CAzBike Membership ANNUAL Meeting: Wed Oct 24

When: October 24, 2012 at 6:30pm
Where: Aunt Chilada’s  2021 West Baseline Road, Tempe, AZ [map/directions]; (it’s part of the the Arizona Grand Resort)

All members are cordially invited and encouraged to attend. The meeting is open to the public.
For space planning purposes, please drop us a line if you can attend;
you can respond to the Event on Facebook www.facebook.com/events/516148175062813/

Meeting Agenda
This can be participatory, with a goal of having this meeting more discussion-oriented that prior years (direction, priorities, how to grow membership, etc.)
·         Call to order
·         Introductions
·         Call for additional agenda items
·         Treasurer’s Report
·         President’s Comments: Current Priorities, Opportunities and Concerns (to include Federal Funding, ADOT Policies, Board/Volunteers Needed, MAG programs, Route 66, etc.)
·         VP Education: MAG education programs
·         Additional Agenda Items, including nominations of additional board members (if any).
·         Adjournment

Road Hazard Hotline

If you are out riding and spot some dangerous road hazard conditions (Cattle guards, dangerous longitudinal cracks and rail road crossing pavement buckling, etc. Generally NOT simply debris.).

Generally, you’ll need to supply the following information:

  • Type of hazard (description).
  • Detailed location.
  • Date observed.
  • Your Contact information

It’s best to directly report the hazard to the responsible jurisdiction, Here’s a few (sorry these links go dead regularly) —

FREE Ready-to-Ride Class: Peoria Dec 1


Registration for the December 1, 2012 9-12 AM, located at Peoria – Lakeview Room of Rio Vista Recreation Center 8866 W. Thunderbird Road, Peoria is now open; (note: this class was originally scheduled for Oct 13, but was postponed).

Ready-to-Ride is a FREE class brought to you by the Coalition of Arizona Bicyclists and the Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG).

The free classes for ages 16 and up will last for 3 hours. The classes will be overview on the basics of bicycling and riding on streets in traffic. The last 45 minutes of the class will be on your bike in the parking lot. Helmets are required.


Please visit free-ready-to-ride-classes for more info, and to register.


Bicyclist Education Scheduled in Flagstaff: July 13-14

Martin Ince of Flagstaff will be hosting a TS101 class July 13 and 14
The location will be the Joe Montoya Community & Senior Center, 245 N Thrope Rd , Flagstaff, 86001. For more info or to register contact:

Kara Kumon (kara.kumon@gmail.com) or
Martin Ince (mince@flagstaffaz.gov, 928-213-2685)

More info from City of Flag website (includes times; THE CLASS IF FREE!)
Listing on LAB website.

This is great for cyclists in Flag and in Arizona.

Traffic Skills 101 is our nation’s premiere street bicycling program taught by instructors certified by the League of American Bicyclists. Learn the basics of bicycle and helmet fit. Learn state bicycle laws. Learn how to predict and prevent crashes, and how to bail out as a last resort! Learn how to operate your bicycle in a skillful and confident manner, in any traffic — any time!

Also, there will be an LCI instructor course (to become LAB certified to instruct) September 7, 8 and 9. (completion of TS101 is a pre-requisite). Registration is through LAB.

CAzBike Logo


Regular Logo

very small – 79×100, 2KBytes
normal – 317×400, 17KBytes
large – 951×1199, 50KBytes
medium large variation – 632×744, 30KBytes (no subtext)


Sidetext Logo

Hi-res – 1600×1200, 30KBytes

Lo-res – 750×90, 8KBytes

The .eps File

Here is the .eps file, CAzB_logo_Final.eps, useful for printing. This is a vector-type file; and can be scaled up to any resolution without looking pixellated. Upon opening the .eps file in Adobe Illustrator, it seems as though the main color is “Pantone 542 CVU” (CVU apparently means Computer, Video, Uncoated), though it appears as though the color looks “too blue” (e.g. RGB = 4, 140, 199 versus the above ones we use on the web that render as 93, 140, 186 and “look right”… in hex this is 5D8CBA, by the way).
I opened the .eps and the .jpg we use on the web in: AI, Photoshop CS4, Photoshop 2.0, Paint, and got all sorts of results; even the black varied. I just opened the .eps in Fireworks/CS2 and the blue renders as #5990BA; and looks just a little too blue, i.e. slightly less red, slightly more green, but same amount of blue.

Letterhead

Here is a .doc letterhead. It uses a version of the website header graphic in the header, and just some simple text in the footer. The text color is set to 70% grey, while the header is in color. This comes out best if printed in color — but also looks pretty good when printed on a b/w laser printer.

Website Header

Used on our website…

CazbikeHeader.gif : 17Kbytes. 780×190 .gif file; used on the “static” site, prior to 2015
CazbikeHeaderForStructure.gif: Used on wordpress site (2015 onward): 960×140 .gif
CazbikeHeaderHi.gif : 125Kbytes. upsampled CazbikeHeader.gif file (has pure white background)
CazbikeHeader.png :  This is the SOURCE file in Adobe/Macromedia Fireworks png format; it is currently on a 960×140 canvas but can be resized using Fireworks (it was created in the version from CS2). It currently has a nearly white background (#f9f9f9 or something) to match the “structure” theme in wordpress.

Paypal

In order to get images/logo to display on paypal’s payment/checkout pages for example when you renew your dues, you need to load them onto an ssl server, e.g. sslpic.com offers this as a free service for small images, here is our image used for paypal checkout pages hosted on https: static.e-junkie.com.

 

 


Tri-fold / Brochure

one-page double-sided printable brochure, folds into thirds; print on glossy white magazine stock…

.

 

Green Valley and Scottsdale: 10 Best Burbs for Biking

I don’t normally expect to find articles regarding bicycling in Sunset Magazine, let alone rankings of communities where bicycling is involved…but I did, in the June 2012 issue.
Green Valley and Scottsdale were both named “Gold” communities (their highest ranking), the only two Gold-level award recipients in the whole western US, in an article titled “Ten Best Burbs for Biking”. 

The premise was to identify the Top Ten communities in the West that were other than “urban” (as in NYC urban, I guess) or “college-centric” communities with a readily expected bicycling population. I was thrilled to read this and to see your personal efforts, along with key allies, supporters and co-workers, get recognized in a “lifestyle” magazine that is not bicycling-focused. It is encouraging to see this type of publicity within what is a broader and hopefully growing audience.

Congratulations to all involved!
Bob Beane, President, Coalition of Arizona Bicyclists

Excerpt from the article (June edition of Sunset Magazine):
10 Best Burbs for Biking 
We developed this list from the nonprofit League of American Bicyclists’ award program. It’s easy to sing the praises of the West’s bike-centric college towns (Boulder, Davis), so we chose instead to focus on communities without an obvious bikeready population that are making it easy for people to ride to shops, restaurants, work, and more. Each of these towns recently received a gold, silver, or bronze award from the League based on bike-friendly infrastructure, education, and progressive city planning…

» GREEN VALLEY, AZ 25 miles from Tucson. Part of bike haven Pima County, where the local police actively advocate motorist and cyclist equality, Green Valley is the latest community in the county to double its bike lane miles (from 30 to 60) in the last five years.
 » SCOTTSDALE, AZ 12 miles from Phoenix. Talk about door-to-door service: A whopping 75 percent of homes here are within a halfmile of a bike path or lane.

The full article is currently here.

League announces Spring 2012 BFC

League Announces Spring 2012 Bicycle Friendly Communities

Cottenwood joins the ranks of BFC cities at the bronze level, and Tucson maintained Gold.

Arizona communities currently enjoying BFC status are

  • Gold — Tucson/East Pima Region, Scottsdale
  • Silver — Tempe, and Flagstaff
  • Bronze — Chandler, Cottenwood, Gilbert, Mesa and Sedona

Read the LAB press release here.

Bike Safety Class offered in Flagstaff

Bike Safety Class

Wednesday, June 6, 2012
5:30 to 6:30 pm
Flagstaff Medical Center, McGee Auditorium
1200 North Beaver Street
Be a Savvy Cyclist! Please join us during Bike to Work Week for this interactive presentation on safe, legal, and smart cycling:
.. Learn to ride safely and legally
.. Bike with confidence in any traffic situation
.. Understand basic principles of on-street cycling
.. Discover tips and tools for bicycle commuting
This class is free and open to the public. For more information, please call 928-773-2080

Jim Thompson Spins Again

BobBeane-h4The following letter was submitted for publication in the Ahwatukee Foothill News,
Jim Thompson “Spins” Again

Dear Editor,

In response to Jim Thompson’s letter of May 9, I have the following to say. In bicycling circles, “spin” has to do with high RPM training…with Jim Thompson it is just the political-type “change what someone else said to suit my argument” version:

  • Jim, do you expect people to take seriously a viewpoint based on totally misrepresenting what someone else says and believes? I never said that “ bicyclists own the highway” and I don’t advocate that position. If you want to debate a viewpoint, at least do it honestly without misrepresenting the other party.
  • The Coalition of Arizona Bicyclists advocates sharing the road and simply wants all road users to exercise care. Asking drivers not to use GPS, cell phones, etc., while driving (which numerous studies show is equivalent or worse than even low level DUI/drug impairment) isn’t unreasonable, in my opinion. And, enacting laws that put unsafe behavior, whether created by alcohol or inattention, at the same standard and set equivalent punishment for equivalent results makes sense to me. What part of injuring or killing someone by driving unsafely seems OK to you?
  • If Jim was honest about his “wonderful world”, I suspect that he would admit that many more motorists aggravate him than bicyclists. I both drive and ride, and I don’t have selective memory. I notice violations and “failure to share the road” by both groups. In my “real world”, many more vehicle drivers violate laws and offend other motorists than bicyclists. The difference is that I am fact-based, while Jim just “spins” other people’s comments and exercises selective memory to create a foil for his anti-bike attitude.

When a guy like this takes a situation where three people simply exercising/training on their bikes and following the law are critically injured by an inattentive driver and tries to twist it into something it isn’t (referring to a totally different situation), it just shows us his stripes. The CAzB doesn’t defend riding three-abreast, Jim. In fact, we educate bicyclists (adults and kids), motorists, and law enforcement on AZ laws and safe cycling and driving.

If Jim did his homework (web site and/or Facebook) he would know what we stand for and advocate. He wouldn’t have to mischaracterize. So, to make it easy for Jim: We advocate enforcing the laws for both drivers and bicyclists. And, we also (the main point of my commentary) advocate requiring a higher standard of care for motorists than currently exists, because a motor vehicle that weighs 2,000+ pounds combined with inattentive or impaired driving can be quite deadly to other car/truck drivers, motorcyclists (think Carefree Highway), bicyclists, pedestrians, and law enforcement officers at traffic stops (how many of those sad stories have we seen in the last ten years, Jim?). Technology allows many more distractions to be present in vehicles than ten years ago, but societal expectations and AZ laws, for the most part, have not kept up with this change.
Jim, I don’t expect to change your attitude toward bicycling as a legitimate form of transportation, athletic/exercise activity, health and wellness and good clean fun, but I’m not going to let you get away with mischaracterizing my views and that of the organization/community that we represent.

Bob Beane,
President, Coalition of Arizona Bicyclists

Bob Beane is an economics graduate of the College of Wooster and an MBA accounting graduate of Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. He is also a bicycling advocate and has been a resident of Ahwatukee since 1992

Traffic Skills 101 offered in Tempe May 24 and 26

T.B.A.G. is offering TS101 at Landis Cyclery at their “north” Tempe location, in two parts: May 24 evening, and May 26 moring. Visit biketempe.org for full info and to register. The cost is $20.

Traffic Skills 101 is our nation’s premiere street bicycling program taught by instructors certified by the League of American Bicyclists. Learn the basics of bicycle and helmet fit. Learn state bicycle laws. Learn how to predict and prevent crashes, and how to bail out as a last resort! Learn how to operate your bicycle in a skillful and confident manner, in any traffic — any time!