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A look back at 2024 and look forward to the new year


The Bike Summer kickoff ride in June was a big highlight of 2024 for bike fun lovers of all stripes. (Photos: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Hello BikePortlanders, welcome to 2025. It’s great to have you here and I’m excited about getting started on our 20th year in business, but first let’s take a look back at 2024. 

Before I get into some of the big stories, trends, and my thoughts for the future; here’s a bit about the output from BikePortland over the past 12 months.

It was another very productive year. We posted 621 stories here on the blog, published 21,460 of your comments, uploaded 62 videos to our YouTube channel and shared 52 podcast episodes. We also posted a ton of videos, photos, and updates on our social media channels.

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Bike Happy Hour was another big part of our 2024. We kept the tradition going strong by establishing our event as one of the best and busiest weekly social gatherings in the city. We welcomed almost every city council member and Mayor Keith Wilson to the event and brought city politics directly to the urbanist and livable streets community.

The Shed (the BikePortland HQ) continued to be a place where important conversations take place. I welcomed folks into this space for interviews, brainstorm sessions, met folks virtually during my Friday Office Hours, and of course hung out with Eva Frazier every Friday for our In the Shed podcast. Thanks to support from financial contributors and monthly subscribers, I was able to invest in equipment that allows me to easily share many of these conversations via video on our YouTube channel.

On the news and editorial front, here’s what I’ll remember from 2024.

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We lost too many really great people. The deaths of veteran activist Jim Howell, bicycling basketball legend Bill Walton, and community organizer Sukho Viboolsittiseri will echo far beyond last year.

And on our streets, we had yet another unacceptably high number of fatal traffic crashes. The Portland Police Bureau says 65 people died while using our roads. I’m still working to verify the exact numbers and victim details, but we know that five of those crashes involved someone riding a bike (one suffered an apparent medical event prior to the crash): David Bentley, 49; Johnathan Henderson, 40; Gad Alon, 74; Sergio D. Hunt, 38; and Damon M. Cousins, 32. I’ve made my thoughts on traffic deaths clear in a recent opinion piece so I won’t go much more into this now. Bottom line: something needs to change and I’ll be here to help build pressure so that it does.

An issue that’s related to deaths on our roads is the disturbing trend that strengthened last year of car drivers using off-street paths and even grassy space in public parks. This abuse of the driving privilege shows how eroded social norms around driving have become and illustrate the vast dysfunction that exists within our driving culture.

On a happier note, the bike bus phenomenon continued to spread far and wide. Even city agencies launched bike buses to help gets staff to work healthier and happier! Local bike bus advocate Sam Balto launched a nonprofit to further push the idea into the mainstream and ended his year dropping his new business card with friends made at the White House in Washington D.C. 

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While Balto shows us the impact a single activist can have, the continued maturation and growth of BikeLoud PDX demonstrates that there’s no substitute for good, old-fashioned community organizing. The nonprofit BikeLoud reached new heights in 2024 by remaining a steady and positive presence in the community and winning its first major grant that will allow the group to hire its first paid staffer in 2025.

BikeLoud has also emerged as an important platform in and of itself. Their Slack communications channel is the go-to spot for activists who want to learn and get things done. On that note, 2024 was the year some Portlanders officially stopped waiting for the Portland Bureau of Transportation to clean up the damn bike lanes. To a level I’ve never seen before, folks are organizing their own bike lane maintenance. They are modifying equipment, sharing DIY videos, and getting their hands dirty cleaning up leaves, gravel, snow, and whatever else comes our way.

Underlying that DIY trend is a rising dissatisfaction and frustration with PBOT — not just among the safe streets and bike advocacy crowd, but across wide swaths of Portland. PBOT, an agency beleaguered by years of budget cuts, also had a very rough year, PR-wise. They were called out by some candidates during election campaigns for making driving too inconvenient, one guy got so mad at their enforcement cameras he shot at them with a gun, and we even saw the emergence of “anti-PBOT extremists” in Rose City Park. BikeLoud’s lawsuits against PBOT moved forward in 2024, including lengthy depositions last month with top planning staff regarding implementation of the State of Oregon’s “bicycle bill.” Even a visiting bike blogger made a point to criticize PBOT’s progress on building a safe bike network.

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And to top things off, PBOT posted an inappropriate and tone-deaf video to social media last month the morning after a 75-year old person was hit and killed by a driver while walking in a crosswalk. PBOT must realize that the gargantuan task of changing traffic culture on a limited budget will be impossible without strong internal morale and the community on their side.

One thing our community usually loves are big projects, and 2024 had its share. TriMet opened a new bike path to the Portland Airport and cut the ribbon on a new path and bridge for bikes into Gateway Green. PBOT made big progress on a coming reconfiguration of NE Broadway and the exciting N Willamette Blvd project came into focus. And while many folks are pleased to see 82nd Avenue finally changing into a more humane, city-run street, there are growing concerns that its lack of bike access and/or a compromised plan for bus service might not let it reach its full potential.

When it comes to potential, Biketown’s year was mixed. The quality and quantity of e-bikes and e-scoters in our bike share system went up, but the lack of bikes overall and the relative cost of rentals still kneecaps what could be a transformative transportation option.

There are reasons for optimism in 2025. Big projects, big funding, and big structural changes should make an impact.

We’ve got a new slate of leaders in Portland and a new form of government to empower them. PBOT no longer has to answer to one politician and should have a more stable trajectory as a result. Our new 12-member council will have some sort of transportation committee, and with a strong “Bike Happy Hour majority” in place we should expect strong awareness of our issues that (hopefully!) translates into priority and good policy.

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Oregon House Rep. Khanh Pham at a stop on ODOT’s listening tour for the 2025 transportation package. As a member of the Joint Committee on Transportation, she could play a key role in the upcoming session’s debate about funding.

2025 will be the year of funding for transportation. At the state level, lawmakers and lobbyists (aka advocates) will debate a multi-billion funding package for the Oregon Department of Transportation. Given the work of the Move Oregon Forward coalition (The Street Trust and Oregon Walks are steering committee members), we’re likely to see hundreds of millions dedicated toward biking, walking and transit. And if they try to leave our stuff at the side of the road, we’ve got the very transparent and comprehensive listening tour to fall back on as proof of what the majority of Oregonians want (hint: it’s not larger freeways and highways).

Locally, the Portland Bureau of Planning and Sustainability will launch a long-awaited, $20 million e-bike rebate program in the summer of 2025 and we’ll see the first batch of an expected 6,000 new e-bikes that will hit the streets in the next five years as a result of this investment.

Bringing it back to PBOT… the bureau’s desperate need for new revenue and the new faces on city council tasked with coming up with ways to create it, will be one of the most intriguing things to watch in 2025.

These are just some of the questions I’ve got at the start of a new years. What are yours?

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