Bike SF 2010

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Bike SF 2010[1] are a set of 10 milestones established by then-Mayor of San Francisco Gavin Newsom on San Francisco's Bike to Work Day, May 17, 2007. The milestones are a set of comprehensive goals to measure the progress in making bike improvements to streets in San Francisco.

Bike SF 2010 Milestones[edit]

  • 1. Complete draft EIR of the San Francisco Bike Plan by June 1, 2008.
  • 2. Complete planning work for bike safety improvements at 50 locations, including bike routes such as 2nd St., 17th St., Portola Drive, Masonic Ave., and key intersections such as Market/Valencia and Fell/Masonic.
  • 3. Finish five-year funding plan for City's bicycle improvement needs in the city, including 6-month progress updates to the Mayor's Office beginning in July 2007.
  • 4. Install 300 bike racks by 2010.
  • 5. Stripe 20 new bike lanes by 2010.
  • 6. Direct the Department of Public Works to place higher priority on official bike routes in regular street resurfacing process.
  • 7. Actively support ‘Level of Service’ reform at the Planning Commission to better meet the needs of San Francisco's Transit-First policy.
  • 8. Reach 10 percent of trips by bicycle in San Francisco by 2010.
  • 9. Reduce bicycle injury collisions by 50 percent by 2010.
  • 10. Create a Mayor's Working Group for bicycling improvements, which meets quarterly beginning in July 2007. This Working Group will include key departmental and community representatives.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Mayor Newsom Announces “Bike SF 2010 Milestones” Archived 2007-07-07 at the Wayback Machine Office of the Mayor. Retrieved on July 23, 2007.