Job: Paid Internship – Metropolis Cycle Repair

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Job Title

Paid Internship

Company / Organization

Metropolis Cycle Repair

Job Description

Job Title:
Paid Internship

Job Type:
Seasonal Saturday

Summary:
Are you looking to get a foot in the door of the bicycle industry? Or perhaps want to make a few extra bucks surrounded by your passion? We are hiring for a part-time, seasonal employee to work Saturdays through October 1st, 2025 (8-10 hours per week). Saturday work is a non-negotiable requirement.

Metropolis Cycle Repair is a community oriented bike shop committed to serving our customers. Whether it be customer service, sales, or repairs we strive not only to meet expectations, but to exceed them.

As a small bike shop, our employees must have a do it all attitude and be willing to jump in on any task. Every day at Metropolis Cycles offers a wide variety of opportunities and challenges that require great communication and teamwork in order to be successful.

Our employees’ in-depth product knowledge, love of the cycling community, eagerness to provide customer service, and a willingness to continually learn are all key aspects of what sets Metropolis Cycles apart.

Job Responsibilities:
Providing in depth, friendly customer service whether it be in store or over the phone.
Performing a variety of functions within Lightspeed including cash register, appointment scheduling, inventory search and management, creating customer profiles, special order creation and management, as well as others.
Restocking and maintaining inventory on the floor as needed.
Cleaning and maintaining both the shop floor and personal workspace.
Ability to perform on the spot flat fixes for customers.
Willingness and desire to learn and perform other mechanical skills.
Other duties as assigned.

Job Requirements:
Some bicycle knowledge with a desire to learn more
Requirement to work Saturdays (maximum 2 time off requests)
Prior customer service experience (preferred)
Computer skills including POS & appointment scheduling software (preferred)
Phone skills and experience (preferred)
Light to moderate lifting with reasonable accommodations
Standing for long periods of time

Pay:
$18.50 per hour
Access to industry discounts

Please email resume and cover letter to brad@metropoliscycles.com

How to Apply

Please email resume and cover letter to brad@metropoliscycles.com

Portland will daylight 200 intersections over next two years

A large truck completely blocks visibility of a curb ramp in Portland. This type of parking is illegal in Portland. Trucks over six feet high are not allowed to parking within 50 feet of an intersection. (Photo: Melissa Kostelecky)

The City of Portland has made a new commitment to daylight 200 more intersections over the next two years. The news comes in the form of a quiet update to the Portland Bureau of Transportation’s website.

Daylighting, or what PBOT refers to as “vision clearance”, is an intersection treatment that removes visible barriers like parked cars and trucks from corners in order to improve visibility. The treatment has gained popularity among transportation advocates nationwide because of how it can radically improve safety at intersections (where most serious injury and fatal crashes occur) and it’s extremely inexpensive. In Oregon it also has legal backing.

In 2020 nonprofit Oregon Walks launched a “Clear the Corners” campaign to ratchet up pressure on the City of Portland to abide by the Oregon Vehicle Code (ORS 811.550 section 17) which says drivers can’t park within 20-feet of a crosswalk. But the law makes individual cities responsible for parking regulations, and road safety activists think PBOT is using that to shirk legal requirements. Also in 2020, the City of Portland was slapped with a lawsuit brought by a person who was hit as a result of what his lawyer claims was negligence on the part of the city to enforce the daylighting law. Pressure from the lawsuit (which is still pending in the Court of Appeals) and advocates worked. In 2021, former Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty secured $200,000 to daylight 350 intersections.

But as BikePortland reported one year ago, there are still way too many intersections in Portland with terrible visibility due to people parking cars at the corner.

In fact, an analysis by Portland State University student and road safety advocate Melissa Kostelecky found that there are about 4,000 intersections in Portland that should be cleared of parking. At around $600 per intersection (the price for signs and poles at four corners), that would cost about $2.3 million. Kostelecky’s report analyzed 18,143 intersections citywide and looked at factors such as proximity to a school, presence of ADA ramps, crash history, speeding patterns, bike network connections, and so on.

Determining which corners to clear first is part of the challenge. PBOT’s standard practice is to apply vision clearance standards (no parking within 20-feet of the corners) on all major paving and capital projects. But when they find extra funding, they have expanded that scope to include more locations. The upcoming treatments will be targeted near schools, neighborhood greenways, and in designated pedestrian districts (as identified in city plans). PBOT will also respond to specific locations based on complaints. Anyone can call PBOT Parking Enforcement at 503-823-5195 (and wait for option 3) to report a dangerous corner for consideration.

The latest promise from PBOT to daylight 200 intersections will be funded from a $50,000 commitment from the Fixing Our Streets (local gas tax) program and from a portion of PBOT’s General Fund allocation for safety improvements.

View a map of eligible daylighting corridors and learn more on PBOT’s Vision Clearance website.