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  • Washington adds another ring to its bike-friendly state rankings dynasty

    Table showing Washington’s scored in 7 categories putting the state 4th in funding, 1st in infrastructure, 1st in laws, 1st in policies, 8th in capacity and support, 7th in safety, and 3rd in Every Ride Counts.
    From Washington State’s Report Card (PDF) from the League of American Bicyclists.

    We don’t use the term “dynasty,” lightly, but the 1960s Boston Celtics have nothing on Washington State’s utter dominance of the bike-friendly state rankings by the League of American Bicyclists. The League announced the 2024 rankings today, and the trophy is coming home to the Evergreen State once again.

    Since the League started publishing their rankings in 2008, Washington has only failed to hold the top spot once: A devastating fall to 3rd place in 2022. But that 3rd place finish behind the Celtics Massachusetts and Oregon did not account for Washington’s ace up it’s sleeve: The Move Ahead Washington transportation investment package the legislature has just passed. Move Ahead Washington included $1.29 billion of safety focused programs and other active transportation investments such as an e-bike subsidy that has yet to roll out to the public. Those investments were enough to take back the top spot. Eat your heart out, Massachusetts.

    In all seriousness, it’s great that Washington finally has competition on this list and that it now requires safety investments like those included in Move Ahead Washington to stay on the top. Even as recently as 2019, we ran the headline: Other 49 states still seemingly uninterested in being more bike friendly than WA. Well, now Washington will need to keep pushing hard if it wants to keep its spot, especially considering it’s middling score in the safety category. Depressingly, even though Washington’s bicycle fatality rate increased since 2022 (reported as 4.9 per 10,000 bike commuters according to Federal data, up from 4 in the 2022 report), it’s ranking compared to other states improved (8th safest down from 11th). We have so much work to do to get ahead of our nation’s growing traffic safety crisis. The increase in deaths across the nation are unacceptable.

    Below are some suggestions for improvement from the League’s Washington State report card (PDF):

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  • SDOT Director Greg Spotts announces February resignation

    Screenshot of bluesky posts by Greg Spotts. This morning I notified the Mayor of my intent to resign my position effective 2/12/25.
On a personal level, moving to Seattle alone has been hard, particularly living so far away from my mother in CA and father in NY. In 2025 I will pursue professional opportunities closer to my loved ones. I depart the Puget Sound with great enthusiasm for Seattle’s future and profound gratitude to Mayor Harrell for the opportunity to serve a dynamic, innovative and fast growing city with unlimited potential. 

I’m also very thankful for the community members who welcomed me so warmly.
    Spotts posted the announcement on Bluesky.

    SDOT Director Greg Spotts will resign February 12, he announced Tuesday morning.

    “I depart the Puget Sound with great enthusiasm for Seattle’s future and profound gratitude to Mayor Harrell for the opportunity to serve a dynamic, innovative and fast growing city with unlimited potential,” he wrote in a Bluesky post. “I’m also very thankful for the community members who welcomed me so warmly.”

    Spotts took over the job in September 2022 following the December 2021 departure of Sam Zimbabwe in the wake of Mayor Bruce Harrell’s election. It is common in for new mayors to bring in their own SDOT Director, though Spotts would be the first SDOT Director in a while to leave before their mayor’s term has ended. Mayor Harrell announced this week that he will seek reelection in 2025.

    “On a personal level, moving to Seattle alone has been hard, particularly living so far away from my mother in CA and father in NY,” Spotts wrote. “In 2025 I will pursue professional opportunities closer to my loved ones.”

    Though his time in the office was relatively short, Spotts oversaw a pivotal moment in SDOT’s history. Voters approved the largest ever transportation levy in November by a landslide (the final result was 67% in favor), giving SDOT a nod of approval that did not feel certain just a few years ago.

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  • Alert: It is once again time to voice overwhelming support for a safer Lake Washington Blvd

    Map showing the locations of planned speed hump and crosswalk improvements.
    Speed cushions don’t stop anyone from driving, but they do make it a little harder to drive too fast.

    Even the dramatically watered-down and insufficient traffic calming improvements planned for Lake Washington Boulevard are now apparently at risk after pushback from “people who enjoy driving as fast as they want along the boulevard,” as Seattle Neighborhood Greenways put it. Neighbors have campaigned for years about the need for safer walking and biking space on the storied lakeside boulevard, one of the only reasonably flat north-south routes in southeast Seattle. Extensive public outreach showed very strong support for ambitious changes, but SDOT and Seattle Parks decided to ignore their own outreach and instead give a baffling amount of authority to a failed and resentment-consumed community task force effort in 2022–23 that was unable to agree on much of anything beyond a short list of low-cost, unoffensive and insufficient traffic calming improvements that finally made it to construction in 2024 and 2025. We’re talking about a handful of crosswalk improvements, some speed humps, and some boulders in places where people keep driving off the road and into the park and lake. The final list falls far short of than the permanent on-street walking and biking path and expanded Bicycle Weekend hours advocates were initially hoping for. Safety opponents won, and now at least some of them are fighting even the scraps that made it through by pressuring the city to cancel the second half of the planned improvements.

    You can help by using their handy online form to send letters to city leaders supporting completion of the traffic calming work. You can also join supporters at a community meeting 6:30 p.m. December 12 at the Mount Baker Rowing and Sailing Center (3800 Lake Washington Blvd S) in person or online.

    I honestly have no idea why the winners of this joke of a public process would want to reopen debate on this matter, but fine. Let’s do it. Let’s reopen this project debate. If they don’t know how to take a W, then let’s turn it into an L.

    Every time the city surveys people about the idea of a permanent safe space for walking and biking on Lake Washington Blvd., the result is resounding and enthusiastic support. A 2022 public outreach effort got survey responses from 3,048 people, 73% of whom lived in a Seattle zip code that includes Lake Washington Boulevard. The survey asked respondents to pick up to three of their preferred improvements they you like to see on the boulevard. Respondents overwhelmingly supported adding dedicated space for biking (2,319 or 76%), increasing the number of Bicycle Weekends days (1,754 or 58%), and adding traffic calming like speed humps (1,664 or 55%), the top three of eight options. Even though 31% of respondents said they drive on the boulevard as their main commute route, only 14% chose “do nothing” as one of their three preferred changes to the street, a dismal 5% of total responses to the question. Even when they did in-person intercept surveys at nearby grocery stores and community events, they got similar support for better walking and biking conditions on the boulevard even from people who said they usually drive there. Yet we find ourselves once again having to fill out action alerts and pressure city leaders not to listen to this demonstrably unpopular opinion even after these decisions were already made and work is already underway.

    From Jan 2015 to April 2022, there were 101 collisions on this park boulevard, including 36 that injured at least one person and 6 that resulted in serious potentially life-long injuries. This is unacceptable and must change. Speed humps, stop signs and raised crosswalks should help, which is why Rainier Valley Greenways has been supporting the watered-down plans despite their frustrations with the process and result. But even once the traffic calming elements are completed, the work will not be finished. Hopefully the rate of serious crashes will be reduced, but there will still be no dedicated space for people of all ages and abilities to bike on the street.

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  • Talking up biking in Seattle on Radio Free Urbanism

    Big thanks for Nic Laporte in Vancouver, BC, for inviting me to ramble about biking in Seattle on the Radio Free Urbanism podcast. You can listen wherever you get your podcast or watch via YouTube:

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  • You can finally file bike facility maintenance requests via SDOT’s Find It, Fix It app

    Screenshot of a page on the app listing possible bike facility maintenance options like broken glass, damaged bike rack, or leaves on surface.
    Screenshot from the Find It, Fix It app.

    SDOT’s Find It, Fix It app is surprisingly powerful. You can report a pothole or broken walk signal or broken bicycle detector and SDOT crews will look into the issue as part of their regular maintenance process. Sometimes, you get results within days. Sometimes, especially if the problem is extensive, it does not get fixed, but it’s always worth a try. However, until recently, there hasn’t been an obvious way to report issues with bike lanes, bike racks or other bike-specific infrastructure. You could still report them under some other category (perhaps that pavement crack counts as a pothole?), but sometimes it just was not obvious whether your issue was reportable.

    After some persistent bugging from the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board among others, SDOT recently updated the app to make it easier to accept work orders for bike facility needs. The change comes just a month before the voter-approved Seattle Transportation Levy kicks in, which will increase the department’s bike facility maintenance budget.

    Find It, Fix It is the branding for the department’s work order tracking system. Longtime residents may remember the previous branding 684-ROAD, which still works if you prefer to file reports via phone call. It’s the same idea. The city has a maintenance budget, but they can’t possibly know about every location that needs work. So you can help by reporting it, and as a reward they city will fix it if it is within the scope of regular maintenance (for example, they might fill a pothole or crack, but probably won’t repave a whole roadway section).

    So do your fellow bike riders a favor and start filing reports about slippery wet leaves or standing water (use the clogged drain category) or overgrown blackberry. You can also let the city know about damaged bike racks (especially important if they create a theft risk) or if there is a traffic signal that stubbornly refuses to detect your bike, use the traffic signal maintenance category to report it. I’m sure you’re not the only one dealing with these issues, but most people don’t know how to report it. You can be their invisible hero.

    After you submit a report, you will be updates on the status of your reports within the app. Someone from the city may even call you to ask follow-up questions if needed, so be prepared to answer a call from a dreaded unknown 206 number.

    If you have any Find It, Fix It success stories, share them in the comments below.

    More details on the latest updates from the SDOT Blog:

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  • Seattle riders donated 2+ TONS of goods by bike during record-smashing 15th Annual Cranksgiving

    A group of people setting donation items on a table and marking off items on paper forms.
    Photo by Andrew Koved.

    I am still in shock. I knew we had a good crowd Saturday morning as we sent Cranksgiving riders out into the city to buy food and necessities for local food banks, but I had no idea we were on the verge of turning all previous participation and donation records to dust. Riders crossed the 2-ton mark for the first time ever and kept on going.

    242 people participated in the 15th Annual Seattle Cranksgiving food drive bike ride (224 riders and 18 volunteers), donating a total of 4,210 pounds of goods to Byrd Barr Place (1,373 lbs), U District (1,452 lbs) and Rainier Valley (1,386 lbs) Food Banks. All the donations were purchased at an array of food vendors and stores across the city and hauled by bike. Thank you to Cascade Bicycle Club’s Pedaling Relief Project, our co-host and organizing partner for the third year in a row. Thank you also to Bike Works for once again hosting and staffing the drop-off point for Rainier Valley Food Bank. And thank you to Central Cinema for being a fantastic afterparty host.

    As inflation rises and grocery prices increase, the pressure on food banks increases as well. So it is even more remarkable that as food prices have increased, Cranksgiving riders have only increased their support. Last year’s haul of 3,699 pounds of donations was record-breaking, and I my goal this year was just to try to match it. Instead, they added another 14% on top.

    Held in the middle of November, Cranksgiving is supposed to be a celebration of rainy weather biking, but it is mysteriously plagued by good weather. In the same week as our region was hit hard by a rainy wind storm, the rough weather paused for a few hours so Cranksgiving riders could have a beautiful day to ride. The donations were especially helpful because our amazing food security organizations have also been working hard to help folks affected by power outages that unfortunately spoiled a lot of food in home fridges.

    At a time when hate for others has taken hold of the national government, Cranksgiving riders used their legs and their hard-earned money to demonstrate how we can be resilient and take care of each other by working together. Thank you to everyone who volunteered or biked this year, and thank you to all the amazing staffers and volunteers at all our region’s food security organizations.

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