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With the fate of events uncertain, Cascade cuts half its staff and appeals for donations

Screenshot of Cascade's appeal email: Dear Tom, We are in unprecedented times, and I am reaching out to you because Cascade Bicycle Club has some difficult decisions to make. Our rides — Emerald City, STP, and RSVP — fuel our great programming. Through funds raised, we advocate for safe places for people to bike, teach children to ride a bike confidently, and engage the community through Free Group Rides. As we look ahead to the year’s rides, education, and advocacy activities we had planned, we are quickly realizing that many if not all of these programs are grinding to a halt due to COVID-19. I will not sugarcoat it for you: without your support and ride registrations, we face mass cancellations of our events, our ability to staff our team, and threats to our organization’s very existence. It is Cascade’s 50th anniversary this year, and we want to be around to build a better world through bicycling for the next 50 years. But to do that, we need you, our supporters, to dig deep at this moment. If you have enjoyed riding with us, if you’ve learned from a class with us, and if you’ve benefited from a trail we fought to build, donate now to save Cascade. Every dollar you give matters, whatever the amount.
Screenshot of Cascade’s appeal email.

Cascade Bicycle Club moved Friday to furlough half its staff in what leaders describe as an effort to save the club, which is marking its 50-year anniversary this year.

“We want to make sure it’s around for another 50 years,” said Executive Director Richard Smith. “It became clear that we had to plan for the worst but hope for the best.” And the worst case for Cascade would be a total cancellation of all major events in 2020.

Nearly two-thirds of Cascade’s $5 million annual budget comes from the organization’s series of storied events like STP and the Emerald City Ride, and now some or all of those events are at risk of cancellation due to the COVID-19 pandemic.


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The club already postponed the Bike Swap and moved its Bike Everywhere Breakfast from May to June. The breakfast kicks off Bike Month and is a major fundraiser. Bike Month, of course, is also packed with smaller events now in question. But as the pandemic plays out, it seems more and more likely that social distancing will be required for longer than initially thought. So even events that have been rescheduled might not be possible.

But the real doomsday scenario for Cascade is if they cannot hold their major marquee events. The Emerald City Ride has been postponed to a yet-to-be-determined date (possibly in the fall). But the elephant in the room is the annual Seattle-to-Portland ride, which is a massive two-day state-spanning organizing effort and major moneymaker for Cascade and its sister organization Washington Bikes.

“Something like the STP is very hard to reorganize or move to a different date,” said Smith.

They basically need to decide one-month before each event whether it is on or off, so you will have to stay tuned for news about each event. And since the news and public health guidance keeps changing so rapidly, they are going to wait and assess the situation for each event.

But the Board of Directors has decided to take drastic action to cut back on the organization’s costs to prepare for the worst case scenario. And that means cutting half of their staff from an organization that had 32 full-time equivalent staff before they announced the furloughs.

“Our Board President [Tamara Schmautz] actually works for UW Virology,” said Smith. “With her advice, our Board directed me and the staff to plan for the worst, and that means having absolutely no events through the summer.”

Discussions like this are likely happening all over the world right now.

“I don’t think we are alone in the pain we are going through,” said Policy Director Vicky Clarke. And she’s right. Businesses and non-profits of all kinds have been decimated by the drastic efforts needed to prevent this outbreak from overwhelming our healthcare system. “We need our community to step up for us so we can be there for them,” she said.

The organization sent out a fundraising appeal Sunday asking for financial help.

Cascade and Washington Bikes have very few peers in the bike advocacy world. Hosting major events to fund bike advocacy has allowed the organization to become much larger than nearly every other regional bike advocacy organization in the nation in terms of budget and employee count. But they weren’t prepared to operate in a world where people can’t get together.

“We could never have a contingency for this,” said Smith.

Staff members were informed Friday about the furloughs, and Smith said their intention is to work to hire people back.

“Job number 1 for those of us who remain is to get our colleagues back and working,” he said. And those who got cut are joining millions across the country who must now navigate this very uncertain time without the relative security of employment.

“It’s been heartbreaking,” said Smith.

In the meantime, they are trying to figure out ways to carry on or modify their work so it can be done safely.

“We can’t bring people together, but what does that mean for our advocacy?”said Clarke. They are exploring ideas, such as changing how they train advocates. As of press time, they are hosting their Advocacy Leadership Institute online for the first time. And the process of hosting it virtually has led them to think about how the program could be expanded.

“If we’re doing ALI in Seattle, what’s stopping us from having people in Spokane or Walla Walla on the call too?”

But those bright spots will almost certainly be overshadowed by what is missing from their work.

“The core of our business is bringing people together, and now we can’t do that,” said Clarke.


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6 responses to “With the fate of events uncertain, Cascade cuts half its staff and appeals for donations”

  1. dankirkd

    As a Cascade Bike Club member I take objection to this appeal and the calamitous nature of it. What bothers me first is the lack of information regarding refunds to people who have already signed up for events that have been postponed or cancelled. At the very least an email that an event has been postponed would be expected (even if it is evident it isn’t likely to happen anyway).

    So instead we get this email asking for donations, with the insinuation that no refunds will be made, since it wasn’t mentioned.

    As for CBC ceasing to exist – please spare me the sob story. The coronavirus is affecting everyone. I’m sorry CBC staff will be let go. But I cannot believe that the state of Washington bike riders won’t self organize into a new and viable CBC once this virus lockdown has passed should CBC cease to exist or go into hibernation mode. This just isn’t the most urgent thing right now, and the tone of this email is over the top IMVHO.

    1. dankirkd

      And if perhaps my position isn’t clear, the statement that “without your support and ride registrations, we face mass cancellations of our events” just flies in the face of the reality that even with my support CBC will face mass cancellations of events because of the fact no such gatherings will be allowed for surely many months.

  2. James Hansen

    I got this email yesterday and it infuriated me. Surely what’s happening at Cascade is unfortunate, but this is happening to nearly EVERYONE right now. Surely there are more important things to advocate for right now than a local bicycle club. So many people are out of work and it’s going to get worse. People are trying to figure out how to pay rent and feed their kids. The last thing we need Cascade to do is to accept charity for their advocacy programs. If anything, they should be encouraging their members to use whatever resources they have to support local food banks, etc. The demand on these places is going to skyrocket in the very near future. SHAME ON YOU CASCADE!

    1. AW

      I agree with you James, 100% and even sent an email back to Cascade this morning explaining that sick and dying people including health care workers who are sacrificing themselves, millions of unemployed and those dying all alone and denied funerals are what is urgent right now. Riding to Portland in 1 or 2 days is not even important now.

  3. I’m. big fan of CBC in general but it seems like all the small, local ride and race promotors get this, what happened to CBC? It’s a bummer when you need money or lose your job, it’s a much bigger deal when you or your loved ones are experiencing severe symptoms from coronavirus COVID-19. Also, the rides and advocacy that CBC supplies are LUXURY ITEMS. Hence further down the list of priorities than this pandemic.

  4. alexheartsseattle

    One way we can get back to normal: all the heavy breathing bicyclists, runners and joggers who pack up at red crosswalk lights along the Burke-Gilman Trail, as an example…. PLEASE STOP. Simply distance and space yourselves apart as you approach the light!!!

    I saw dozens of grown adults crowding together ready to take the green light like they were in a rush to get somewhere. The party bros at the beach at least have an excuse: they are young and dumb. Seattle cyclists and runners should know better.

    It’s as if Seattleites are begging for a complete shut-down and shelter in place with these highly risky behaviors.

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