-directed.
Somebody that can work independently and has a good head for numbers.

The position:

We need a rider to take over a Wednesday and Friday route. Each route is about 2-4 hours long, and can generally be done anytime in the 10-4 time frame.

If you’re interested in being an integral part of a mission-driven, bicycle-based business we’d love to hear from you!

Compensation: $14/hour as an independent contractor.

How to Apply *
Send an email to laura@goboxpdx.com with 2-3 paragraphs telling us why you’re interested in working for GO Box, your bicycling background and all relevant skills and qualifications.

Saltzman backs away from demand for congestion pricing on I-5 at Rose Quarter

“We don’t want it [pricing] as a poison pill for the entire project. We want to be at the table with them [ODOT] as the process happens.”
— Matt Grumm, senior policy advisory for Commissioner Dan Saltzman

Just three months ago Portland City Commissioner Dan Saltzman was seen as a bulwark against the I-5 Rose Quarter project. Since then he has completely backed away from his insistence that congestion pricing be implemented before any lanes are added to the freeway.

The State of Oregon and the City of Portland are itching to spend $450 million to add lanes to I-5 and make changes to surface streets around the Rose Quarter. The project faces staunch opposition. Many of the critics think widening a central city freeway in 2017 is a bad idea and before doing so, it makes sense to implement congestion pricing. If people have to pay to use the freeway, the thinking goes, perhaps demand will decrease so much that current traffic problems will disappear and we’ll save millions of dollars.

On September 1st, Saltzman agreed with them. Three months later, not so much.

Saltzman’s initial statement on this issue was clear. He wanted to, “Include congestion/value pricing before the project breaks ground to ensure maximum congestion relief and overall environmental benefits.” That statement was heralded by transportation reform advocates and especially the group No More Freeways PDX. It put Saltzman on the other side of the Oregon Department of Transportation who has made it clear they don’t feel this section of I-5 is the right place to try congestion pricing.

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Bigwigs hear community concerns about notorious North Columbia-Midway intersection

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Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek (left) listens to a constituent who has lived north of Columbia for over 40 years.
(Photos: J. Maus/BikePortland)

For decades, people who live in a part of St. Johns north of Columbia Boulevard and west of Portland Road have hoped and prayed for street safety improvements. Cut off from nearby schools, markets and restaurants by an urban freeway where people drive large trucks and cars way too fast, residents of this part of our city have been ignored for a long time.

Now, thanks to a $1.5 million set-aside in the recently passed House Bill 2017, changes are finally coming.

Last night at Roosevelt High School the Portland Bureau of Transportation Director Leah Treat, Portland Public Schools Superintendent Guadalupe Guerrero, and Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek (who represents this area of north Portland) hosted an event to gather input about how to improve safety at the notorious intersection of Columbia and Midway.

“Now we have some money, so let’s make the best use of it.”
— Tina Kotek, state representative

“None of us who live in north Portland need to be reminded we have a lot of accidents out here,” Speaker Kotek said during her brief remarks, “And now we have some money, so let’s make the best use of it.”

Also speaking last night was a sixth grader from nearby George Middle School. “I’m worried my friends will get hurt because of fast trucks,” she said. And a leader of the PTA at Roosevelt High who lives north of Columbia referred to it as, “A neighborhood that’s completely isolated, like a little island.”

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Product review: The Sport Series long sleeve jersey from Wabi Woolens

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(Photos: J. Maus/BikePortland)

I’m picky when it comes to jerseys these days. It’s probably because I’ve been riding and racing long enough that I’ve become a curmudgeon and I don’t have patience for second-rate stuff. And being “in the industry” means I’ve come across some of the best kit available.

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