4/21: Hello readers and friends. I'm still recovering from a surgery I had on 4/11, so I'm unable to attend events and do typical coverage. I'll post as I can and should improve day-by-day. Thanks for all your support 🙏. - Jonathan Maus, BikePortland Publisher and Editor

Checking in after my knee operation

In front of the Shed a few minutes ago. Notice the scar on my right knee that starts right at the end of my shorts. (I will spare you an up-close shot of it.) (Photo: Juli Maus)

Hello everyone. It’s been 12 days since my total knee replacement surgery (which I wrote more about here) I want to check in.

First I want to say thank you. I have received so many nice well-wishes and notes of support. I loved the card everyone signed at Bike Happy Hour last week, and all your messages make recovery so much easier. I’ve heard so many stories about other folks in our community who’ve had joint replacements and other injuries that I’m thinking of leading a Joint Replacement Ride during August.

Why wait until August? Because unfortunately I plan to have my other knee replaced on June 20th. I know, right?! I could have picked a better time to do all of this, but once the condition of my knees sunk in and I found a doctor to help fix them, I didn’t want to wait any longer. (I’ve had bad knees since my first (of two) ACL surgeries when I was 15!).

So far the recovery has been a roller-coaster. The best thing has been how my amazing wife Juli is taking care of me and I enjoy being at home more with her and my kiddos. The first week was really hard, but now I’m in a more predictable and manageable cycle of pain and PT. My docs and PT guy say I’m progressing well. I know it’s healing and I should be patient, but I still get frustrated at the pain and tightness and my physical limitations. Overall this is (another) very humbling experience for me as I enter my 50s. Let’s just say I underestimated the impact this would have on my body and what it would take to fully recover.

During my operation on April 11th, the doctor shaved down the surface of my upper and lower leg bones. He then attached a 3-D printed titanium implant and a polymer cushion between them. Right now, my existing bone is growing directly into the titanium. The process takes six weeks, so I don’t want anything to disturb the very crucial healing process taking place.

I’m so bummed to miss all the cool things going on! I can’t wait to get back into the full swing of working and creating stories and covering events and all the other things I took for granted for so many years. For now, I’m able to work a few hours a day and I’m trying to stay on top of things as best I can. I hope I have a window of time before my next operation on June 20th when I can get back out there.

Speaking of which, I will get back out there today for Bike Happy Hour. I’ll be at Migration Brewing on North Williams Ave from 3:00 to 6:00 pm. I’d love to see you and chat. Tell me what you’ve been up to! Pitch me stories! Let’s talk about the latest news! Share your injury journey with me!

Thanks again for all your support and understanding. Knowing that I have such an awesome community to return to is all the motivation I need to make a full and fantastic recovery.

Person on foot dies after being hit by car driver on Swan Island

View looking west on N Channel Ave. The car came to rest in this right turn only lane. The driveway in lower left leads into a fast-food outlet parking lot (that was closed at the time of the collision).

On Monday night someone was hit and killed by the driver of a car while walking in Swan Island. Portland Police say it happened around 10:20 and the driver remained on the scene.

According to video from local news outlets, the vehicle was a four-door Subaru Forester. It showed severe damage to the center front hood and windshield. The car was facing east on North Channel Street just west of N Port Center Way, in a right-turn only lane that led to a driveway into a fast-food outlet.

This section of N Channel/N Going is 105-feet wide and has eight general traffic lanes with no shoulder. The posted speed limit is 40 mph. Swan Island is an industrial hub and N Channel/N Going is a high volume freight truck corridor. There is no residential zoning in the area and no local businesses would have been open at the time of the collision.

Star marks location where police found car.

This is the eighth fatal traffic crash so far this year, and fifth that killed someone on foot. This is the lowest year-to-date death total since 2018. At this same date last year Portland had 19 fatal crashes.

Last night a group of safe street advocates rode bikes to the location of the crash. They laid flowers and hung a memorial sign created by the local chapter of Families for Safe Streets.

If anyone has further details about what happened, please let me know. You should also contact the PPB at crimetips@police.portlandoregon.gov, attention Traffic Investigations Unit, and reference case number 25-103320.

Saturday’s inaugural ‘Bike Block Party’ signals new direction for Cycle Oregon

Has the start of the bike fun season been amazing or what? From a massive Ladds 500, to over 150 City of Portland employees riding to work bike bus-style Tuesday morning — our city is bursting with bicycling!

This Saturday, venerable nonprofit Cycle Oregon will add to the spirit with their first annual Bike Block Party— and I have a hunch it will be a huge hit. The plan is to throw a big bike fair on SE Sherman Street between 10th and 11th, which is right outside Baerlic Brewing, a business that’s become something of a cycling clubhouse in the past few years.

Cycle Oregon got a permit to close the street to cars so they can set up bike rodeo courses and a vendor expo full of cool local bike brands and cycling organizations. The event

Cycle Oregon began 37 years ago and came to prominence for their seven-day, fully-supported tours of Oregon’s best bike routes. When they sunsetted that event two years ago, it wasn’t an end to Cycle Oregon, it was a step in the organization’s evolution. They still host three bike rides, but are now also focused on their Jump Start program that gets kids on bikes throughout the state. With the Bike Block Party, Cycle Oregon is signaling their role as the state’s main bicycling booster and living up to their updated mission statement to, “Bring the joy of riding a bike to all of Oregon.”

Executive Director Steve Schulz told BikePortland that Cycle Oregon’s transition from an event-based organization to the “new Cycle Oregon” (a donor/program-based organization), “Was founded on the premise that the simple act of bicycling can be an antidote for physical and mental isolation.” But what good is bicycling if folks can’t access a bike or plug into the cycling community?

“Cycle Oregon is working to get more people on bikes by tackling barriers such as cost, accessibility and safety and so that anyone who wants to can experience the joy of riding a bicycle,” Schulz shared. “We are doing this collaboratively with creativity, an open mind, and enthusiasm, one person, community, and event at a time.” 

“We want people to know that we are developing into so much more [than just an event-based company],” Schulz continued. “With events like the block party, youth education programs, camp and event scholarships, bike giveaways, repair services — and of course events — we are working to expand our reach throughout the state.”

When it comes to Saturday’s Bike Block Party, Schulz said Cycle Oregon is making it happen because, “We all need a little more joy and a community to share that joy with.”

If you want to hang out with cool bike friends old and new, while plugging into cool local brands and organizations like Biketown, Trophy Cup, BikePOC, OMTM, Salmonberry Trail, Blaze the Trail Cat, Candlelighters for Children with Cancer, Bike Bus PDX, Sorella Forte, BikeLoud PDX, Community Cycling Center, Bike Summer, and more; roll over to the Bike Block Party on Saturday.

Cycle Oregon Bike Block Party
Saturday, April 26th from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm (rain or shine!)
Baerlic Brewing, SE Sherman between 10th and 11th.
Free entry (food and drinks available for purchase)
Event details

Oregon Active Transportation Summit kicks off Wednesday

Attendees at the 2023 summit mingle between sessions. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Tomorrow (Wednesday, April 23rd) transportation advocates will have a huge opportunity to learn, network and be inspired when the annual Oregon Active Transportation Summit (OATS) kicks off. This year’s event takes place at the Doubletree Hotel in the Lloyd and is jam-packing with amazing speakers, workshops, and social mixers.

Organized by The Street Trust, the event is billed as, “a platform to share best practices, tackle pressing challenges, and explore strategies that drive safety, equity, climate action, and community mobility and connectivity.”

I’ve attended a bunch of these over the years and it’s just getting better and better. BikePortland did a bunch of stories from the 2023 edition, but I can’t be there this time around as I need to focus on recovering from my recent knee surgery. Speaking of which, I need to sign off for today, but wanted to make sure there was at least some mention of OATS in case folks hadn’t heard about it yet.

Check out the schedule, consider grabbing some tickets, and have fun becoming smarter and getting fired up to change our city and the world!

City Councilors show no love for advocates who oppose I-5 Rose Quarter project

Advocates at City Council meeting Monday. L to R: Winta Yohannes and JT Flowers with Albina Vision Trust; Chris Smith and Joe Cortright with No More Freeways.

Advocates for and against the I-5 Rose Quarter project had a rare opportunity to voice their perspectives at Portland City Council on Monday. But it wasn’t a fair debate, as city councilors Loretta Smith and Olivia Clark were clearly in favor of one side and were deeply skeptical of the other.

Members of the Transportation & Infrastructure Committee heard from leaders of nonprofits Albina Vision Trust (AVT) and No More Freeways (NMF) as part of an agenda item organized by City Councilor and Vice-Chair of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Angelita Morillo. AVT has emerged as a powerful force in the Rose Quarter since it first came on the scene in 2017 with a plan to re-establish the neighborhood around the Moda Center that was destroyed by construction of I-5. NMF is a grassroots organization trying to stop and/or dramatically reform ODOT’s plans. The lack of any industry representatives or transportation agency staffers was by design. Morillo said at the outset that she felt it was important to have these “different community perspectives” offered by AVT and NMF at the table, “Because we often hear from industry and other voices a lot.”

But two of Morillo’s colleagues on the committee — councilors Loretta Smith and T&I Committee Chair Olivia Clark — clearly didn’t agree. They not only lamented the absence of project leaders from the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) and Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT), they were clearly on the side of AVT, a nonprofit working to redevelop Rose Quarter neighborhoods that strongly supports the I-5 Rose Quarter project’s highway lids and expanded freeway lanes. This bias for AVT and the project in general manifested in part by how Clark and Smith treated NMF co-founders Chris Smith and Joe Cortright, both of whom were invited to testify.

The hearing began with AVT Executive Director Winta Yohannes. Yohannes used her time to clarify her organization’s position on the controversial project. She knows there are many Portlanders who are excited about plans to build a new neighborhood on lids over I-5 through the Rose Quarter; but who strongly oppose other project elements that would increase auto capacity by widening I-5 between I-84 and I-405. AVT’s support of the project, “is rooted in our very clear and deep understanding of trade-offs of project components,” Yohannes said. For AVT, the benefits of the estimated (and likely to be higher) $1.9 billion project outweigh the possible harms. Yohannes also knows that the $450 million federal grant to build the project (which would not have been awarded without AVT) would be in jeopardy of the widening elements were stripped away.

“This project represents the braiding of climate, community and statewide economic development goals,” Yohannes told the committee. “At this point, we ask that you continue to stand with us, not us a rubber stamp for a project, but as vigilant partners committed to forward momentum. We do not want to see this council be the one that snatches defeat from the jaws of victory on a project that represents over a decade of hard-earned work and community building.”

Before Yohannes and her co-testifier, AVT Director of Government Affairs & Communications JT Flowers, completed their remarks, Yohannes shared one last comment — one that directly undercut the testimony that would come next from No More Freeways.

“One last note here about the slogan, ‘Lids not lanes.’.. There is no highway cover without a complete project… so unless you know someone has a secret plan for delivering just the covers [and not the lanes], I want to be really realistic and just honest on the record and saying that that is not a real position.,” Yohannes shared.

At that point, and with an eye on the clock, Councilor Morillo suggested having NMF reps Cortight and Smith give their presention, so that both groups would have equal time to share their remarks and a Q & A with the committee could be held after hearing information from both sides. But Committee Chair Clark overruled Morillo and allowed a discussion to begin.

Councilor Loretta Smith was the first to speak. She was glad Yohannes and Flowers made a clear argument that the lids and lanes were inseparable and said, “I think the public is getting confused as if we could [just] do the lids.” Smith wanted to get a clarification on the record so she asked Flowers, point-blank: “Do you think we can do these lids without doing the whole project?”

“There’s absolutely no path, financially or politically, to developing a highway cover without the expansion of the freeway,” Flowers replied.

Smith was pleased to hear that and quickly accepted it as incontrovertible fact. Smith might be so accepting of AVT’s views because she appears to have worked for them in the past. Smith is a registered lobbyist with the State of Oregon via her Dream Big Communications company, which she lists on LinkedIn as being principal of from 2019 to the present. According to state records from the Office of Government Ethics Commission, Smith lists AVT as one of her clients as of January, 2024.

(UPDATE, 2:00 pm: In a phone call with BikePortland today, Smith confirmed she was hired by AVT last year to help them earn $25 million in state funding for a housing development. Asked if her conduct at Monday’s meeting was influenced in any way by her prior relationship with AVT, Smith said “No, because I didn’t work on [the I-5 Rose Quarter Project]. They have different people who work on different projects. I never worked on the I-5 Rose Quarter.” Then Smith added, “Don’t make something out of nothing. This is no big deal… I don’t appreciate you trying to check me on this. You can try to write something up, but I would be very careful [then laughed a few times] about how you characterize my interaction [with AVT] as being favorable. It is not a good thing to do just because you are more favorable, obviously, to the other group.” “I never said that,” I replied. To which Smith said, “Well, you’re calling me on something, so you must be favorable to the other group.”)

After hearing Flowers response, Smith said the public must be “confused,” she implied that anyone who says otherwise is spreading “misinformation,” and she characterized NMF’s concerns that the actual freeway ODOT wants to build could be much wider than they’re letting on as, “totally ridiculous.”

Councilor Loretta Smith in February, 2024. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

“I wish ODOT was here to be able to tell their story,” Smith lamented. “I want the misinformation to stop. I want people to tell the truth about the project and not confuse it.” These comments shocked me as I listened in real time. I’ve never heard anyone cast such aspersions on the work of Chris Smith or Joe Cortright, two widely respected advocates who’ve devoted countless hours to their work on this project. And Councilor Smith’s initial comments were just a precursor to what was to come.

In his presentation, NMF Co-founder Chris Smith laid out his organization’s concerns with the project and attempted to get the new council members up to speed. NMF believes any investment in widening freeways is “adding more harm that could go to proactive investments like transit, walking, biking, that could reduce greenhouse gasses,” Smith said. NMF is suing ODOT to force them to do a comprehensive alternatives analysis that would consider whether congestion pricing and/or transit upgrades could alleviate traffic concerns in lieu of lane widening. “We have never had a full alternative analysis at that level,” Smith explained.

And he also responded directly to Yohannes’ assertion that “Lids not lanes” is not a real position. “We do believe in ‘Lids not lanes,'” Smith said. “And if ODOT won’t allow us to imagine a project that will do that, we need a better political imagination.”

Smith then passed it over to his fellow NMF co-founder, economist and City Observatory publisher, Joe Cortright.

Cortright shared graphics of a massive freeway (above), much wider than anything ODOT has shared publicly for many years (this project has been bouncing around since 2012, but its current form took shape in 2017). The images came from ODOT themselves and NMF acquired them through public records requests. “This is something they never show anymore, because what they’re really proposing is a massive freeway-widening project,” Cortright explained against the backdrop of a freeway rendering and a technical cross-section drawing created by ODOT that puts the total width of the freeway at 162 feet. “ODOT is proposing is to essentially double the width — and in some cases triple the width of I-5 through the Rose Quarter.”

Cortright also pointed out that independent consultants hired by ODOT as part of their analysis of the highway covers told the state agency they could narrow the planned freeway widening by 40-feet and still achieve project goals. Then, as Cortright warned the committee that once ODOT gets shovels in the ground (a “classic Robert Moses technique from the 1930s” he said), the city and other partners would be obligated to build the entire project no matter the costs (which Cortright believes will be much higher than the $1.9 billion estimated today (of which a $1 billion gap still remains)) — Committee Chair Clark cut him off and told him it was time to wrap up.

After an abrupt ending to their presentation, Councilor Clark was first to respond. “I think some of the data you’re talking about is outdated,” she said, in reference to Cortright’s claims that ODOT plans a much wider freeway than what’s proposed. She then said she would have PBOT and ODOT come to the committee to “rectify some of the misunderstandings here.”

“I appreciate your passion,” Clark added, before trying to pass the baton to Councilor Smith.

But NMF’s Smith forcefully interjected: “The physical dimensions are correct. The striping underneath is a matter of opinion about what ODOT would do in future.”

“We’ll wait for to hear from ODOT and PBOT,” Clark replied, in what felt like an attempt to quiet the NMF advocate.

Then Councilor Smith began her questioning. She implied they weren’t ODOT documents because she didn’t see the ODOT logo on them. When Chris Smith reiterated they were indeed authentic ODOT documents, Councilor Smith not only waved-away Smith’s comment, she dressed him down. “I agree with the Chair. That is outdated information and that’s really unfair and disingenuous of you to bring it here as if it was released yesterday.” (Asked in a phone call today how she knows the doc is outdated, Smith replied, “ODOT said it’s outdated.”)

Then the councilor asked: “Do you think you can actually do the lids without expanding the freeway?” As NMF’s Smith answered and Cortright attempted to add some context of his own, Councilor Smith spoke over Cortright, saying, “Excuse me, you don’t have the floor. I do.”

With Cortright silenced, Councilor Smith asked again: “Now, could you please answer the question Chris? That’s what I’m asking you — not your political, environmental plan — I’m just asking you, as it stands right now, can we do the lids without doing the freeways?”

“The goal of a full EIS [the larger alternatives analysis called for in NMF’s lawsuit] is to answer that question,” Smith responded.

“Thank you,” Councilor Smith replied. “I would appreciate, when you come to this this committee, that you give us real information and not what you would hope. That is a question I would ask ODOT if they were here.”

It’s unlikely Smith would get a clear answer from ODOT either, but according to documents currently published on the official project website, the width would be even wider than what Cortright shared at the council meeting. Asked about the exchange via text message after the hearing, Chris Smith told BikePortland, “It’s frustrating they’re focusing on the date of the document and not the width of the freeway.”

When Cortright spoke up to remind Councilor Smith that ODOT’s own consultants said the freeway could be narrower, Councilor Smith said, “But you don’t want any freeway, whether it’s narrow or wide, so it wouldn’t matter if it’s a narrow freeway or not.”

“I don’t think we said that,” Cortright replied, and then Councilor Clark cut off the exchange and gave Councilor Mitch Green the floor. Green stated his strong opposition to the project, saying he’d rather invest in better transit service instead of more lanes and that he doesn’t trust ODOT to be fiscally responsible.

After that, Clark closed the hearing.


Watch the meeting below. The player starts at the end of Chris Smith’s presentation:

Reckless driving Instagrammer arrested by Portland Police

Burell’s truck. (Photo: Portland Police Bureau)

In dozens of videos posted to the keepingitlittlike06 account on Instagram, a man who goes by “Mr. 06” can be seen driving a pick-up truck with his legs while hanging out of the drivers’ side window and filming himself with his phone. In other videos, he can be seen doing donuts in public parks. Many people are worried that his highly distracted and dangerous behaviors while operating a motor vehicle could lead to an innocent person being injured or killed.

A man who posted dozens of videos of himself driving dangerously on Portland streets has been arrested. The Portland Police Bureau say 33-year-old Oscar Burell Jr. called in a report of a hit-and-run on Southeast Hawthorne and 37th on Friday, April 18th. But the officer realized the caller was actually a suspect in a series of crimes the PPB had been investigating since March.

The officer called for backup and responded to SE Hawthorne, where he ultimately arrested Burell. “The officer’s investigation determined that Burell was involved in a confrontation with another driver on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard,” reads a PPB statement. “The other driver sideswiped Burell, who was standing in the roadway, as he drove away. Burell did not report any injuries. The other driver has not yet been located.”

According to PPB, they’d been tracking Burell since March. As we reported, he showed no shame in doing donuts in public parks and driving with complete disregard for other road users. Then he would post the videos to Instagram for all to see. PPB says they’ve been investigating him since late March, following tips from the public about Burell’s posts. They noted how videos showed him, “speeding, passing illegally, failing to maintain lanes, hanging out of the window of his moving truck, driving through parks, and other reckless conduct throughout the Portland metropolitan area that put the community and himself at risk.”

Burell’s posts spread not only to his followers online, but to officers throughout the bureau.

Burell’s blue, 1994 GMC Sierra pickup has been towed and he’s been booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on charges of Reckless Driving (3 counts), Criminal Mischief in the First Degree, and Reckless Endangering Another Person.

The investigation is ongoing. PPB wants anyone with first-hand information about Burell’s crimes and behaviors to email crimetips@police.portlandoregon.gov and reference case number 25-89041. (“Please do not send social media posts, links to websites, or any secondhand information,” PPB says.)

James Johns bike bus grows thanks to ‘community initiated diverter’ and new signage

James John bike bus organizer Jessica Fletcher (right) with volunteers (left to right) Nat West, Joseph Perez, and Brendan Price. (Photos: Jessica Fletcher)

Organizers of the James John Elementary School bike bus held a special Earth Day edition of their morning ride to school, and it was made even more special because of a temporary traffic diverter that kept car users off their route.

As I reported last month, there’s huge demand for the bike bus in the St. Johns and Cathedral Park neighborhoods. The one big thing stopping advocates from meeting it is that many families either don’t have a bike and/or don’t feel safe sharing the roads with drivers. James John Elementary school parents and school groups came together back in March to give out free bikes to kids and parents in need, and now they’ve taken concrete steps to make their route safer.

According to ride organizer Jessica Fletcher, they pulled off what the Portland Bureau of Transportation referred to in a meeting last week as a “community initiated diverter” this morning. Fletcher applied for and received a block party permit from PBOT and was able to prohibit drivers from turning on North Charleston between N Smith and N Hudson.

They used a combination of hay bales, “Street Closed” signs, and homemade bike bus route signs to communicate that drivers were not welcome. Further strengthening the route and the ride were PBOT’s brand new bike bus wayfinding signs that James John’s bike bus used for the first time. These signs were made possible thanks to a $50,000 grant delivered to PBOT from Metro that aims to shift travel trips away from cars.

“The diverter worked great,” Fletcher shared with BikePortland. “Our neighborhood association provided all the barricades and the ‘Street Closed’ signs. The SJNA [St Johns Neighborhood Association] and Cathedral Neighborhood Association are all about community and safe streets!”

To get the block party permit, Fletcher knocked on every door along the blocks and let them know what she was working on. She’s now sold on the idea of doing these quick and inexpensive diverters as a way to demonstrate their effectiveness and show how they are often well-supported by folks who live along bike bus routes.

Fletcher also enlisted the help of advocates at BikeLoud PDX, who showed up to help install the diverter and assist with the ride. Former city council candidate Nat West, Brendan Price, and active BikeLoud volunteer Joseph Perez were among the helpers. One of their jobs was to count car traffic as part of the PBOT-sanctioned diverter pilot program.

The cherry on top of this wonderful effort in St. Johns is that several of the students riding this morning received free bikes last month. Fletcher says a group of four fifth graders who received bikes ride their bikes to school every day (and even park their bikes in the racks together).

It’s so great to see how this bike bus effort in St. Johns has grown in such a relatively short time. It validates so much of what many advocates have been saying for years: if you just get bikes in the hands of those in need and make streets in their neighborhood safer to ride on, magical things will happen.

Way to go Jessica, Joe, Brendan, Nat, and everyone else who’s working on this project and many others around the city!

Volunteer Nat West counting traffic as part of the PBOT pilot diverter program.

With drama in rear-view, Thursday Night Ride celebrates 10th anniversary tonight

On TNR in 2021. (Photos: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)
Flyer for tonight.

Portland’s big weekly social ride turns 10 today — and after surviving Covid, leadership vacuums, drama, and calendar delisting, its fans are more than ready to celebrate.

The Thursday Night Ride (TNR) began in the spring of 2015. One of its first organizers, former Portlander Nathan Jones, said he was inspired by large social rides he attended in Guadalajara that have thousands of riders each week. The ride is a socially-paced mass of folks who come for all different reasons. One year in and it was clear TNR had become an institution. It somehow managed to be massive and important like Critical Mass, but without the political baggage or police presence. It was just a fun, rolling party and it was reliable: every Thursday rain or shine at Salmon Street Springs. Meet at 7:00, announcements at 7:30.

But it wasn’t all hunky-dory. Drama spouted up here and there as original founders moved away and various folks emerged as self-proclaimed leaders. When events blow-up in popularity, they often also attract lots of different egos and ideas for how to keep the fun going. Intra-community drama eventually reared its head at TNR, with various types of dysfunction, usually centered around the fact that there was no central form of leadership.

In late 2023, the drama spilled over when there was an altercation at the meet-up spot that was recorded on video and shared widely in our community. As I reported at the time, the situation was serious enough that the ride was ultimately taken off the Shift Calendar due to violating the group’s code of conduct that exists to make rides safe for everyone.

In our community, the Shift Calendar is ground zero for organizing. If something isn’t on Shift, it’s almost like it doesn’t exist. So Shift, an all-volunteer group of scrappy activists who believe bike fun makes the world a better place, plays a key role in mediating these complicated and emotional disputes.

This past week, after many hours of meetings and discussions, Shift and TNR organizers came to a resolution and the ride is back on the calendar. (Note that the ride never stopped happening, it was just delisted from Shift.) “TNR organizers stepped up, met with the Shift Code of Conduct (CoC) Committee, and addressed standing concerns,” reads a post shared on Instagram by Shift today.

The new calendar listing shows John “JR” Russell (who you might have met at Bike Happy Hour) as the person who’s “sort of in charge now.” JR calls TNR a “an energetic, party-paced, rolling dive bar of a ride for newcomers and regulars alike.” He says the ride has new leadership, but same positive vibes. He also wants to remind folks that if anyone displays behavior that makes other riders feel uncomfortable or unsafe, they will be held accountable.

So come out tonight and celebrate this great ride and all the amazing folks who show up to have fun on bikes. 10 years of a weekday ride that is held together by nothing more than a few dedicated folks and a shared love of community and cycling is something very special that no one should take for granted.

“We are TNR!”

ODOT set to break ground on Outer Powell project

A view of the first phase of the project in August 2020, showing new bike lane and sidewalk treatments. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Bike lanes on Southeast Powell Boulevard east of I-205 are slated for upgrades as part of an Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) project.

ODOT started work on a three-mile stretch of SE Powell from SE 99th to 174th (city limits) in 2019 at total project cost of $158 million. The project was allocated $110 million by the Oregon Legislature in 2017 with the condition that once the changes were made, ownership of the road would be transferred to the City of Portland. The first phase of this project was completed in 2020 and focused on Powell between SE 122nd Ave to SE 136th Ave. At a cost of $25 million, ODOT added new bike lanes (one side elevated to sidewalk level), new lighting, more crossings, upgraded traffic signals, transit stop improvements, new sidewalks, and more.

Phase two of the project consists of two sections, from SE 99th to 122nd and from SE 136th to SE 174th (city limits). ODOT plans to match the cross-section from phase one, which also includes one less driving lane. A key goal of the project is to reduce the frequency and severity of crashes and reduce conflicts between all road users.

ODOT says construction will begin this spring and is expected to last five years. The project was expected to break ground in summer of 2022 but for some reason (that I’m not yet clear on), it was delayed. A major project on Powell just west of this project has also been delayed and neighbors have ramped up pressure on agency leaders and elected officials as deaths and injuries continue to pile up.

Once ODOT is done with this project, they’ll hand over ownership and maintenance responsibilities to the City of Portland as part of a jurisdictional transfer that was ordered by the legislature in 2017.

Weekend Event Guide: Easter, Troutdale explorations, 4/20 fun, and more

I-5 Bridge from the Vancouver side. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Now is the time in my recovery where I’m getting real sad about all the events I’m unable to attend and cover. Ladds 500, TNR’s 10 Anniversary ride tonight, the big transportation lobby day that’s happening at the State Capitol in Salem today, and so on and so forth. Ugh! All I can do is focus on getting better so I can get back out there sooner and start creating stories again. I think it will be early May before things are somewhat normal again (because I have a family trip in late April that was planned before my surgery).

Anyways, enough about me, below are suggestions for what to do this weekend while I stare wistfully outside my window at the spring sun and scroll through all the fun photos y’all are sharing…

Friday, April 18th

Summer Night Rides – 5:30 pm at Cyclepath Bike Shop (NE)
Want a fun crew to spend Friday night’s with? Roll to the shop and then tackle iconic Portland climbing loops on this new weekly ride series. It’s like Friday Night Lights, but for bike people! More info here.

Saturday, April 19th

Bike Milwaukie Monthly Ride – 10:00 am at Milwaukie Bay Park (SE)
Explore Oak Grove via the Trolley Trail and then end at the awesome new Pfriem Brewery in downtown Milwaukie. Make it a loop from Portland and this is a classic local route and the perfect distance for almost any fitness level. More info here.

Trek to Two Bridge Loop – 10:00 am at Trek Slabtown (NW)
Join an experienced ride leader for this 40-mile route that will cross the Columbia River and connect bridges and carfree bike paths. Expect a medium pace of 12-14 mph. More info here.

Troutdale Travels – 10:00 am at Glen Otto Park (Troutdale)
Explore the neighborhoods around downtown Troutdale with a wonderful local guide and ride leader named Frank Stevens (you might have met him at Bike Happy Hour or other Portland events). Ends at Mt. Hood Community College Farmers Market. More info here.

Earth Day Community Bike Ride – 11:00 am at Colonel Summers Park (SE)
The City of Portland Bureau of Transportation invites you on this group bike ride to Laurelhurst Park where they’ve organized a big community gathering for Earth Day. More info here.

Sunday, April 20th

Reach the Beach Training Ride – 9:00 am at REI in Hillsboro
Join experienced (but nice and friendly!) riders from Portland Bicycle Club for a beautiful route around Hagg Lake as you tone your thighs and bums for the Reach the Beach event. More info here.

Kidical Mass Easter Bunny Ride – 2:00 pm at Irving Park (NE)
The merry-makers of Kidical Mass want to celebrate the season by decorating bikes and adding bunny ears to helmets for this fine Portland tradition. Ride from park-to-park with your little ones at this family-friendly event. More info here.

Very Merry 4/20 Ride – 3:45 pm at Colonel Summers Park (SE)
Pay homage to Mary J on this ride that will include stops at dispensaries and will have fun music and a 10-mile route at an easy/social pace. 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.

New planning model tested as riders tackle SE 7th and Sandy

Riders gathered for a live-action planning exercise on SE 7th and Sandy Sunday morning. (Photo: Aaron Kuehn)

Publisher’s Note: This is a guest post by Aaron Kuehn. Aaron is a former chair of BikeLoud PDX, is passionate about wayfinding, and wrote a series of articles for BikePortland on bikeway design.

Early Sunday morning, as the springtime sun warmed the asphalt, a group of nearly 20 curious Portlanders, planners, and advocates gathered in hi-viz vests to roll up their sleeves—and then roll through a notoriously treacherous intersection at SE 7th and Sandy.

The event, listed on the Shift calendar as the Street Plaza Test Ride, was no ordinary community feedback session. Instead of just viewing plans on a board, participants took part in a live-action, hands-on “planning by doing” process: sketching new lanes, medians, and turn boxes with tape and cones, then test-riding different configurations to feel what worked best. The goal? Refine bikeway design options for a challenging five-way intersection that’s both a pivotal link in the 7th Ave Neighborhood Greenway and part of an evolving public plaza.

This area has long been a sore spot for people on bikes. In a 2023 BikePortland article, Taylor Griggs described SE 7th and Sandy as a “sketchy intersection,” where crossing Sandy northbound means darting across multiple lanes of fast-moving car traffic with limited visibility. “It’s one of the most complicated maneuvers I regularly make,” she wrote. “I dread the experience every single time.”

Over the past few years, ongoing efforts have aimed to reimagine this space—not just for safety, but for public life. Depave’s 2022 block party previewed the potential of a people-centric plaza, and more recently, a BikePortland video in 2024 highlighted last summer’s creative reuse of space—and lingering concerns from riders about the safety and comfort of the temporary bikeway winding through it.

Sunday’s test-ride event built on all of that, bringing a new level of focus and nuance to the conversation. It was led by a unique collaboration: the nonprofit Depave, now in its fourth year of iteration on the plaza; Adam Zucker, an engineer who previously developed a landscaped plaza nearby; Mobycon, a Dutch firm known for high-quality bikeway planning; engineering consultants KPFF; and BikeLoud, the grassroots advocacy group that helped organize and facilitate the ride.

Importantly, the most recent design options were drafted by KPFF and Mobycon, and the on-the-ground feedback session was led by me on behalf of BikeLoud. After completing a heatmap-style study showing that people on bikes mostly use the shortest path to cross the site, biking this stretch myself multiple times per week, and seeking the next breakthrough in community-focused planning and design, I felt it was important that this exercise be driven by action-oriented planning: an underutilized method that trades static renderings for real-world testing, especially when the stakes are high and the space is complex.

And this site is very complex. It’s not just the five-way geometry, but the steep grade, the blind turn, the vehicle speeds, and the mix of travel modes that make this a crucial test case. It’s also a space in transition—from redundant roadway to public plaza—meaning that transportation and placemaking need to coexist, not compete. For other plazas in Portland and future segments of the Green Loop, this type of engagement could be a model.

The conversations on the pavement were practical and cooperative. Volunteers debated the best turn angles for visibility and lane placements. Some emphasized the need for more direct routes for vehicular cycling; others focused on how to make the Sandy crossing intuitive and reassuring for all users. Everyone brought a valuable lens: riders who use the intersection daily, planners steeped in Dutch cycling infrastructure—even freight operators like B-Line Urban Delivery are invested in the bikeway and the plaza’s success.

The design team is reviewing the feedback collected that day and will use those observations to shape the next temporary buildout of the plaza, scheduled to open August 9 through September 19. Hopefully, Depave will secure the additional funding needed to finally build the plaza using permanent materials—and by that time, the design will have been thoroughly tested through all these trials.

Yes, action-oriented planning can take more time and resources than traditional methods—but it also surfaces better ideas. When people test out designs in real life, they give more useful feedback. They notice things you can’t see on paper. They revise. And they come away with a sense of shared ownership. There were some regrets expressed that this design approach wasn’t used at other complex junctions in the bike network—but also hope that it might be going forward.

As we packed up cones, barriers, and rolls of four-inch white duct tape at the end of the day, there was a feeling that something important had happened—not just for this intersection, but for how we approach street transformations more broadly. We didn’t just talk about best practices. We created them as we pedaled. Together.

Want to help shape future designs at SE 7th and Sandy or other locations? Keep an eye out for upcoming test rides and plaza events. And if you have thoughts about this intersection or ideas for balancing bike access with public space, add your comments below.

Job: Experienced Mechanic Needed – Joe Bike

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Job Title

Experienced Mechanics Needed

Company / Organization

Joe Bike

Job Description

Are you interested in joining our well-rounded crew of talented and diversely-skilled mechanics? At Joe Bike, we pride ourselves on providing excellent service and communication with every customer. We like making personal connections and finding solutions to meet customer needs and budgets. Our team also knows how to have fun and enjoys collaborating on projects. We offer competitive wages based on experience, paid time off, health benefits, and a retirement plan.

How to Apply

If this sounds like you, please send an email to info@joe-bike.com with your resume and answer the following questions to help us get to know you:

1. What are your best mechanical strengths when working with bikes, and what areas are you less confident in?

2. Our bike shop is a busy and dynamic environment. How would you prioritize your time when deciding between working on bikes, helping customers with test rides and product selections, and working on cleaning, organizing, and completing side projects around the store?

3. What is your ideal bike shop environment and why?