http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0423/p03s01-ussc.html


Jos� Hernandez has forsaken the gas pedal for cycle pedals to get to his US
job.
By Eilene Zimmerman

It's a cool, drizzly morning rush hour at the San Ysidro border crossing,
the place where San Diego County ends and Tijuana begins. A line of
pedestrians waiting to enter the US snakes three blocks back into Mexico
from the port of entry building, where US Customs and Immigration officials
conduct inspections and security checks.

But Jos� Hernandez cruises right past the stalled pedestrians on his faded
blue Roadmaster bike. Pedaling is his way of cutting through the border
tangle on his way to work in the US.

And it just got easier this month. The Immigration and Naturalization
Service, under pressure from California-side businesses to allow cyclists in
faster, has created a bike lane at the crossing.

Mr. Hernandez has been using his bike to commute to work at a San Ysidro
parking garage since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, when national security
concerns made crossing by car a two-hour ordeal.

"For a long time we had maybe 50 to 75 bikes crossing with early morning
commuter traffic. After Sept. 11th, it was probably 2,000 a day," says
Lauren Mack, INS spokesperson in San Diego. Since the bike lane was started
April 8, about 550 bikers use it daily.

On the damp weekday morning Hernandez crossed, the parade of humanity
emerging from Mexico on newish, brightly colored Schwinns and beat-up,
decades-old brands was clearly different from the color-coordinated and
helmeted American biking set. These were people pedaling and smoking,
precariously balancing travel mugs, and � like the father and daughter on a
tandem bike, she in a Catholic-school uniform, he in a suit � clearly on a
non-recreational mission to beat the wait.

"I've been commuting for 20 years, but after September it was impossible.
It's much faster going by bike now," says Hernandez, pausing on his way to
the US.

Two weeks ago, bikers simply cut haphazardly through the maze of Mexican
traffic to the front of the bus lane and crossed to the US in vehicle
inspection lines. The INS, worried about cyclists' safety, put an end to
that and announced that bicyclists would have to cross with pedestrians,
negating the big benefit of biking � no wait.

That decision was criticized by business and political leaders in San Diego,
who complained the San Ysidro economy was already suffering because of a
post-9/11 drop in border traffic. So the INS agreed to give bikers their own
lane. But "bike lane" is a deceiving term, because it isn't actually a lane
on the roadway for the exclusive use of cyclists. Instead, the INS' bike
lane begins after bikers leave the road. It's an indoor walkway roped off
with yellow police tape that's been fastened to a bunch of thin, orange
cones.

Inspections inside may proceed more smoothly, but outside bicyclists are
still at risk. They ride in the bus lane, dodging lane-weaving sportscars,
SUVs, lumbering buses, and diesel exhaust � only now they get off a little
sooner in order to walk their bikes the rest of the way into the US.

"This is a bureaucratic issue, it has nothing to do with our safety,"
complains John, an American computer programmer living in Tijuana who
commutes to work in the US by bike every day. He's paused to talk on the
Tijuana side, where the bike lane starts just in front of a building billed
as a cafe-pharmacy-liquor store, where a nun pleads for donations to the
poor.

"It's no more or less safe than it was last week," says John. "I still worry
about the cars and buses."

Ms. Mack, of the INS, insists the bike lane has made the situation safer.

John says it's only made the wait at the border more variable, sometimes 15
seconds, sometimes 20 minutes. In the bus lane, he says, it took seconds to
get through. That's because in the bike lane, riders receive far more
scrutiny than they did in the vehicle lanes. Bike riders and their
belongings are screened by a metal detector and their names can be run
through the INS database.

Sometimes, of course, the wait exists simply because San Ysidro is the
world's busiest border crossing. Yet for many years, few used bikes to
commute to the US. Indeed, in southern California, biking as a necessity is
an uncommon sight. One listen to the morning freeway report tells the whole
story � Freeways 5, 8, 805, 163, 15, 94 jammed to capacity.

But John is not a San Diegan, so he has no trouble embracing two wheels. He
takes hold of his bike, wipes the rain from his face, and surveys the scene.
He turns to watch fellow cyclists disappearing into the port of entry,
assessing the wait that lies ahead.

"Well," he sighs, entering the bike lane, "today looks promising."


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