Contact:
Elyse Eisenberg, 212 616 1308 Michael Replogle,
301-529-0351
Bikestation
Long Beach: Bringing Better Travel Choices for Healthier Communities
Bike-Transit
Link Cuts Pollution, Traffic Congestion, Oil Dependence
(3 November
2005 - - Long Beach, CA) A state-of-the-art Bikestation Park & Ride for
cyclists in Long Beach will be hailed at its opening celebration November 4th
as a portent of bigger changes underway in American transportation. Michael
Replogle, a prominent transportation expert, will tell assembled officials,
business leaders, and cyclists, “this new enclosed bicycle parking facility is
emblematic of fresh winds blowing from California to Washington state and
Washington, DC as communities address traffic, pollution, and gas price
challenges by delivering better travel choices and smarter market incentives.”
“Two decades
ago, my book, Bicycles and Public Transportation, showed how successful
Japanese and European bike-transit centers cut pollution and traffic, and how
these might be adapted to America,” Replogle said. “In the past 10 years, the
Bikestation Coalition has nurtured those seeds to life, creating Bikestations in
Long Beach, Seattle, Palo Alto, Berkeley, and San Francisco, and is now taking
the vision to Washington, DC’s Union Station, across from the Capitol, where a
new bike-transit center will open in 2007.”
A new federal
transportation bill, called “SAFTEA-LU”, enacted in August 2005 gives states
$283 billion over five years, with over half available for investment in
alternatives to drive alone travel, and an unprecedented $1 billion dedicated
for bicycling and $35 billion for public transportation. “More than ever, it
will be up to local and state officials to make smart investment choices,”
Replogle said. “Even if funding were not an issue, we can’t build our way out of
traffic congestion, since more roads generally spur more traffic. But we can get
smarter about managing traffic and expanding travel choices.”
“Business and
community partnership was key to building the new Long Beach Bikestation. So too
agencies across America will turn more to public-private partnerships to boost
transportation investment, encouraged by new provisions in SAFETEA-LU. Many will
build on the model of San Diego’s I-15’s toll-managed lanes that fund better
public transportation,” said Replogle. “And thanks to SAFETEA-LU, many
communities will develop Safe Routes to Schools Programs, modeled on
California’s, and ensure safety for those walking and cycling to public transit
and commercial centers.”
According to
the Federal Highway Administration, the health cost of transportation pollution
exceeds $40 billion a year, a hidden tax of roughly $600 per household that is
expressed in premature death, asthma, and other health problems. This
Bikestation makes a small but important contribution to Southern California’s
success in cleaning up what was once the most unhealthful air in the nation. It
also helps curb invisible greenhouse gas pollution that is changing our climate
in profound ways.
Environmental
Defense is pleased to support the Bikestation Coalition as our staff also works
with state, regional, and local officials and business to accelerate the clean
up the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, encourage early retrofit and
replacement of dirty diesel engines, hold development industry accountable for
indirect source pollution in the San Joaquin Valley, and find the ways that work
to cut pollution.
Environmental
Defense, a leading national nonprofit organization, represents more than 400,000
members. Since 1967, Environmental Defense has linked science, economics, law
and innovative private-sector partnerships to create breakthrough solutions to
the most serious environmental problems.
www.environmentaldefense.org.