Where to send your kid for bike summer camp

Scenes from Cycle Oregon Summer Kids Camp last year. They’ve expanded offerings for this summer and have scholarships available if you act fast. (Photos: Cycle Oregon)

Tis the season to consider summer camps for the little ones in your life. And since we live in a cycling-soaked region, bike summer camps are relatively commonplace. But you can’t sign up for something you don’t know about! That’s where this little roundup comes in. If you’re interested in finding a cycling summer camp, consider the options below…

Cycle Oregon

“At a time when childhood independence is declining and fewer children are biking to school, Cycle Oregon’s Summer Kids Camp aims to reverse the trend. Led by the experienced team behind the statewide Jump Start bicycle education program, the camp transforms young riders into confident bike commuters through a curriculum focused on safety, wayfinding, and real-world riding.”

Cycle Oregon did so well with their camps in their first year they’ve expanded offerings for 2026. They now offer full-day camps in Portland, Hillsboro, and Bend for kids ages 8-12. They offer scholarships to qualified families if you register by March 29th. Price: $550. Website

Biking Buds

“Our approach blends the magic of traditional camp culture, the intention of experiential education, and the practical skill-building of a modern day camp. Campers learn biking fundamentals at their own pace, strengthen resilience through supported challenges, and develop social-emotional confidence, all while riding, laughing, exploring, and making new friends.”

Biking Buds has four different camps and serves kids ages 3-12. Full day and half day options are available. Their home base is in the Ladds Addition neighborhood in Southeast. Price: $350 – $650 per week. Website

Pedalheads

Pedalheads offers two types of bike camps: one that sticks to streets and the other that goes off-road onto trails. Website

Northwest Trail Alliance

This just in from NWTA:

“Northwest Trail Alliance is partnering with Portland Parks & Recreation and the Montavilla Community Center to offer a series of mountain biking day camps for elementary school students. Check out our website and/or the Portland Parks & Rec. summer programs registration soon or more information, or reach out to Eric Oliver, erico@nw-trail.org.”

Trackers

“Join the Rovers Wheelers and learn to ride in a calm, supportive setting surrounded by laughter and discovery. Practice balance, braking, and pedaling through playful games and short, supervised adventures. When you’re off the bike, enjoy creative crafts, storytelling, and songs with new friends.”

Based in the Sellwood/Brooklyn area, Trackers is a Portland institution when it comes to quality outdoor education. Their Rovers Wheelers class is a full day camp for kids kindergarten to second grade. Price: $445 (5% discount if you register by April 24th). Website

WashCo Bikes

If you live in Washington County, this could be a great option for you. WashCo Bikes offers eight weeks of camps in various locations (Hillsboro, Tigard, Forest Grove) for kids ages 8-12. Price: $350 (scholarships available). Website

Coach Robbie MTB

I haven’t vetted this person yet, but the website seems legit so it might be worth inquiring if you’ve got a kid interested in becoming a serious mountain biker — or who just wants to gain confidence on the jumps and trails. Camps are held at Gateway Green Bike Park and Sandy Ridge Trail Area. Price $385. Website

Washington Transportation Camp

“If you are a high school student passionate about pursuing a career in transportation or simply curious about this rapidly evolving industry, WATC promises an adventure-filled camp where you’ll explore, discover, and have a blast while learning!”

This is a very intriguing program sponsored in part by the State of Washington. It’s a way for high schoolers to get exposure to the transportation industry while staying in a college dorm and learning form professionals in the field. It’s a free, week-long program offered to Washington high school students entering 10th, 11th or 12th grade. Website


Have you heard of any other bike summer camps? If so, let me know and I’d be happy to add them to this post.

Guest Opinion: Vision Zero is possible, but focus must change

(Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

By Sarah Risser

After Portland committed to Vision Zero in 2016, things only got worse. The statistics have gotten better recently, but if we want to reach zero we must acknowledge current shortcomings to our approach and be laser-focused on the true risks.

First, let’s rewind… 

For nearly a decade, road fatalities in Portland climbed (aside from small downticks in 2018 and 2022) until culminating in a three-decade, panic-inducing high in 2023 when 69 people were killed. Vision Zero was on the hot seat. People wanted to know when the carnage would stop. To outraged cries of “Vision Zero isn’t working,” City of Portland staff held firm. “It is working,” they’d say. Where the city invested in safety, fatalities were down. Not everyone was convinced.

Are we trying to make a dangerous system safer, or reduce the danger itself? They are not the same thing.

– Sarah Risser

Then, to everyone’s relief, fatalities dropped in 2024. And in 2025, they dropped sharply. The narrative flipped. PBOT issued a statement declaring progress, and many road-safety advocates put 2023 firmly in their rear-view mirror with a sigh of relief. But the two-year decline could simply reflect a post-Covid surge correction, rather than a structural shift. Moreover, Portland’s trends have closely mirrored national trends: a surge after Covid followed by a decline. This suggests larger forces are at play. 

And still, the core question remains: Why are Portland’s roads so deadly?

Portland’s Vision Zero staff have quietly answered this question with a disclaimer on the first page of every Vision Zero Action Plan, Update, and Addendum: ‘Achieving Vision Zero goals depends upon available funding… Optimal performance depends on funding.’ 

Portland is cash-strapped, and its budget reflects its core values. Until the city consistently prioritizes human life through sustained investment, road fatalities will persist. Based on this, everyone should immediately moderate their expectations. I could end here, but there’s more to say.

Funding is only part of the problem

The program lacks authority as evidenced by its notable silence on politically sensitive issues that directly impact safety. There are many examples including but not limited to: not speaking up for dedicated bus lanes on 82nd Avenue or against high-speed police chases, refraining from weighing in on the possible widespread adoption of Autonomous Vehicles (AVs), and watching in silence as traffic-calming concrete planters are removed. A program tasked with eliminating deaths can’t sidestep policies that shape risk simply because they are controversial. To fully succeed, Vision Zero needs the courage and authority to engage in politically controversial policies and the unwavering support of Mayor Keith Wilson and City Administrator Raymond Lee when it does. 

In September of 2025, City Councilor Tiffany Koyama Lane introduced a resolution to reaffirm Portland’s commitment to Vision Zero and created a cross-bureau task force (which has yet to meet)  to build momentum for the program. This work should be applauded. 

Ensuring city council is fully behind Vision Zero is important; however, the most successful cities had a mayor who provided inspiration and championed Vision Zero. Hoboken, New Jersey offers a compelling and well-known case: Former two-term mayor Ravi Bhalla was inspired to act after he was forced to push his child’s stroller dangerously close to traffic. Bhalla worked tirelessly to daylight intersections, reduce speed limits, and upgrade infrastructure. Similarly, in Paris, former Mayor Anne Hidalgo transformed the city by taking space away from motor vehicles and giving it to bikers and walkers. The result has been a much quieter, cleaner — and safer — city. Having a Mayor who cares about road safety and is motivated to consistently prioritize safety over motor vehicles and throughput is extremely important to the success of the program.

Limits of the Safe Systems approach

Safe Systems approach. (Graphic: City of Portland)

The adoption of the Safe Systems approach by the City of Portland represented an important paradigm shift and step forward from the more top-down “Three Es” of Education, Engineering and Enforcement. Safe Systems incorporates public health principles which formally acknowledge that humans make mistakes and aims to reduce the consequences of human error by ensuring multiple systems — people, cars, speeds, streets, and post-crash care — are safe and work to reinforce each other. This ensures that if one system fails, other systems will compensate.

But the Safe Systems approach isn’t perfect. Its ‘Safe People’ pillar calls for shared responsibility among road users, directly contradicting the central tenet of Safe Systems: that humans will make mistakes and these mistakes should be anticipated. The focus on shared responsibility also enables potential back-sliding into a victim-blaming mentality and confusion over what is ultimately responsible for harm. For example, Portland’s unhoused population, as well as distracted or inebriated pedestrians, are often cited as part of the problem. They are not. These groups do not contribute to road traffic violence. They are at risk of being harmed by road-traffic violence. 

More importantly, the Safe Systems approach doesn’t clarify the cause of fatalities and serious injuries — the ‘pathological agent’ — nor does it provide a framework for prioritizing interventions. 

Vision Zero needs more clarity on what actually causes harm 

Recent work by Jessie Singer and David Ederer informs how Vision Zero programs can become more effective. In the video Singer produced for the nonprofit Families for Safe Streets, she argues that the safety science principles used in the workplace should be applied to road-traffic safety. Singer suggests applying “The Hierarchy of Controls” framework used in the workplace to prioritize interventions by effectiveness. Within this framework, the most effective intervention is physical elimination of the hazard (kinetic energy and the cars that convey it) with the least effective being personal protective equipment and education.  

Hierarchy of controls, as presented by Jessie Singer.

Ederer reframes road-traffic safety with an epidemiological lens where the agent of harm, kinetic energy, is transmitted by motor vehicles to inflict harm on relatively fragile human bodies. He presents the Safe Systems Pyramid which encourages interventions that have a widespread public health benefit and require little individual effort.

Both Singer and Ederer’s contributions call for clarity and focus on what needs to be controlled — the agent (kinetic energy) and vector (vehicles) — and how to prioritize interventions. 

Vision Zero won’t succeed until it is empowered to clearly and unapologetically name the problem: kinetic energy, transmitted at dangerous levels by motor vehicles. Until the city fully commits to reducing that energy by lowering speeds even further and reducing the number of, and collective reliance on cars, fatalities will persist.

By skirting around the cause of harm, Portland’s Vision Zero program is too deferential to motor vehicles, which are not only the vector of death on our streets, but bring a host of negative externalities that extend far beyond traffic safety.

Are we trying to make a dangerous system safer, or reduce the danger itself? They are not the same thing. We need to reduce danger at its source. If we continue to focus on increasing safety while allowing more and more kinetic energy and large vehicles onto our streets, we will keep getting the same results.

— Sarah Risser is a member of Families for Safe Streets and a dedicated road safety advocate.

Weekend Event Guide: No Kings rally, bike swap, Thorns, and more

Once again it is time to resist our terrible rulers. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Weekend forecast calls for dry skies and lots of resistance. Time to hit the streets and show the world that Americans are not cool with Trump.

Check out all my recommendations for the weekend below…

Friday, March 27th

Kelley Point Loop Ride – 10:00 am at Wilshire Park (NE)
Join leaders Ronda and Bob for a 27-mile jaunt out to Kelley Point Park (a magical place where the Columbia and Wilamette Rivers meet). The return loop is along the bluff of Willamette Boulevard where you’ll get views of downtown and can see the progress of PBOT’s exciting project. More info here.

Saturday, March 28th

Women’s Equinox Race – 8:30 am at Ovation Coffee (NW)
Say goodbye to winter by racing your guts out in this totally unsupported and unsanctioned road race. Neutral roll-out from the Pearl to Helvetia area where the fun really begins. Register to get the GPS route. More info here.

Baerlic Bike Swap – 11:00 am to 2:00 pm at Baerlic Brewing (SE)
The swap is back! This has become a much-anticipated, very well-attended event that promises not just a bunch of really excellent deals on used bikes and parts from dozens of vendors, but also really solid community vibes. More info here.

Thorns Bike Bus – 11:00 am at Baerlic Brewing (SE)
This group ride to Providence Park to watch the Thorns match will leave the bike swap around noon. Come join a fun-loving crew of soccer fans for this spirited ride. More info here

No Kings Rally – 12:00 to 4:00 pm at Battleship Oregon Memorial (SW)
Show your resistance to Trump at what’s expected to be a massive, nationwide mobilization against him and his administration’s policies. More info here.

Gnargo Launch Party and Ride – 1:00 pm at The Athletic (N)
Gnargo is a bike company that offers front loading cargo bikes. They’re boosting their Portland presence and The Athletic is helping them kick it off with a short ride followed by a party at the shop. More info here.

Sunday, March 29th

Cycle Cats and the ‘Burbs – 10:00 am at Beaverton Transit Center (West Side)
Ready to explore more of Washington County? Let the Cycle Cats lead the way with all their pedaling panache. Expect a 34-mile length and intermediate pace. More info here.

— Did I miss your event? Shout it out in the comments blow, let me know by filling out our contact form, or just email me at maus.jonathan@gmail.com.

Job: Maintenance Mechanic – B-Line Urban Delivery

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

Job Title

Maintenance Mechanic

Company / Organization

B-Line Urban Delivery

Job Description

Summary of role:
The core purpose of the Maintenance Mechanic role is to service and maintain our fleet of electric motor-assisted pedal vehicles, as well as support basic maintenance needs for our electric van fleet, and warehouse material handling equipment. The role is expected to perform routine maintenance procedures, safety inspections, and act as an on-call mechanic. The position requires comfort working with basic electrical systems and components, though advanced expertise is not required. The role may be coupled with delivery rider and/or warehousing support responsibilities or may stand independently.

Responsibilities:
The Maintenance Mechanic will be responsible for, but not limited to, the following:
● Perform routine maintenance and repair procedures, including spoke replacement, flat tire repair, basic electrical troubleshooting, shifting adjustments, and brake service
● Troubleshoot and repair basic mechanical and electrical failures on electric pedal-assisted vehicles
● Support basic maintenance and inspection needs for electric van fleet as needed
● Serve as a support mechanic on weekends
● Perform weekly safety inspections of the fleet, including but not limited to: checking for frame cracks, tire pressure, brake systems, hardware tightness, broken spokes, and component wear
● Document all work performed in the maintenance log and utilize internal tools, including Cycle Analyst data collection devices, to record relevant data
● Maintain a safe, clean, and organized workspace
● Communicate fleet condition, maintenance needs, and shop updates to the Fleet Manager and team
Key Competencies include, but are not limited to the following:
● Minimum 2 years professional shop experience required
● Familiarity with standard tool use and workshop practices required
● Comfort working with basic electrical and hydraulic systems required
● Experience with bicycles and e-bikes required; additional experience with other motor vehicles preferred
● Strong attention to detail and ability to complete repetitive tasks with consistency
● Ability to communicate effectively and work well within a team
● Basic computer skills required; experience with spreadsheets or similar tools preferred
● Demonstrates reliability, accountability, and trustworthiness

This is a part-time, non-exempt position with an expected schedule of approximately 20–30 hours per week focused on maintenance and repair responsibilities. Additional hours may be available through delivery rider and/or warehouse support duties, depending on business needs and candidate interest.
Pay range dependent upon experience: Hourly rate of $20.00–$22.00. Eligible for up to 120 hours of PTO annually and overtime pay where applicable.

How to Apply

Send resumes and cover letters to jobs@b-linepdx.com

This week at Bike Happy Hour: Bike Lane Uprising Founder Christina Whitehouse

This week at Bike Happy Hour our special guest is Bike Lane Uprising Founder Christina Whitehouse.

Founded in 2017 after Christina suffered a very close call, this app and website has spurred of a nationwide advocacy movement. Christina, who was named Chicagoan of the Year in 2022 and one of the 50 Most Influential People in American Cycling in 2023, and her all volunteer-run organization, provide a platform that catalogs bike lane obstructions from riders in hundreds of cities.

By building rich databases full of who’s blocking bike lanes and where, Bike Lane Uprising has illuminated hot spots, changed laws, helped get justice for crash victims, and empowered thousands of cyclists across the country. Her app has logged over 100,000 bike lane obstructions!

This Wednesday, 3/25 (tomorrow!), is your chance to meet Christina, thank her for her amazing work, and learn about what BLU has planned for the future. In addition to a short presentation, Christina will bring have a few of the hi-viz, reflective jackets BLU is well known for available for purchase. The jackets are amazing and this is a great opportunity to see them in person and try one on.

Don’t miss it! We’ll all be downloading the app and sharing bike lane blockage stories. Swing by Bike Happy Hour tomorrow between 3:00 and 6:00 pm. We’ll be at Migration Brewing on N Williams Avenue. Hope to see you there!

Get ready: Portland’s citywide e-bike rebate program launches April 6th

Rebates will be redeemed at local bike shops. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

It’s finally here. Three years after we first reported on it and just months after what program officials deemed a successful pilot, the Portland Rides, PCEF E-Bike Rebate Program is set for its full launch two weeks from today.

The program website went live today with information about how to prep for Monday, April 6th. Given that folks can qualify for an instant rebate of up to $1,600 for a standard e-bike or up to $2,350 for a cargo e-bike (plus $300 for accessories), I expect a lot of demand. People with low incomes (at or below 60% of Area Median Income) and those in various frontline communities (whom PCEF defines as, “groups disproportionately impacted by climate change and historically underserved by sustainability programs”) are eligible for rebates. Once deemed eligible, recipients will be chosen at random through an automated process.

Rebates for adaptive e-bikes will be available April 20th.

The program is powered by an investment from the Portland Clean Energy Community Benefits Fund (PCEF) of $20 million over five years and is expected to provide over 6,000 bikes to people in need between now and 2029. Seetha Ream-Rao, PCEF’s Transportation Decarbonization Program manager, said the program will support Portland’s “deeply rooted bike culture,” and will, “make commuting more affordable for low-income households, support healthier communities, improve transportation access and help the city reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

An online application and a basic safety training course (completed online) are required for each interested person. Once they’re confirmed for a rebate, they’ll receive a code that can be used at any one of 14 participating local bike retailers. Participants must choose from a list of around 100 qualified e-bike models. The program offers rebates for Class 1 (20 mph max speed, no throttle) and Class 2 (20 mph max speed, throttle).

Below is the list of 14 shops taking part in the program:

  • PSU Bike Hub
  • Joe Bike
  • Nomad Cycles PDX
  • Trek Bicycle Portland Slabtown
  • The eBike Store, Inc
  • TomCat Bikes, LLC
  • Clever Cycles Bicycle & Ebike Store
  • Trek Bicycle Portland Hollywood & Outlet
  • Trek Bicycle Portland Westmoreland
  • A Convenient Cycle
  • Sellwood Cycle Repair
  • pXcycle
  • Metropolis Cycle Repair
  • Vvolt eBikes | Portland

Applications for this first round of rebates will be accepted between April 6th and July 24th. To learn more, do a test ride, and submit your application in person, visit the EV Tailgate Party Powered by PCEF Earth Day event at Parkrose Middle School from 12:00 to 3:00 pm on April 11th.

www.portlandebikerebate.com

Guest Opinion: On Dolores Huerta Street

By Lois Leveen.

I want a street named Dolores Huerta
Let me tell you why
It would show us where we’ve been
And where we can go if we try
And if I ever feel lost
On a night that’s dark and bleak
I’ll find my way back home
On Dolores Huerta Street

– Alice Bag

Just after waking up on Thursday morning, I heard on OPB that Portland City Councilor Candace Avalos was proposing a street be renamed for Dolores Huerta. Huerta, a ninety-five-year-old activist who has dedicated her life to community building, political organizing, and bettering conditions for those whose labor makes our nation function, deserves to be honored. But the street Avalos identified already bears the name of one of Huerta’s longtime fellow activists, Cesar E Chavez. Avalos’s proposal is one of many such responses to the startling revelation, newly documented by the New York Times, that for years, Chavez sexually abused girls and women, including Huerta. 

Although the news broke on Wednesday, I somehow hadn’t heard it. Nevertheless, I had been thinking and speaking about Huerta on Wednesday evening, as I stood in the Abernethy Elementary schoolyard, singing with the Wild Rose Resistance Choir. Wild Rose is a street choir dedicated to singing songs of solidarity, resistance, and liberation. One of our favorites is Carsie Blanton’s “Little Flame,” a song that commemorates and inspires action in the face of injustice. “Little Flame” references a number of resistors and revolutionaries, and that night we took time to talk about each of them and the movements they were part of, including “Dolores,” as she is named in the song. 

Wild Rose is a radically welcoming choir, and we invite anyone who shares our commitment to resistance to sing with us. One of the participants on Wednesday, Perry, was joining our song circle for the first time. But, as is often the case, this person wasn’t a stranger. As fellow bicyclists, we’d connected on various group rides around Portland. And as a pedaling parent, Perry noted during our discussion of “Little Flame” that in April, various Portland schools would be participating in El Camino de Dolores, an Oregon Safe Routes to School “walk and roll to school day … to celebrate Dolores Huerta’s dedication to social justice” when “students will have the opportunity to learn about the farmworkers’ movement, her fight for equality, and how these struggles connect to current efforts for positive change.” 

Wednesday evening, the intersection of two parts of my Portland community-building life – singing as resistance and bicycling as connection – filled me with joy. But the revelation of the abuse Huerta and other women and girls survived has filled me and countless others with shock, horror, betrayal, and regret that someone we admired and lauded and studied had intentionally enacted such harm. As journalist Julio Ricardo Varela put it, “The years I spent defending César Chávez make me feel like a fool.” 

In 2024, I had co-taught Songs of Activism: The Music and the Movements of Harry Belafonte and Cesar Chavez, a course designed as part of an ongoing effort to diversify whose voices we raise up in music classes and jams. My co-teacher Avery Hill and I undertake this work because of how many beautiful and valuable voices have been marginalized or silenced, over many decades and centuries. We did not imagine that Huerta, whose inspirational activism we discussed in the class, was also one of the many beautiful and valuable voices who had been silenced. Now that we can finally understand from her own words what she carried all these years, we are even more inspired and moved to learn from her.

Every day, I cross Cesar E Chavez Boulevard. And every time I do, I think of terrible violence, violence that people in power have not done enough to prevent. I think of beloved children’s librarian Jeanie Diaz, killed by a driver across the street from the Belmont Library, while waiting for a bus to bring her home to her family. Of my beloved friend Grey Wolfe, a therapist and activist who, like Diaz, touched the lives of innumerable community members, and who was killed by a driver on the day before Thanksgiving, as she took her morning walk to Mount Tabor. Of Jocelyn Latka, a teenager I chatted with regularly when I patronized Movie Madness, where she worked, who was killed by a driver on 39th, as it was still called in 2006, partway along the seven-block-stretch where Diaz and Wolfe would later die. And of the others who have also died or been injured on this dangerous street, because Portland leaders fail to protect us.

Renaming one street is not enough to make us safe. Not safe from vehicular violence, nor safe from sexual predators. But renaming this particular street will make a difference. Reeling from the revelations about Chavez’s sexual predation, I composed a message to send the students who had taken Songs of Activism. I wanted to include a musical tribute to the women of the farmworkers movement, and that is how I discovered “Dolores Huerta Street,” a song written and performed for Huerta several years ago by the Latina punk pioneer Alice Bag. One verse, referring to an unspecified man for whom a street is named, seems particularly prescient in light of what we now know:

Those worn roads help preserve
And cement his story
Ignoring all her deeds
But think what it could mean
To a girl in her teens
If she could see what she could be
What she could be

Every day of my life, I cross a street named for someone we now know did terrible things over and over again, in a calculated and cruel way. I cannot honor that man, and I don’t want my city to honor him either. 

Naming a street or a school or anything for a particular individual can distort our understanding of history, because it’s not a single hero who makes meaningful change; positive historical change is always the work of many people, joining together. Labor movements in particular demonstrate the power of union:  coming together in collective struggle is a necessary strategy to make things better for everyone. Dolores Huerta herself is now reminding us that “The farmworker movement has always been bigger and far more important than any one individual.” 

So when my friends suggest the street formerly known as 39th might be better named Farm Workers Boulevard, or Grape Boycott Boulevard, or Solidarity Forever Boulevard, or Sí, se puede Boulevard, I know I would be proud to travel any of those streets. But I also know what Huerta has always meant to those whose lives she improved and to those whose own activism she inspired, and how much more she means to us for all she is modeling now. 

I don’t want to laud individual heroes. The cult of personality is part of what protects perpetrators like Chavez, just as it is part of what silences and isolates those they harm. And yet, in these times that feel so dark and bleak, I find that like Candace Avalos and Alice Bag, I also want a street named Dolores Huerta. 

As Nikki Darling wrote in “A Street Called Dolores Huerta,” the poem that inspired Alice Bag’s song, 

What would it feel like
and where would it go?

It would be like taking a journey
down a road I knew was meant for me.

A road I knew had been travelled
before my arrival.

A street named Dolores Huerta
would be a street worth seeing.

It would be valuable.
It is necessary and urgent.

Let us come together and build it.
We need desperately someplace to go.

Lois Leveen is an author, activist, bicyclist, and ukulele player in Portland.

(Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Monday Roundup: Transit cut impacts, Mamdani Ws, AVs and more

What a weekend, huh?! Hope you got a chance to enjoy our city in full bloom.

Below are the most notable stories that came across my inbox this past week…

Bike theft underbelly: An Australian cycling journalist dove deep into the bike theft world after responding to a Facebook Marketplace listing with the hope of reuniting a suspicious bike with its rightful owner. (Escape Collective)

Yes, Paris again: Sorry but I am still not tired of learning about how one solid elected official can make such transformational change to a major city, simply by pushing out car users from its busiest areas. (Bloomberg)

What a loser: “Donald Trump’s War On Nice Things is set to start removing bike lanes around the National Mall in Washington DC next week, because bicycles are woke and popular with Democrats.” (Wonkette)

Another Mamdani W: New Yorkers must be loving their new mayor, Zohran Mamdani. After the previous administration was hostile to bicycling, Mamdani has reversed course on a key piece of enforcement policy that will end the practice of issuing criminal citations for low-level bicycle traffic infractions. (Cycling Weekly)

Slower speeds at schools: Even bigger news about Mamdani is how he ordered NYC DOT to reduce speed limits to 15 mph on streets around all schools. They plan to have 15 mph school zones at 2,300 school locations by the end of his first team. (NYC Gov)

Deadly driving: This piece makes it clear that enforcement alone won’t save us from distracted drivers. We must create a cultural stigma around people who interact with their phones while driving. Name and shame! I’m tired of the selfish behavior. (Guardian US)

Impact of transit cuts: This story about what happened to peoples’ lives (and livelihoods) when Rhode Island’s transit authority made severe service cuts is a cautionary tale for Oregon. (Ocean State Media/NPR)

Video of the Week: Excellent overview that looks at the latest state-of-play for Waymo and Tesla AVs:


Thanks to everyone who sent in links this week. The Monday Roundup is a community effort, so please feel free to send us any great stories you come across.

Job: TomCat Bikes hiring mechanics – TomCat Bikes

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward

TomCat bikes is a small and vibrant bicycle repair shop in the Brooklyn Neighborhood in SE Portland. We service almost any bike that can fit through the door. We are seeking experienced bicycle mechanics who can work on yesterday’s electroforged Schwinn, today’s e-bikes, and everything in between.

Preferred skill sets:
– 2-5 years experience in a bicycle repair shop setting. Corporate, For-profit, Non-profit, Co-op all acceptable experiences
– An understanding that bicycle repair and service is the primary business model
– Efficient and fast repair of all bicycles, brand and channel agnostic
– Accurate estimates of service work; thorough documentation of work-in-progress to customer file; explaining work performed during handoff
– E-bike diagnostics and repair
– Knowledgeable with major hydraulic disc brake systems
– Efficient wheelbuilding
– In depth knowledge of vintage and modern drivetrain compatibility
– Sales of refurbished bikes
– New bike, frame up build experience
– Familiar with Lightspeed POS, Ikeono, and Square Appointments
– You know these acronyms: QBP, JBI, TCB, WTF, FLAME

Bonus:
– Social media experience
– Website optimizing
– Secondary marketplace posting
– eBay sales
– Certifications: Bosch, S-TEC, Micromobility Connect, UBI, etc.

Ideal temperaments:
– Open and welcoming to everyone of all ages, genders, orientations, origins, and incomes
– Problem solving
– Communicative on the phone, email, text, in person at shop
– Respectful of boundaries
– Works well with others
– Interested in learning new technologies while honing already established skills
– Not afraid to seek a second opinion
– Positive customer outcomes
– Can articulate upgrades or modernization and make it make sense to clients
– Independent, productive work ethic
– Confident of skills without being arrogant
– Less Oscar the Grouch, more Big Bird

Benefits:
– Flexible (really!) schedule
– Relaxed and welcoming work environment
– Non corporate vibe
– W2 wages and associated benefits
– Parts and accessories discounts from primary suppliers
– Hourly wages: $20-24, depending on experience to start
– Tips are split among mechanics (a surprising bump in pay!)
– Modern electric workstands
– Tools maintained and replaced when worn out

We are hiring experienced mechanics for part time or full time work and peak season hours. Total hours based on seasonal volume.

Know your stuff. Be awesome.
Send relevant work history with verifiable references to: tom@tomcatbikes.com
Please, no phone calls, no texts, no DM slidin.
Share widely, email directly.

Sunday Parkways returns to North Portland this summer

Sunday Parkways on North Willamette Blvd in 2014. (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

North Willamette Boulevard will be one of the stars of the show when Sunday Parkways hits this summer. The Portland Bureau of Transportation announced the 2026 Sunday Parkways season this morning and shared that the beloved open streets event will return to the North Portland Peninsula for the first time since 2019.

2026 is the 19th year of Sunday Parkways, a carfree fair that stretches for miles across the city and highlights parks and Portland’s largest public space — our streets.

We’re just two months from the first event of the season. Below are the dates and routes:

May 17th in Southwest Portland

June 28th in East Portland

August 2nd in North Portland

September 13th in Downtown Portland

Also in their announcement today, PBOT shared a series of City Bike Fairs that will kick off with the Hazelwood Bike Fair at Menlo Park Elementary on April 24th. The Centennial neighborhood will host a bike fair at Parklane Elementary School on May 29th and two more fairs coming to North and Northwest Portland will be announced soon. These bike fairs are billed as, “free, all-ages community events where adults and children can learn to ride a bike, get fitted with a new helmet, practice the rules of the road, and get minor repairs on their bikes.

For more route and event details, check the Sunday Parkways website.

Advocates demand action from PBOT on concrete planter removals

Note the large concrete planters in top image (from April 2025). Bottom image taken this morning by Claire Vlach.

Simmering tensions over the removal of concrete planters on a popular neighborhood greenway in Southeast Portland have reached a low boil. After months of discussions between cycling advocates and transportation bureau staff, the City’s Bicycle Advisory Committee (BAC) is demanding the planters be re-installed or replaced with something that provides the same benefits.

In September of last year, I reported that some Portlanders who bike on Southeast Salmon Street were dismayed when the City of Portland removed barriers placed on the street in 2021 during the Covid-era “Slow Streets” initiative. Officials from the Portland Bureau of Transportation said the yellow-painted planters were a maintenance liability due to being repeatedly hit and moved by car drivers, and that a 2024 directive from the City Traffic Engineer encouraged them to remove temporary infrastructure in favor of more permanent solutions. PBOT said another reason for their removal was a slew of planned safety updates (speed bumps, new crossings, parking restrictions at corners, and so on) on Salmon and other greenways.

But advocates are unsatisfied and say that PBOT’s plans for the greenways don’t come anywhere close to providing the same benefits that the concrete planters once did. Now they’ve upped their concern with a three-page letter endorsed by the BAC.

SE Salmon and 20th. Bottom image: Claire Vlach

“The planters improved conditions for bicycling in ways unforeseen by city staff and their removal has resulted in worse conditions,” states the March 13th letter, signed by BAC Chair Jim Middaugh and Vice-chair Joe Perez (and written by BAC member Gianna Bortoli). “The City of Portland Bicycle Advisory Committee (BAC) is writing to express disappointment and concern regarding the removal of the concrete planters that established the city’s Slow Streets program.”

The letter lists five specific benefits that have “disappeared” along with the planters:

  • Improved intersection visibility and comfort
  • Increased left turn calming and reduced dangerous passing
  • Indication that “these streets are for biking” and priority is given to people biking and walking
  • Improving wayfinding by creating a visible gateway to the greenways
  • Signaling to people on bikes that PBOT cares about bicycling and safety

Perez, the BAC vice chair, feels PBOT erred in calling for the removal of the concrete barrels. He believes the engineering directive requires project managers to keep temporary materials in place until updated designs are installed. Perez and others worry that PBOT removed dozens of concrete planters and left nothing of substance in their place.

PBOT says they’ve tried to have removals followed immediately by other planned upgrades, but timing hasn’t always aligned. PBOT also claims that their analysis shows the concrete planters have not lowered driver speeds or the volume of car traffic on greenways. But some advocates claim even if that is true, the planters’ myriad other benefits are lost.

During a discussion about the removals at the February BAC meeting, Perez said (via meeting minutes), “I hope you know, removing planters discourages people from riding bikes. Removal of these planters has discouraged me from biking on Salmon.”

Claire Vlach (Photo: Jonathan Maus/BikePortland)

Claire Vlach, a widely-respected advocate affiliated with several transportation nonprofits and who’s also volunteered on several PBOT committees over the years, says the agency’s decision to remove the planters is a red flag. “PBOT’s failure to recognize that people liked the planters and that they provided important safety benefits — both real and perceived — is problematic,” Vlach wrote in an email to BikePortland today. “And shows a lack of understanding of the impacts of their infrastructure on street users.”

Vlach says an easy solution would be to simply bolt the planters to the street, which would make them no longer trigger removal as per the 2024 engineering directive on temporary materials. In fact, Vlach claims she got that idea directly from PBOT Operations and Maintenance Group Director Jody Yates. “The planters would need to be emptied, bolted down, and then refilled, but would no longer be able to be moved out of place by people driving their vehicles into them,” Vlach explained.

Dozens of these planters have been removed citywide (not just on SE Salmon), leaving many folks to wonder why PBOT would downgrade these important bike streets and not replace them with something just as robust and popular. Advocates like Vlach and Perez plan to keep the pressure on PBOT.

“We advise PBOT to do everything within its authority to provide inexpensive, effective treatments that make people feel safer and more comfortable when riding on these bikeways,” the committee’s letter reads. “The yellow planters accomplished that and any replacements need to offer those same feelings.”

(I’ve reached out to PBOT for comment but have not yet heard back.)

Jobs of the Week: Community Cycling Center, eBike Store, Go By Bike

Bit of a spring hiring boom going on.

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