Note: I'm currently on a family trip and not working normal hours. Email and message responses will be delayed and story and posting volumes here and on our social media accounts will not be at their usual levels until I return to Portland September 4th. Thanks for your patience and understanding. - Jonathan Maus, BikePortland Publisher and Editor

Weekend Event Guide: CCC Carnival, river walk, 80s music, and more

Get out and enjoy this great weather! (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

I hope everyone is having fun on all the great rides going on. Remember it’s Bike Summer Pedalpalooza season so you’ll want to check the official calendar and/or grab the Bike Fun App (iPhones only) for all the ride options!

**Sponsored by The eBike Store (809 N Rosa Parks Way), all-electric since 2008**

Check out my picks for the best things to do for bike lovers this weekend…

Saturday, July 27th

Ride Around Clark County – All Day in Vancouver (WA)
Vancouver Bicycle Club hosts this annual supported ride with four route options ranging from 18 to 104 miles in length. More info here.

Bike Back the Night – 11:00 am at Colonel Summers Park (SE)
This ride raise awareness of how to handle domestic and sexual abuse. I did this ride way back in 2008 and it was really eye-opening. Supports the nonprofit Call to Safety. More info here.

Community Cycling Center 30th Anniversary Bike Carnival – 12:00 to 5:00 pm at Alberta Park (NE)
Come one, come all to this family-friendly celebration of three decades of the CCC! Classic games, traditional carnival snacks, workshops, and more! More info here.

Art in the Bike Lane Ride – 2:00 pm at Ladd Circle (SE)
Fourth annual edition of this classic ride that pays homage to the whimsical bike lane characters and sharrow art you see all over town. Folks come dressed up as their favorite and the ride leader is an amazing person who knows a ton about the bike lane art program and wants to keep the tradition alive. More info here.

Big Break Block Party – 4:00 to 10:00 pm at SE 7th and Sandy
Be a part of the excitement for a future green plaza at the intersection of SE 7th/Washington/Sandy. Hosted by Depave and the Central Eastside Inudstrial Council, this event starts today with a clean-up and builds to Saturday’s massive blowout featuring food, fun, tons of great live bands, and all the cool people who believe excellent public spaces are the key to excellent cities. More info here.

80s Mixtape Ride – 7:15 pm at Portland Opera/Esplanade (SE)
Vibe to a crowd-sourced playlist of 80s favorites and stop for karaoke and dancing. Ride merges with other big rides so get ready to party! More info here.

Sunday, July 28th

NPGreenway River Walk – 11:00 am at University of Portland Boathouse (N)
Get a close look at the newest section of the North Portland Greenway paved trail on the Willamette River and take a walk with advocates pushing to complete the project that will someday connect the Esplanade to Kelly Point Park. More info here.

Hablamos Español con Abuelita! – 11:30 am at Peninsula Park
Keep your Spanish-speaking on point by spending time on a ride where only Spanish will be spoken (I’m sure they’ll help you along if you have trouble) and the playlist will be abuelita-approved. More info here.

Ride for Gaza and Sudan – 12:30 pm at Alder Commons (NE)
Join with others who want to end these horrific, violent conflicts and raise support and awareness for innocent victims. Ride ends at a fundraiser. More info here.

Climate Adaptation Ride – 2:00 pm at Salmon Street Springs (SW)
From ride organizers: “Let’s spend a bit more time in our saddles talking about adapting to a future where we can thrive, no matter what climate change throws at us, by being more prepared and building community.” More info here.


— Did I miss your event? Please let me know by filling out our contact form, or just email me at maus.jonathan@gmail.com.

Biketown adds e-scooters, with thousands more on the way

A Biketown station on NE 11th in the Lloyd full of the new scooters. (Photos: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

The City of Portland has silently launched a new fleet of electric scooters. As far as I can tell, the new scooters hit the streets this week. A spokesperson I contacted via text yesterday after seeing the scooters in the wild for the first time responded with only, “Soft launch. Big news coming. In a couple weeks. 😃 [smiling face emoji].”

The scooters are Biketown-branded and are owned by Lyft, the same company that holds Portland’s bike share contract. Readers have reported Biketown stations full of scooters in northwest and the Lloyd. The tight marketing integration (you can also find the scooters in the same Biketown app where you rent bikes) makes sense and will likely help these new scooters succeed.

PBOT first launched an e-scooter rental program in July 2018. Despite being a mode many people love to hate, e-scooters have done very well here. In 2022 PBOT decided it was time to drop the “pilot” and make scooters a permanent program. Since that time they’ve issued requests for proposals for a company (or companies) to operate the program and expected to have the new contract in place last year.

The grey color differentiates them from the Nike orange bikes, but an orange rear fender ties the colorways together.

We’ve had several different scooter companies enter and exit our market. Bird was here for a while. So was Spin, but both of those companies no longer offer e-scooters in Portland. That leaves just Lime — and now Lyft/Biketown — as the only scooters on our streets. According to the city’s micromobility dashboard, there are currently about 1,340 e-scooters for rent in Portland (compared to about 1,000 e-bikes).

A page on the Biketown website shares a bit more about the scooters:

  • the first ride is limited to 10 mph maximum, then they top out at 15 mph (we should do that for cars!);
  • riders must be 18 or over;
  • parking is free at Biketown stations and there’s a $1 fee if parked elsewhere;
  • the scooters have integrated turn signals;
  • riding is prohibited inside Portland parks, high school campuses, and TriMet MAX platforms.

Pricing-wise, annual Biketown members can unlock scooters for free and rides are $0.27 per minute. Non-member rates are $1 to unlock and $0.37 per minute. The “Community Pass” offers eligible Portlanders a monthly fee of $5 for free unlocks and rides for $0.07 per minute.

The scooter is Lyft’s “next-gen” model that came out in February 2023. It’s got lots of tech to track routes and detect when riders are on sidewalks. The scooters also have a phone mount, dual brake leavers, and suspension.

PBOT spokesperson Dylan Rivera says Lime and Lyft are slowly ramping up service and, “In the coming weeks the two companies should have more than 3,000 scooters combined in Portland.”

Stay tuned for the official launch and let us know if you’ve ridden one yet and what your experience has been.

Speed limits, speeding, and Naito Parkway

Naito Parkway near SW Taylor St on July 23rd, 2024. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

We watch Naito Parkway very closely here on BikePortland because it’s home to one of the most high-profile bikeways in the entire city: Better Naito. So when I recently heard grumblings in activist circles about its speed limit and the rate at which people break it, I decided to take a closer look.

Turns out the posted speed limit on this important, 1.2 mile stretch of Naito between SW Harrison (near Tom McCall Waterfront Park) and NW Everett (where the protected bike lane ends prior to the Steel Bridge) has gone through quite a few changes in the past eight years. And if all goes according to plans hatched just this week by the Portland Bureau of Transportation, we’ll see yet another change before the end of the year.

Come with me on a bit of a wonky ride into the history of Naito Parkway speeds…

Think back to 2016 when Naito (also known as Pacific Highway West/99W) had narrow, paint-only bike lanes and five general travel lanes (image on left). It was really inhospitable to cycling! In that era it had a posted speed limit of 30 mph. When the adjacent Waterfront Park had large festivals, crowds would spill into the lanes and create a very unsafe situation. It was that context that the idea for more cycling and walking space was born and named “Better Naito.”

In 2020, after three years as a pilot project, PBOT was finally ready to make the protected bike lanes permanent and launched the Better Naito Forever project. During this period, PBOT was able to reduce the speed limit to 20 mph since Naito was a construction zone (image on right).

In 2021 PBOT began the process to reduce the posted speed limit from 30 to 25 mph by making a formal request with the Oregon Department of Transportation (who oversees all speed limits). ODOT approved that change in 2023 and the signs changed from 20 to 25 mph earlier this year.

That five mph increase raised eyebrows. Why would we allow people to go faster on a multi-modal street in a crowded part of downtown Portland? That’s the question I asked PBOT this week as I began to look closer into this story.

PBOT spokesperson Dylan Rivera explained the history and said, “The bureau has been working on submitting a new speed zone reduction to 20 mph through our authority to set speeds in business districts.”

The “authority to set speeds in business districts” Rivera refers to is something PBOT has only had since a change to Oregon law went into effect in 2022. This change (outlined in Oregon Administrative Rule 734-020-0013) gives cities more power to investigate and determine speeds on roads in their jurisdiction (instead of ODOT having total control). In Oregon, the statutory speed limit for business districts is 20 mph.

Then Rivera added, “As of this morning (July 24th), we’ve submitted a request to rescind the 25 mph speed from Harrison to Everett in favor of a 20 mph speed as a business district. Assuming ODOT approves that request (which they typically do within days), we could change the speed back to 20 mph in the next 2-3 months.”

While Rivera seems confident ODOT will grant the 20 mph request, the ultimate decision is still in state engineers’ hands. (Who exactly has authority over the various aspects of speed limit setting is still a bit murky to me. The ODOT flow chart that explains it helps a little).

(Source: ODOT speed zone investigation #13168, May 2023.)

The current rate of rampant illegal speeding on Naito might figure into that decision. When ODOT did a speed study of Naito in May 2023 (and approved PBOT’s request to go from 30 mph to 25 mph), they found that 94% of all drivers exceeded the 20 mph limit. The 85th percentile speed — the speed at or below which 85 percent of all vehicles are observed to travel under free-flowing conditions — was 32 mph. (A PBOT speed study in December 2022 found similar numbers.)

One of the reasons ODOT agreed to lower the speed limit to 25 mph was because, “The crash rate for the segment exceeds 150% of the average crash rate,” for similar types of roadways. The question remains whether ODOT thinks lowering it even further to 20 mph will encourage folks to slow down and crash into each other less frequently, or whether it will be too low to process average daily traffic volumes.

Given how fast the majority of people drive on this stretch of Naito, making Better Naito Forever 20 mph forever could be considered too much of a stretch for ODOT to make.

ODOT says they are currently reviewing PBOT’s request and they will have a decision next week. Stay tuned. The speed limit signs on Naito might be changing once again!