Quote for the Day
Cycling to work is a choice for me, not an ideological act. I like bicycling, it is free, it is reasonable exercise, it does not rain as often as you would think, I know how long the journey will take and the Tube is horrid. – Bagehot’s Notebook, The Economist.
What is Jim Walden’s Angle?
Thought I’d pull this one from the comments…
In case you were wondering what a lawyer like Jim Walden of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher is doing taking on a pro bono case of dubious legal merit to remove a highly successful and popular bike lane, Crain’s Insider offered a theory on Friday:
Jim Walden’s spate of high-profile pro bono lawsuits has insiders speculating that he wants to challenge Brooklyn District Attorney Joe Hynes. Walden, a Brooklyn Heights resident and litigator at Gibson Dunn, is battling a development in Dumbo, the Prospect Park West bike lane, judges in Queens who allegedly discriminate against disabled people and discrimination against a transgender employee. But Walden said, “I love Joe Hynes. I will never run against him.” Hynes told the Insider he will run for re-election in 2013. Walden has been on a media blitz reminiscent of Sen. Chuck Schumer, who is thought to have considered pushing him for U.S. attorney in 2009. Schumer’s wife, Iris Weinshall, is a leading opponent of the bike lane.
While I’m not so naive as to think it doesn’t happen in every office across the city, I’m not sure Brooklyn needs someone in its top legal job with a seeming proclivity for trading in political favors, especially with the wealthy and politically connected. Some of Walden’s pro bono work is admirable, but attaching himself to Neighbors for Better Bike Lanes has certainly gotten him more ink than representing disabled people fighting for their Social Security benefits. That’s the sad state of our media these days, I guess.
Even when the PPW case is long behind him, I think his involvement in it should be a major strike against him and a frequent campaign issue.
Fourth Avenue Then and Now

Above, a picture of Fourth Avenue in 1933 looking towards the Williamsburg Savings Bank tower. The building on the corner of Butler Street is still there, housing a bodega in its ground floor. Below, a picture taken from a similar vantage point today.
New Bike Lane Coming to Prospect Park West!
Exciting news! According to 1010 WINS, a brand new bike lane is coming to Prospect Park West! Here are highlights from the radio station’s report:
Members of a Park Slope neighborhood organization are ecstatic after Community Board 6 in Brooklyn voted in support of a long sought-after bike path Wednesday night.
A number of people in the community had been battling since 2006 to establish the bike path after concerns over speeding, unsafe pedestrian crossings and a lack of bike access on Prospect Park West.
The Community Board vote cleared the way for the two-way bike path that will be physically separated from traffic by a row of parked cars.
Bike lanes are pretty controversial, so I hope no one is upset by this. It would be a shame if anyone decided to sue.
It’s the Little Things
New York doesn’t go to the lengths Copenhagen does to accommodate cyclists during road work, but I’ve noticed a tiny move in that direction lately. This is the Grand Street bike lane, where construction on a building on the south side of the street has made the sidewalk impassable. The DOT installed a temporary pedestrian walkway, moved the bike lane over a few feet, and put in orange poles to demarcate the path. It’s just one block, but it sends a signal that cyclists matter. Even the sign tells me there’s a different institutional mindset at DOT these days. As someone who uses this lane almost every day to get home, this makes a big difference in my ride.
Plus, did you notice? Parking on this side of the street is gone for now. Not a peep from the media!
Jim Walden: 50,000,000 Bike Lane Fans Can Be Wrong
On Wednesday night, Community Board Six passed a unanimous motion to support DOT’s recommendations for modifications to the Prospect Park West Bike Lane. It’s yet another example of how truly democratic this years-long community process has been.
Of course, this wouldn’t be Prospect Park West without Neighbors for Better Bike Lanes claiming it wasn’t. Jim Walden wrote an Open Letter to CB6 on the PPW Bike Lane — “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” it is not — which he requested be read at the meeting. He was not obliged.
There’s nothing surprising in it, but I was struck by how, in effect, Walden disparages the good people and volunteers who serve on the board, especially in the closing passage:
At some later point, CB6’s actions, and inaction, will be judged against a broader context, including the evident problems with DOT’s data. We hope the Board makes the right decision tonight by deferring any vote until after a full and meaningful discussion about alternative configurations, which will include more pointed questions for DOT about the various decisions it made to “sell” a dangerous bike lane to your community.
Essentially, the approximately 50 members of Community Board 6, Brad Lander, Lander’s entire staff, independent traffic engineers and urban planners, Howie Wolfson, 54% of New Yorkers, 78% of nearly 3,000 survey respondents, 69% of people in the Brennan poll, over 300 PPW supporters who attended the March 10 public hearing, and 750 people who showed up to Sunday’s family ride are all complete saps, easily duped by Janette Sadik-Khan and her minions at DOT who conspired with local acivists to “sell” the community a dangerous bike lane. Makes total sense.
But Lois Carswell, who incorrectly linked the MTA’s suspension of B69 bus service along Prospect Park West to the DOT’s installation of a bike lane on the same street? She knows the truth.
What is a Class II Bike Lane?
I promise you, there’s a Class II, painted bike lane in the foreground of this picture.

Here’s the scene from behind. Would you want your kid riding in this alone?

Community Board 6 Meeting Wednesday Night, 4/13/11
Following Sunday’s massive 750-person family ride, there’s still another piece of unfinished Prospect Park West business. Brooklyn’s Community Board 6 meets on Wednesday night, April 13th, for its General Board meeting. On the agenda: [PDF]
Recommendation to conditionally support the Department of Transportation’s proposed modifications to the Prospect Park West bike lanes.
Many of the modifications grew out of suggestions included in the Brad Lander survey and were ostensibly on the agenda at the March 10 public hearing.
This is not a public hearing and no time for general comments is scheduled. Still, it can’t hurt to have a few bodies in the room in case Neighbors for Better Bike Lanes tries to make another end run around the years-long public process. Since the meeting is being held at the Prospect Park Residence, just one block away from NBBL headquarters and the infamous Louise Hainine spy cam, it’s certainly convenient for them to try.
Norman Steisel Wants to Get Rid of This
“We’re not opposed to bike lanes. We’re opposed to this one and the way it was done,” said Norman Steisel, a former deputy mayor in the Dinkins administration, who believes the path creates more danger for all parties. “You have to be concerned about all who use it, and that includes drivers, pedestrians and the bicyclists.”
The Neighbors for Better Bike Lanes member was quoted in the New York Post one day after hundreds of kids rode the bike lane he’s suing to remove.
If you want to see how concerned you should be for all who use it, please watch this excellent Streetfilm.
We Ride the Lanes
“If we’re going to talk about transport, I would say that the great city is not the one that has highways, but one where a child on a tricycle or bicycle can go safely everywhere.” – Enrique Peñalosa, former mayor, Bogotá
Kids don’t vote, they don’t respond to surveys or polls, and, if they’re under the age of thirteen, they probably don’t have Facebook profiles. Based on that last fact, I had a feeling that the 302 adults who had responded to the invite for We Ride the Lanes as of Sunday morning would grow into an awesome crowd once the event actually began.
And grow it did. About 750 people participated. In fact, when the first rider made it to Bartel Pritchard Square, there were still hundreds of people waiting to get started at Grand Army Plaza one mile away. Kids doubled back over the lane, riding safely as more and more riders paraded down Prospect Park West.
There were orange t-shirts, balloons, great welcoming speeches from organizer Mitch Sonies and Council Member Brad Lander, and a highly festive atmosphere. Long after the cupcakes were gone people lingered at the end, talking with friends and meeting their neighbors. All this on an April day with a forecast that called for rain. My wife later commented that considering how much community building occurred today, other areas of the city should start groups called “Bike Lanes for Better Neighborhoods.”
We Ride the Lanes began much like the Prospect Park West bike lane and traffic calming project itself began: with a grass-roots, community-driven desire to do something to support safe streets. I don’t think anyone could have imagined that today would be as big as it was, just as no one could have imagined that a mile of green paint could possibly stir up so much nontroversy.
In an odd way, Gibson Dunn attorney Jim Walden may be the new hero of livable streets activists. Whereas before people might have merely accepted the PPW bike lane as a safe amenity in one of the city’s best neighborhoods, the Neighbors for Better Bike Lanes lawsuit has had the effect of igniting a movement. The movement was already there in the hard work of activists, civic organizations, and involved community members. It grew at last October’s rally and at various community board meetings over the past year, but now it’s morphed into something entirely different. When people come by the hundreds from across the city on an overcast day, you know there’s something bigger going on than just a bunch of people wanting to do something fun with their kids.
As amazing as today’s event was, the moment that most revealed to me how vital bike lanes like this one are came not during the ride but hours after it was over. At about 2:30 PM I rode north on the bike lane with some friends. We passed a young girl, a little older than the one in the picture at the top of this post, riding by herself sans training wheels. Her mom was a block or two behind her walking on the sidewalk, as relaxed as could be as the young girl shared the lane with riders of all ages passing in both directions. Who on earth would want to get rid of that?





