VeoRide e-bikes
VeoRide e-bikes are here. VeoRide is going to replace 150 of their regular pedal bikes with the new e-bikes in the near future.
VeoRide e-bikes are here. VeoRide is going to replace 150 of their regular pedal bikes with the new e-bikes in the near future.
The VeoRide e-bikes are here. Ben Thomas is holding a launch event for the VeoRide e-bikes between Foellinger and the Undergrad Library today (April 3rd, 2019) from 10 am to 2 pm. Stop by if you can for a free trial ride!
News-Gazette published an editorial on March 20, 2019, regarding the assessment of Bike Sharing expansion for VeoRide in UofI and the cities of Champaign and Urbana. Please see attached
iCAP Working Group Meeting Notes from March, 2019.
Please see attached the initial idea for the Lock Your Bike Right (LYBR) contest.
The Washington Post published an article on February 22, 2019, about how farmers are making the transition to solar based on current corn and soybean price drops, and the implications of that. Evan DeLucia is quoted in this article.
See attached or follow the link to read the article.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/the-next-money-crop-for-...
The attached document contains the meeting minutes for 6 February 2019.
Hi Everyone,
Ben from VeoRide and I have started a discussion about how we can make sure the VeoRide Bike Share opportunity is known and available to everyone in our Champaign/Urbana community. We are not alone. Other communities are exploring this question too. There is even a Better Bike Share Association!
https://www.smartcitiesdive.com/news/bike-share-expansion-neighborhood-perception/545012/
https://ppms.trec.pdx.edu/media/project_files/TREC_BreakingBarriersSummaryReport_emQeiBA.pdf
Are any of you interested in joining this conversation? Do you know of others who would be interested? Let me know and I’ll create an email list and keep you in the loop of ideas and meetings.
Note: CU has a dockless bike share system and some of these studies looked at cities like Chicago and their large public docked bike share systems like Divvy. But I think we can learn a great deal from what these studies and authors have learned about the introduction of bike share to various populations of potential riders.
CHANGING MINORITY & LOW INCOME PERCEPTIONS OF BIKE SHARE
-> Smart Cities Dive reports when bike share was not understood or accepted when it expanded to the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY. A grant from the Better Bike Share Partnership provided resources for a community-led campaign. A historically rooted, minority-led organization lead the charge. Community groups and churches organized group rides, and schools offered bike education classes. Ads were rewritten to reflect the voice and priorities of the neighborhood. Discounted memberships were publicized and bulk memberships were offered to employers to get more people to sign up. From there, more listening sessions in the neighborhood helped Citi Bike explore new dock locations that would better serve the community. Just a year later, Bed-Stuy was an unexpected poster child for Citi Bike. Personal engagement has become a top priority for successful cities trying to expand mobility options. http://bit.ly/2CKogRj
[See Research section for links to 2 studies of minority and low-income neighborhood bike share perceptions and concerns.]
MINORITY & LOW INCOME NEIGHBORHOOD PERCEPTIONS OF BIKE SHARE
-> Smart Cities Dive reports as bike share expands, neighborhood perception is key. (http://bit.ly/2CKogRj) A recent study published in Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice on bike share systems in Chicago reinforced a persistent problem for new mobility options: Minority and low-income neighborhoods aren't always on board. (Where Does Active Travel Fit within Local Community Narratives of Mobility Space and Place?: http://bit.ly/2Fe1jsg) Researchers used advanced machine learning to analyze focus groups of residents of 2 contrasting neighborhoods. Minority and low-income residents worry bike-sharing presence is yet another sign of a gentrifying neighborhood while more pressing needs, such as safety measures or expanded broadband are not addressed.
A study from the Transportation Research and Education Center surveyed residents in Chicago, IL; Philadelphia, PA and Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY and found people of color, or those with lower incomes, had more concerns about bike sharing than white or high-income people. (Breaking Barriers to Bike Share: Insights on Equity: http://bit.ly/2FfqCdy) Among those concerns were uncertainty about how it worked, and the cost and the fear that bike share would make their neighborhoods too expensive.
[See The National & International Scene for an initiative that successfully changed a neighborhood vocally against bike share to on that embraces it.]
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CCB has a growing concern about Cycling Equity, and making sure cycling events, education, infrastructure, and opportunity reach to all the neighborhoods and people in the greater Champaign/Urbana area. We will be giving this some thought as be plan for CU Bike Month 2019, and particularly, our Bike to Work Day - given that the data is showing that the majority of the people who bike to work in Champaign/Urbana are not pedaling towards the U of I, where we have traditionally put most of our efforts.
If you are interested in helping us explore something new and additional to our Bike to Work Day, let me know.
Thanks,
Jeff
From a Washington Post article looking a census data:
Of special interest, the demographics also reveal an important underlying dichotomy. The people most likely to bike or walk to work are either the least educated in society or the most educated. Slice the demographics by income, and the less money you have, the more likely you are to take either of these modes of transportation to work. Unless, that is, you're really wealthy. The graph below illustrates that biking and walking decline as income rises, until both start to tick back up again for the two highest income groups:
The pattern is even clearer when we look at educational attainment (this is my graph, using the Census data):
These two graphs illustrate a transportation paradox: Alternatives to driving in the United States are both a luxury for the well-off and a last resort for the poor.
* These charts taken from here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2014/05/09/the-demographic-paradox-of-who-bikes-and-walks-to-work/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.c8e6397e5c49
Jeff Yockey
Board Member
Champaign County Bikes
Executive Director of Facilities & Services (F&S) Mohamed Attalla and Director of the Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment (iSEE) Evan DeLucia approved the use of Carbon Credit Sales Funding for the geothermal monitoring well on the Bardeen Quad.
Ideas for recommendation related to post-consumer waste reduction, recommendations to continue in Spring semester
Producing 25000 lbs. of tomatoes, now have classes there looking to work with university to teach about plants! economically sustaining our own building, looking to expand to a new location! Strong producer for the campus, and excited to grow more! |
Hi Becky,
As I mentioned yesterday at the Sustainability Celebration, we have developed HTML web pages for embedding into FourWinds digital signage so you can demonstrate or monitor your daily and weekly electricity usage. Here at the physical plant building, we have them built into a frame that toggles between the two web pages. You have to create a frame with a titel like “Electricity Usage – Illini Union”, embed the html, and then add a button to switch between the two sites. Unfortunately, the person who did this for us has moved to another job, so I can’t help you on the FourWinds programming. But I know that there are ways to display web pages. Here are the links to the pages we created for the Illini Union. We’d really like to see you guys put something like this up on your digital signage.
Day version:
https://ednaweb.illinienergy.illinois.edu/post/IUnion/graph.html
Week Version:
https://ednaweb.illinienergy.illinois.edu/post/IUnion/graph.html?week
If you would like more information, feel free to give me a call over here at F&S.
Mike Marquissee
Director – Budget and Planning Resources
Utilites and Energy Services Division
Facilities and Services
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Join iSEE, the Student Sustainability Committee and Facilities & Services for a "plogging" fun run/walk, a tour of Abbott Power Plant, a celebration event with organizations and RSOs that includes the Energy Conservation Incentive Program awards and updates on Illinois Climate Action Plan goals, a socially responsible investing program, and the popular Illini Lights Out energy savings event.
Tony Mancuso . Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment (iSEE)
The RLF selection committee approved funding for five projects totalling $814,120. See attached file for the list.
Attached are the meeting minutes from the iWG meeting that was held on September 17th, 2018. Several SWATeam recommendations were assessed.
Eliana Brown, Extension Stormwater Specialist, and Katy Kraszewska, Department of Landscape Architecture, will lead you through the basics of rain garden design for your home. This workshop will take place on September 13th from 6:30-8pm in the Allerton Park Visitor Center. Tickets are $5.
Diana Harris . Allerton Park & Retreat Center
Spring 2018 report submitted to SSC for the Local Grains and Locally Processed Foods for Dining Services project.