FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
3/16/11

CONTACT:  Bill Barker, 608-263-0540, [email protected]

LISTENING SESSION: BICYCLES ON PICNIC POINT 

MADISON - Bicycle use and abuse on Picnic Point will be the subject of a 
listening session at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Memorial Union from 
7-8:30 p.m. on Monday, March 21.

"Bikes and pedestrians sometimes come into conflict on the narrow path running 
down the spine of Picnic Point," says Bill Barker, chair of the Lakeshore 
Nature 
Preserve Committee. "Six years ago, we tried to encourage better cooperation on 
the part of bikers, but we feel the need to revisit the issue."

To deal with the issue, Barker says, the Lakeshore Nature Preserve Committee 
will reconsider the appropriateness of bicycle access to Picnic Point at the 
session. Check Today in the Union for the room location, or add your thoughts 
via e-mail to Barker at [email protected]. 


Picnic Point is part of the Lakeshore Nature Preserve, located where the campus 
meets Lake Mendota.

"Several large tracts of woods and savanna sparkle like jewels strung along a 
necklace, along with an active alternative transportation corridor, the Howard 
Temin Lakeshore Path," says Barker. "Thousands of people use the preserve 
daily, 
in education and research, searching for spring wildflowers in Muir Woods, 
birding on Picnic Point, running and walking the wooded paths, sitting quietly 
by the lake or commuting to and from campus."

With more than 300 acres, the preserve also serves as essential natural 
habitat, 
Barker adds, and is a legacy of the intellectual and political contributions of 
former Badgers John Muir, Aldo Leopold and Gaylord Nelson, who helped form the 
foundations of modern environmentalism.  


The 2005 policy on bikes at Picnic Point 
(http://www.lakeshorepreserve.wisc.edu/plans/bicycle_policy.htm) was driven by 
concerns that a few inconsiderate bikers were riding too aggressively, and 
causing erosion and spreading invasive species by riding off trails. At the 
time, the Lakeshore Nature Preserve Committee opted for infrastructure changes 
and a trial period of education to encourage bikers to ride responsibly or 
consider enjoying Picnic Point on foot. 


"Since then, in part due to changing trends in biking, as well as greatly 
expanded bicycling infrastructure in the Madison area, walkers and runners are 
now the majority of Picnic Point path users," says Barker.  "Nonetheless, 
recent 
user surveys indicate that a few bikers continue to ride without concern for 
safety and the ecological health of Picnic Point."

He adds: "The question is, how do we ensure that the Lakeshore Nature Preserve 
best serves the research, teaching and outreach mission of the university while 
simultaneously protecting it from overuse and abuse?  An open and transparent 
decision-making process best serves all these goals, and the public is 
definitely invited," says Barker. 

###
- David Tenenbaum, 608-265-8549, [email protected]



      
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