Quantcast

Assemblywoman: Planned Bushwick bike lanes a danger to kids, commerce

City seeks artsy cyclists to help plan new Bushwick bike lanes
Photo by Stefano Giovannini

Bushwick cyclists may be getting new bike lanes, but won’t somebody think of the children?

Now one local pol has, claiming neighborhood youngsters and old folks will be at the mercy of rule-flouting speed demons if the city goes ahead with the cycling paths.

“This neighborhood is filled with many children and senior citizens, and bike lanes pose hazards for them specifically,” said Assemblywoman Maritza Davila (D–Bushwick), who in a March 11 letter to the local community board, urging it to reject the for the neighborhood’s commercial corridors. “Many users of bike lanes ride at high speed, often ignoring traffic laws and signals.”

Community Board 4 nevertheless voted 13–10 with two abstentions to approve the new designated lanes for Irving and Knickerbocker avenues between Cooper Street and Flushing Avenue, as well as Jefferson Avenue, Cornelia Street, and Hancock Street between Broadway and Wyckoff Avenue — despite many members echoing the Assemblywoman’s concerns about reckless riders overrunning the streets at a meeting last month.

Transportation officials countered that cyclists are already traversing Bushwick’s boulevards, and said the new lanes will just offer them a designated space that will make the streets safer for motorists, pedestrians, and riders alike. If they are breaking the law, it is up to police to crack down, they said.

“The fact is, there are bicycles in your neighborhood, and we want to make it as safe as possible for everybody on the road,” said spokesman Theodore Wright.

Davila also argued the lanes will harm businesses on heavily-trafficked Knickerbocker Avenue by obstructing deliveries and turning off shoppers. But Wright claimed the change would have no impact on stores trying to load or unload their goods, as there will still be a parking lane, and the bike path won’t block traffic lanes or sidewalks.

“This is a simple thing — this is a bike lane, it’s not moving traffic and not impacting the neighborhood in any other way,” he said.

The Assemblywoman further slammed the city for not reaching out to locals when planning the lanes — but the reps claimed they actually did more community consultation than is typical, conducting a year of surveys and workshops with residents.

If the city goes ahead with the lanes, they will appear this summer.

Reach reporter Allegra Hobbs at ahobbs@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260–8312.
The Davila's in the details: Assemblywoman Maritza Davila is no fan of bike lanes.
Photo by Stefano Giovannini