Critical Mass riders promote bicycle use in city

Dan Haugen - Staff Reporter

After police broke up last month�s Critical Mass bicycle demonstration,
Friday�s rush-hour ride through Minneapolis might have been the largest in
state history. 

Clad with homemade T-shirts and stickers with slogans such as �Turn off your
ignition� and �0 gallons per mile,� Friday�s 300-plus participants �
including several University students � quadrupled the number of riders in
last month�s Critical Mass.

In March, Minneapolis police arrested two bicyclists, cited eleven others
with traffic violations and confiscated dozens of bicycles, in the monthly
pro-bicycling ride.

The police action prompted a series of meetings at City Hall involving Mayor
R.T. Rybak, City Council members, police leadership and many Critical Mass
riders.

As a result of those meetings, police took a more hands-off approach Friday.
Officers mingled with bicyclists as they gathered in Loring Park, and once
the ride began, trailed them in police cars, occasionally pulling ahead to
help block automobile traffic. There were no arrests or citations.

�We were really caught by surprise last month,� said Minneapolis police Sgt.
Ed Nelson. �This time we�re really trying to open up the lines of
communication and make sure it�s a safe ride for everyone.�

Critical Mass began in San Francisco 10 years ago, when a group of cyclists
decided to ride home from work together. It now takes place in several major
cities. Its objective is to promote bicycling as a legitimate � and
sometimes superior � means of transportation.

In Minneapolis, Critical Mass participants gather in Loring Park at 5 p.m.
on the last Friday of every month. From there, the group snakes its way
through city streets during peak rush-hour traffic.

The mass on Friday extended about two blocks and spread several lanes across
as it wound its way through downtown, Dinkytown and Stadium Village
neighborhoods. 

At one point, as the mass crossed the 10th Ave. Bridge just before 6 p.m.,
the group claimed all four lanes, leaving nothing but the shoulder for a row
of cars to slink along in single file. Some motorists smirked, others stared
and a few honked their horns, either as a sign of their support or their
impatience.

The increased participation was, in part, a result of last month�s melee
with police and the meetings and media coverage that followed.

Eric Stiens, an employee at the University�s Institute on Race and Poverty
and a frequent Critical Mass rider, attended one of this month�s City Hall
meetings and said both sides were �fairly reasonable.�

�We wanted an assurance from police that it wouldn�t happen again,� Stiens
said.

Police eventually agreed to return all the bikes they confiscated in March
and discussed logistics for future rides.

�The mayor seemed very interested in facilitating a dialogue between us and
the police,� Stiens said.

Rybak initially intended to ride in Friday�s Critical Mass but changed his
plans so he could attend his son�s baseball game. Spokeswoman Laura Sether
said he still hopes to participate in a ride this summer.

Two City Council members � Robert Lilligren and Dean Zimmermann � did ride
on Friday, however.

�Most of us on the council want to make it easier to bike in this town than
it is now,� Zimmermann said. �It is my personal goal to make it as easy for
people to bike to work as it is to drive a car in this city.�

He said bicycle advocacy isn�t �front-burner� right now, but he�s working on
a set of reforms aimed at making life easier for bicyclists.

Zimmermann said there needs to be �an understanding that it is city policy
that bikers are good and welcome and an important part of our transportation
system.�

>From there, he said, he would like to make stop signs the equivalent of
yield signs for bicyclists.

�This is how bikes treat them. It�s realistic,� he said. �If a biker rolls
through a stop sign, as if it was a yield sign, and there is a problem, the
damage happens to the biker, not to his victims.�

Zimmermann said he also wants the city to look at converting a few streets
to bike-only thoroughfares, similar to 19th Avenue on the West Bank.

�Make them accessible to homeowners and visitors and so on to park their
cars, but otherwise they are exclusively bike lanes,� Zimmermann said. �The
street then has the added effect of becoming a place where kids can play
free from traffic. It�s an opportunity to expand the amount of green space
that we have in the neighborhood.�

Dan Haugen welcomes comments at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 

Steve Spindler Cartography
BikeMap.com
1504 South Street
Philadelphia, PA 19146
(215) 985-2839
(425) 984-1820 (FAX)

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