Please show your
support for Cycle Tracks!
On April 16th, the
recommended Cycle track network will be coming to the Standing Policy Committee
on Transportation and Transit and members of Calgary City Council will be
voting on it.
Council passed a motion to ask
Administration to provide Calgarians with more transportation choices in
Calgary’s busiest area—the Centre City—and to determine an updated
East-West-North-South separated Cycle Route Network through the Centre City. Funding
for this transportation plan has already been allocated
This is an extremely important vote. If it loses, it will
set back safe cycling in Calgary for years.
Unfortunately Council has been hearing a lot of negative and
false information from their residents regarding cyclists. They are being told
that cyclists do not pay taxes because we do not own vehicles (vehicle
registration is collected by the Provincial government and none of that revenue
goes to cities); that we live in a car city; that winter last six-months of the
year and people shouldn't ride bikes in winter to very hostile comments of
people saying that we should be run down.
Council is leaning
towards not supporting Cycle Tracks. This is where we NEED your help:
Contact your Member
of Council and the Mayor—we need to let our members of council know that
cycling is important to Calgary. It will provide safe and alternative modes of
transport in the Centre City.
Tell your friends to
write/call too!
Visit the City’s page on the recommended
cycle tracks
Join the ‘Calgarians for Cycle Tracks’
Facebook page
Calgary cannot build anymore roads
into the Centre City and alternative modes of transportation are desperately
needed. The Cycle Route Network will provide 3% of transportation funding to
cycling which currently contributes to the 3.5% of people commuting into the
Centre City via bicycles.
Providing cycling infrastructure
is extremely cost effective and saves on infrastructure repairs and is
dramatically cheaper than building a c-train line or a grade separated
interchange (approximately $80 million per).
Furthermore, more cyclist will be
encouraged to commute into downtown through the separated cycle tracks—cars,
bikes and pedestrians all have their place and are separated creating greater
safety for all three.
Thank you for taking the time to
read this and contact your Member of Council.
Jenn
3 comments:
Done as well
Done and done!
Done!
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