Category: Education

Bike Commuter Night Out-May 10th

May 10, 6:30 to 8pm. Hilyard Community Center.

Are you trying to find out if riding a bike might be right for you? Or are you just getting started and need some great tips and safety guidance from some experienced helpful people? If yes is the answer to either of the above, you will not want to miss this months GEARs General Meeting.

GEARs is pleased to have Paul Adkins present an evening that both teaches and reinforces good cycling. He’ll have a short presentation with information about proper gear and clothing, riding skills, technique, cycling laws, street confidence, and bicycle maintenance.

Then we will have a very diverse panel of six women that will share their personal stories. They’ll talk about their fears and barriers to getting around by bike and how they have overcome them. Then you can ask them questions.

And for those that want to stay, we’ll give a lesson on fixing a flat tire.

This evening is a great way to get you ready for the summer and to gear up to participate in the Business Commuter Challenge that starts the week of May 14-20. Businesses, schools, offices, and factories all around Eugene will be encouraged to bike, walk, and take a bus or carpool during that time. Our aim is to get people on bicycles and and help them to enjoy that experience enough to keep it going.

Also coming up soon:
GEARs will offer a 9-hour Confident Cycling class the weekend of May 14-15.

Confident Cycling Course Next Week

GEARs is holding another Confident Cycling course next week (Friday 5:30-8:30 & Saturday 8-2) and we’d love to have you join us!

Here is more information on the very valuable Traffic Skills class. Please register here: http://edu.eugenegears.org/class_sign-up

The Traffic Skills course teaches cyclists the laws, skills and technique to give riders the confidence they need to ride safely and legally in traffic and on the trails. The course covers state laws as they pertain to bike riders, bicycle safety checks, fixing a flat, on-bike skills and crash avoidance techniques and includes a student manual. Recommended for adults and children above age fourteen, this fast-paced, nine-hour course prepares cyclists for a full understanding of ‘vehicular cycling’ and is a great resource for cyclists from beginning to experienced. This class offers certification by the League of American Bicyclists at the successful completion of this course. This is a 9 hr. class and it is offered in a 2 part option so if you can only make the Friday course you can take the Saturday portion anytime throughout the year (see schedule). Cost is just $10. Register now!

2011 Education Schedule Announced

via Flickr: RussRoca

Are you thinking of doing more bicycling this year? Do you want to become a better rider, a more confident and safer commuter, or learn more about traffic laws or bicycle maintenance? Or do you know someone that wants to learn more about bike riding in Eugene?

GEARs is announcing our 2011 Confident Cycling class schedule.
http://edu.eugenegears.org/classes

Our classes teach people the laws, skills and technique, giving riders the
confidence they need to ride safely and legally in traffic and on the trails.
The courses cover state laws as they pertain to bike riders, bicycle safety
checks, fixing a flat, on-bike skills and crash avoidance techniques
and include a student manual.

Our Adult Traffic Skills class is recommended for adults and children
above age fourteen. This fast-paced, nine-hour course prepares cyclists for
a full understanding of vehicular cycling and is a great resource for cyclists
from beginners to experienced. This 9 hr. class, endorsed by the League
of American Bicyclists and sponsored by GEARs, is offered in 2 sessions.
Materials Fee $10.

Our Family Traffic Skills class is shorter 3-hour – designed for parents and children – course that includes traffic laws, confidence building techniques and on-bike skills as well as bike maintenance. Parents that would like to ride bikes as a family are strongly encouraged to attend this class. Materials fee per family is just $5.

This years we’ve also introduced a class called: Riding with Leaves – where
we will spend 3 hours learning the laws which affect bikers, safety measures
and on-bike skills and techniques to get you safely through leaf pick-up
season in Eugene.

All GEARs classes are led by League of American Bicyclists Certified Instructors
with many years experience. GEARs wants to see more people riding bikes
and doing it safely.

We encourage you to please pass this on to anyone that you think would
be interested.

Learn more and Register online at:
http://edu.eugenegears.org/classes

Eugene Needs a Bike Education Instructor

The BTA Bike Safety Education Instructor position for Eugene is open and we need someone to lead the program to teach local students this important course. This program has a lot of great potential for growth and GEARs is working with the BTA to expand it to a more robust and sustainable job. Contact Paul Adkins or Shane Rhodes for more detailed information or apply via the BTA Website:

Organization Bicycle Transportation Alliance
Job Title Bike Safety Education Instructor
Reporting To Program Manager
Pay Rate $14.00 per hour
Status Seasonal, part-time, non-exempt
Location Primarily in Eugene area with occasional trainings in Portland
Job Timeline March 7 through June 30 with opportunity to renew in the Fall
Hiring Timeline Open until filled

Vision Statement:
Bicycling transforms communities by reinventing transportation and offering solutions that help solve the universal challenges to health, livability and the environment.

Executive Summary:
The Bicycle Transportation Alliance (BTA) is a non-profit 5,000-member organization with a mission to create healthy, sustainable communities by making bicycling safer, more convenient and more accessible in Oregon and SW Washington.

The Bike Safety Education Instructor is responsible for the delivery and support of the Bicycle Safety Education program conducted by the BTA and funded by ODOT.

Responsibilities:
• Deliver 10-hour Bike Safety Education Curriculum in elementary and middle schools. Locations will be determined in partnership with the Program Manager.
• Represent the BTA at assigned workshops, trainings, forums, activities, events and other educational program opportunities in the region.
• Identify and pursue potential fundraising and in-kind donations as well as local grant and partnership opportunities.

Accountabilities:
Organization and Planning
Plan and organize in order to effectively manage multiple essential tasks with minimal support including the management of program scheduling, supply logistics, volunteer management, and relationship building with community partners. Report program activity in a timely and accurate manner to the Portland-based Program Manager.

Bike Safety Education Expertise
Posses skilled bicycle riding and maintenance skills needed to instruct and support students of varied ability and maintain dozens of bicycles in good order.

Presentation Skills
Organize and deliver lessons that effectively inform and engage young people using current presentation technologies as well as being able to make effective spontaneous presentations to children in classroom and outside settings.

Emphasize inclusiveness, work to minimize the impact of the differences in student’s ability and self-confidence to produce memorable and rewarding experiences for the students in our programs.

Requisite Experience:
• Studies in child development, education, physical education, outdoor recreation and public health preferred
• Experience in bicycle safety instruction, education, physical education, outdoor recreational, public health or volunteer management preferred
• Exhibits a passion for bicycle transportation and/or an interest in creating livable, healthy, and sustainable communities.

Non-Discrimination:
The BTA does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, marital or familial status, physical or mental disability or legal source of income.

To Apply:
Please send cover letter, resume, completed BTA application form in PDF format via email to humanresources@bta4bikes.org. No calls, please.

Download:
BSE instructor job description
BTA application form

Have You Had a Bike Crash?

Now is your chance to learn more about your rights and responsibilities as a bike rider. On September 24th, 6:30pm-8:00pm at The Atrium Building (Sloat Room), Olive & 10th, Derek Johnson, of Johnson, Clifton, Larson & Schaller P.C., will present and answer questions relating to civil justice, insurance, and liability associated with bike crashes.

It is your chance to ask questions like: “Do I need to get the name and phone number of the guy that pulled right into me while I was riding down…?” or “Am I liable for hit and run if I run into a pedestrian and leave the scene without talking to them?” Your questions are probably something that we all want to know and this is the night to learn — for free. So, grab your biking friends and bring them to the GEARs legal clinic, this Thursday evening. Bring your headlights too.

Empower yourself and attend. Free to the public.

Oregon's Own "Idaho Stop Law"?

(updated post after Jonathan Maus interpreted this post as not “too supportive of the Idaho Stop”- GEARS hasn’t taken a position yet so I was trying to be a bit neutral, maybe to a fault?)*

GEARS hasn’t officially met to discuss this issue yet but I think that as cyclists we all know the realities of riding our cities streets and the true nature of how cyclists treat stop signs.   Even well intentioned, well trained, and conscious cyclists rarely come to a complete stop at stop signs.  With such great visibility, hearing, agility, and slow approach speeds it becomes clear how different cyclists are in their ability to assess the hazards posed at intersections with stop signs and how this law could actually help cyclists navigate our streets in a safe and legal manner and maybe even allow better enforcement of those who blatantly blow stops signs with no regard for others right of way.

That being said, as an LCI bike educator one of the mantras we live by is that “cyclists fare best when they act like and are treated as drivers of vehicles.”  Because that is what we are, vehicles.  So why should we have different laws that treat us differently?  Is it a slippery slope?  Will it be easier for the legislation to then change laws that restrict us from the roadways?  We already have one example of that type of restrictive “special law” and it’s the “Far Right” law that requires cyclists to ride as far right as “practicable” and also the mandatory bike lane law. Though there are exceptions to the laws they are still special laws that are limiting and are used against cyclists claiming their right to the full lane when they feel it is safer to do so.  Would this law encourage more of these types of laws or would it maker it easier and even safer for cyclists in Oregon?

*I personally think this would be a great change in the legal system for cyclists.  I would like to see more enforcement of cyclists blowing stop signs (by blowing I mean not yielding) and this law would make it so those who are acting as safe and considerate cyclists could continue to act as they do on the roadway; stopping for others when they have the right of way or continuing through if it is safe and those who do not could be penalized.  And maybe be required to take a bike ed class like some of the ones GEARS is offering this summer??

Here is a post from bikeportland.org that gives an idea of the BTAs position on the bill.  For more coverage on the issue see bikeportlands Idaho Stop Law coverage.

Full text of Karl Rohde’s Idaho Stop testimony

Posted by Jonathan Maus (Editor) on March 19th, 2009 at 10:54 am

Below is the full, prepared text of Karl Rohde’s testimony in front of the House Transportation Committee yesterday on behalf of the Idaho Stop law. Rohde is in charge of the BTA’s government affairs and he is their lobbyist in Salem.

(For a full report from that hearing, read our story from yesterday.)

Chair Beyer and Members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today in support of House Bill 2690, the “Idaho Style Stop Law”. For the record, I am Karl Rohde, Government Relations and Public Affairs for the Bicycle Transportation Alliance.

The BTA firmly believes that this law is in the best interest of all users of the road. The BTA is committed to safety and would never support a bill that we felt might jeopardize someone’s safety.

This bill does not decriminalize bad behavior, it decriminalizes good behavior, bad behavior would still be illegal and we will continue to work in collaboration with law enforcement to address the truly unsafe behavior that this law would not protect.

Most cyclists have a high degree of self-preservation and are not going to engage in unnecessarily dangerous behavior. By the very nature of the vehicle cyclists travel on, they have a higher degree of awareness of their surroundings. They sit up higher, they have no blind spots and they are not in an enclosed environment so their hearing is not affected. The letter from researcher Jason Meggs goes into greater detail on this.

The existing law, is a discouragement to cycling. Around 60% of the public are interested in cycling but have concerns for their safety and convenience. They would prefer to ride on low volume, low speed residential streets, however, in the interest of traffic calming, those streets are often loaded with stop signs to discourage automobiles from cutting through neighborhood streets. So the citizen choosing to bike to his or her destination is faced with a difficult choice—do I take the neighborhood street with all it’s stops and starts or do I move over to the high volume street will I can travel at a faster pace amongst all that traffic. Or, worse, do I accept that in order to get to my destination safely and conveniently, I’m just going to have to be an outlaw.

In our original concept of the bill, we had included a provision that would allow local jurisdictions to sign certain intersections that were determined to pose an extreme hazard with a required stop for bikes sign. We were contacted by Legislative Counsel and informed that because such a sign does not exist in the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, referencing it in legislation could not happen. We are still willing to entertain this concept and work with the Committee to address it.

Joining me to testify today are

  • Attorney Ray Mionskie
  • Attorney Ray Thomas
  • Corvallis Resident Kris Warloe
  • Chair of the BTA Legislative Committee, Doug Parrow [Parrow did not testify]

The Bicycle Transportation Alliance is a statewide non-profit organization that works to open minds and roads to bicycling. We represent bicyclists and the bicycle industry with over 5000 members in Oregon and SW Washington, and have seventeen years of experience in bicycle engineering, planning, education and advocacy.