HomeMy WebLinkAbout2/6/2018 Item 12, Gurnee
T. Keith and Meri Kay Gurnee
108 Broad Street
San Luis Obispo, CA 93405
TKG: (707)696-2937 tkgurnee@gmail.com
January 28, 2018
Mayor Heidi Harmon
San Luis Obispo City Hall
990 Palm Street
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
Subject: Don’t Turn Our Residential Neighborhoods into Bike Highways
Dear Mayor Harmon and Members of the City Council,
As long-time residents of what has been one of the nicest neighborhoods in our community—the
Anholm neighborhood—we are beseeching you to spare our neighborhood from an action that will
diminish the livability and character of where we have lived for 45 years. Transforming Broad and Chorro
streets--our local residential streets--into bike highways would be nothing more than an affront to our
neighborhood.
Because what my wife and I have to say about the so-called Anholm Bikeway can’t be done within a 3-
minute snippet of time at the February 6, 2018 hearing to be held on this item, we have resorted to
writing this letter in the hopes of getting this Council to “see the light” in protecting rather than abusing
our neighborhood.
Simply stated, our points are these:
1. It’s Not Needed: Broad and Chorro streets have been shared streets for years that have worked
well for both cars and bikes. Drivers and cyclists are well aware that both use our streets and
look out for the presence of both. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!
2. Please Listen To Our Neighborhood: The Anholm neighborhood overwhelmingly opposed the
“Preferred Alternative”. The city’s own polling show that the neighborhood favored the Lincoln
alignment by nearly 2 to 1. But if you throw in the 19% of neighborhood respondents wanted
neither of the two options, 74% of the neighbors polled opposed the “Preferred Alternative” by
nearly a 3 to 1 margin. Further, the neighborhood whole had 363 respondents as opposed to the
292 citywide responses which were no doubt bolstered by the bike lobby.
3. It’s Not About Public Safety: A Public Records Act request to the SLOPD recently revealed that
there have been NO car-on-bike accidents on our local residential streets in the last 5 years. By
contrast, the accidents, including fatalities, have been occurring on our arterial streets that
frame our community’s neighborhoods. Shouldn’t that be where the city should be investing in
improving public safety? And what about cyclists improving their own safety by obeying the
traffic laws, actually stopping at stop signs, wearing helmets, and using a light at night.
4. The “Preferred Alternative” Will Exacerbate Public Safety Problems: As presently designed,
the “Preferred Alternative” will almost certainly create rather than eliminate public safety
issues. The double cycle track on Chorro will introduce tortured wrong way traffic movements to
what has been a peaceful and safe residential neighborhood.
5. We Can’t Afford to Lose On-Street Parking: After approving two major under-parked
development projects at Chorro and Foothill and on Luneta Drive in an area already heavily
impacted by student parking, eliminating another seven blocks of on-street parking totaling 70
spaces is not the answer. Asking my disabled wife to haul groceries home from two blocks away
isn’t the answer either.
6. It Will Unnecessarily Impact the Serviceability of Our Neighborhood: Removing parking on one
side of the street will dramatically impact the already scarce parking on the other side of the
street (we will be bringing photos to the Council meeting to verify this). Where will our mail
carriers park? What about where delivery, landscape maintenance, or contractor’s vehicles
would park? And where will my daughter and our three grandchildren park when she visits us?
7. It Is a Misplaced Priority for Cyclists: If the city truly wants to facilitate bicycle travel and safety,
it should focus its energies and dollars on completing the railroad bike trail that would connect
Cal Poly with the Edna Valley and serve as a true north-south bicycle highway while minimizing
potential conflicts with other vehicles.
8. Don’t Follow the Mistakes of Others: Other cities like Los Angeles and Baltimore have spent
considerable funds on installing traffic calming and bike boulevard projects only to turn around
and spend more money undoing those projects in response to the overwhelming public
opposition that rose up against them. Save yourself, the residents, and the taxpayers from this
misbegotten project.
9. Emulate Those Communities That Have Done the Right Things With Bike Boulevards: Consider
the Humboldt Avenue Bike Boulevard in the city of Santa Rosa that functions just like Broad
Street does today. It has speed tables, contains painted bike symbols on the surface of the
street, allows on-street parking on both sides of the street, has boldly painted crosswalks at
intersections to remind street users that pedestrians may be nearby, and has stop signs that
cyclists actually obey. The neighborhood containing Humboldt Avenue was more than happy to
accommodate such improvements, just as the residents of Broad Street are today.
10. It Will Trash Our Neighborhood: Our Council’s action against using plastic straws is one thing.
But why would our City Council want to infuse our neighborhood with bright school-bus yellow
plastic “speed pillows” bolted into our streets? Why would the Council want to clutter our
streets with a continuous line of shiny white plastic pylons marching down our streets? And
should our streets become a canvas for the proliferation of fluorescent plastic paint graffiti
bristling with public signage? Finally, why would our Council want to make our beautiful
neighborhood so ugly?
11. This Project Has Deliberately Bypassed the Planning Commission and the Architectural Review
Commission. Why is this? Why empower the Bicycle Advisory Committee-- an activist organ of
the bike lobby-- to be the sole public body in charge of the planning and design of this project?
Shouldn’t the Planning Commission be required to review a project that will fundamentally
change the functionality of our neighborhood’s circulation system? And shouldn’t the ARC be
asked to weigh-in on changing the aesthetics of our public realm improvements? What is this
city afraid of? A more balanced assessment of this project?
12. It Represents an Imposition of One Ideology Upon an Historic Neighborhood: Having lived on
Broad Street for as many years as we have, we have welcomed the site of families cycling along
our street. But retrofitting our historic neighborhoods with a “bikes uber alles” mentality is
going way too far.
13. It Is a Clear “Win-Lose” Solution: The all-powerful bike lobby is manipulating your City Council
into furthering its one-sided agenda, regardless of the sentiments of the long-standing residents
of this historic neighborhood. If the “Preferred Alternative” is selected, a powerful special
interest group will be the winner and our neighborhood will be the bullied loser at the hands of
the City Council. In the process, the bike lobby is alienating neighborhoods in a way that could
translate into frustrating the achievement of more reasoned improvements in support of
cycling.
14. It Represents Over-the-top Social Engineering: That City staff has contrived such a contorted
number of alternative concepts based on fallacious assumptions and stiff advocacy by the bike
lobby is unfortunate. In the process city staff has done its best backflips to put lipstick on this
pig. But one thing hasn’t changed: this project remains a pig.
15. It Is a Waste of Taxpayer’s Money: With the city facing the financial crisis portended by the
public pension tsunami, why would it spend up to $3 million of valuable public funds on such
goofy “improvements” to the detriment of one of the best neighborhoods in the city?
16. Get Ready for More Street Sweeping: At present, that section of Broad Street between Murray
and Mission suffers from significant leaf and needle drop in the areas adjacent to the curbs
where bikes would be expected to ride. Yet our streets are swept only once per month. Aside
from the expense of acquiring special equipment to sweep protected bike lanes, the city will
need to pay more personnel to sweep the areas adjacent to curbs on a far more frequent basis.
If Broad Street is left the way it is today, cyclists could avoid the debris of leaf drop, and the city
could avoid the additional expense of maintaining protected bike lanes.
17. So What Should Be Done? The City Council should consider and action that would improve
rather than harm public safety and our neighborhood. If limited to only two choices-- the
“Preferred Alternative” or the “Lincoln Street” option--we would clearly choose the latter. We
would prefer that the Council consider the Lincoln St. option, but amended to include the
following stratagems:
Improve the safety, functionality, accessibility, and aesthetics of the Chorro Street
underpass at Highway 101. This would go a long way towards eliminating a dark and
foreboding part of the public realm on Chorro Street.
Consider closing the southbound Highway 101 on and off ramps at Broad Street. While
Caltrans might be reluctant to do so, this would dramatically change the extent and speed of
traffic on Broad Street while also serving to eliminate the illegal use of Broad Street as a
truck route. This would improve the safety of motorists, cyclists, and pedestrians who use
Broad Street. Should Caltrans be reluctant to permanently close these on and off ramps,
work with Assemblyman Cunningham and State Sen. Monning to temporarily close them to
gauge the effects of the closure on traffic patterns in the community. Bicycle advocate Eric
Meyer strongly believes in doing this over ramming bike boulevards down our local streets.
Consider providing a curb protected bike lane from the pending new crosswalk at Foothill
and Ferrini to be extended along the south side of Foothill Boulevard along the frontage of
the Foothill Shopping Center to Broad Street. This would provide a protected bike lane
where a recent car-on-bike fatality occurred while obviating the expense of purchasing right-
of-way from the church to build a Class I bike path and eliminating the need to remove
parking from the heavily parking-impacted section of Ramona Street.
Provide painted crosswalks at cross-street intersections on Broad and Chorro Street. This
would help serve as a reminder to motorists and cyclists and pedestrians could be nearby,
thereby improving pedestrian safety.
Keep Broad Street as it is today. With the exception of possibly closing the on and off ramps
to Highway 101, providing painted crosswalks at intersections, and placing the painted
letters “BLVD” next to the bicycle symbols on the street, leave Broad Street alone. No plastic
speed pillows, no plastic polyps, and no elimination of on-street parking. This is precisely the
way the city of Santa Rosa has treated its Humboldt Avenue Bike Boulevard.
Retain all on-street parking on Ramona, Broad, Chorro, Mission, and Lincoln Streets. This is
essential to the livability and serviceability of our Anholm neighborhood.
Install increased streetlights at key points along Broad and Chorro Street. Elimination of
dark spots along Broad, Chorro, and Mission would improve nighttime public safety for all
modes of travel.
Install ADA accessible transitions at intersection corners where necessary. This will help the
aging population of the Anholm neighborhood immensely.
Concentrate on implementing what should be higher priorities for improving bicycle
safety. This would include focusing on completing the rail road bike trail that should be the
highest bicycle priority in the community while improving the safety of bike lanes on arterial
streets rather than jamming them through local neighborhood streets.
In closing, we appreciate the opportunity to weigh-in on this issue that is of such importance to our
neighborhood, to us personally, and to our children and grandchildren who visit us regularly. This is
where we have lived and enjoyed most of our lives. Please let us and our fellow residents of the Anholm
Tract live out the remainder of our lives in peace rather than in aggravation.
Sincerely,
T. Keith Gurnee Meri Kay Gurnee