The Ontario Professional Planners Institute (OPPI) calls upon planners, the
provincial government, municipalities and the public to make non-motorized
forms of travel a mainstay of daily life throughout Ontario communities.
OPPI prepared this Call to Action to raise awareness and to highlight key
issues so that Ontario’s planners and communities can address the
challenges associated with planning for active transportation.
Read more:
http://www.ontarioplanners.on.ca/pdf/Call-to-Action-on-Active-Transportatio…
*Count Yourself In. Make Cycling Count. *
So far *2522 people* have registered to Bike to Work this Friday, June
22nd. That's $1261 that Manitoba Pubic Insurance will dedicate to The
WRENCH<http://thewrench.ca/>,
and a massive group of cyclists to take to the streets and stand up for
cycling in Winnipeg. *
BRING A FRIEND.* If everyone can encourage one other coworker, friend, or
stranger to register and ride we could see over 4000 cyclists on Friday and
maximize our donation to the WRENCH. It's free for you!
*
*
*If you haven't yet, REGISTER
TODAY<http://biketoworkdaywinnipeg.org/register><http://t.ymlp226.net/eyybaxajjqbadausqaxahyse/click.php>at
biketoworkdaywinnipeg.org/register
<http://t.ymlp226.net/eyyhanajjqbavausqaxahyse/click.php>
*
OR
*Pedal by a pit stop to register on your way to work on Friday between
6:30-9:00 a.m.* There are 38 around the city! Plus one at the Forks opening
at 9:00 and closing at 3:30 when our BBQ party begins. Find one along your
route on the pit stop map at:
http://biketoworkdaywinnipeg.org/pitstops<http://t.ymlp226.net/eyywacajjqbarausqacahyse/click.php>
BBQ party at The Forks!
*****Mogley and the Woodland Creatures* and *Flat City Folk* will entertain
us at the BBQ while we enjoy* Half Pints' Pedal Pusher Ale* and draw for
our grand prizes: a new *Schwinn bike, bike trailers, a stay at Falcon
Trails Resort *and an enormous amount of prizes from Fort Whyte Alive,
Assiniboine Credit Union, and all of the incredible Winnipeg Bike Shops.
*Count Yourself In. Make Cycling Count. *
See you in the sunshine on Friday!
Andraea Sartison
Event Coordinator
Bike to Work Day 2012
www.biketoworkdaywinnipeg.org<http://t.ymlp226.net/eyyqaiajjqbatausqapahyse/click.php>
LOVE US ON THE FACEBOOK<http://t.ymlp226.net/eyyyaaajjqbaxausqaaahyse/click.php>
Active Transportation - You and Your Community
Rosanne Prinsen, MSc, Resource Coordinator, Alberta Centre for Active Living
Active transportation means using human-powered transportation (rather than cars or other motorized vehicles) to get to and from local destinations, such as work, school, businesses, facilities, events and much more. This article offers a variety of tips and insights to help you and your community works towards your active transportation goals.
http://www.centre4activeliving.ca/publications/wellspring/2012/jun-active-t…
Jaymi Derrett
Consultant
Recreation and Regional Services
Children and Youth Opportunities
310- 800 Portage Avenue
Winnipeg, MB
R3G 0N4
Phone: (204) 945-4401
Fax: (204) 948-4042
Hi,
For those coming to tomorrows webinar, Resolving Conflicts at Complex
Intersections, handouts can viewed here
<http://www.apbp.org/?page=Webinar_Downloads>.
Green Action Centre and Bike to the Future invite you to join us for a
local viewing of the upcoming APBP webinar at the EcoCentre (3rd floor,
303 Portage Ave) followed by group discussion.**Detailed description
provided below.*
*
Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals (APBP) presents:
Resolving Conflicts at Complex Intersections
*Wednesday, June 20 | 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. CST*
The webinar will focus on mitigating bad geometry at awkward
intersections, including how to address skews, multi-legs, unusual
bicycle and pedestrian movements, and interchanges. imageThrough an
overview of engineering tools and many examples, partipants will learn
how to realign skewed intersections, get rid of extra legs, place
crosswalks, design corner radii to reduce speed while accommodating
turning trucks, and use islands and medians to make a complex
intersection safer and more pedestrian friendly. Several signal phasing
topics will also be covered, including exclusive pedestrian phases,
leading pedestrian intervals, banning RTOR, and bicycle signals.
Presenter: Michael Moule, PE, TE, PTOE, has over 18 years of progressive
traffic and transportation engineering experience, including traffic
calming, conceptual design for Complete Streets, and the planning of
improved bicycle and pedestrian facilities. His projects accommodate all
modes of transportation in order to help cities and states meet their
mobility, economic development, safety, and quality of life goals. He
has significant innovative design experience and specializes in
improving conditions for non-motorized users without degrading motor
vehicle capacity. Michael routinely leads community planning processes
and training sessions to give citizens the basic skills they need to
develop and review street design solutions.
--
Cheers,
Mark
*Friendly reminder about tomorrow's webinar (thanks to those who have
already RSVP'ed)...*
Green Action Centre and Bike to the Future invite you to join us for a
local viewing of the upcoming APBP webinar at the EcoCentre (3rd floor, 303
Portage Ave) followed by group discussion.* *Detailed description provided
below.*
*Resolving Conflicts at Complex Intersections
*Wednesday, June 20 | 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. CST*
RSVPs are appreciated but not necessary. Hope to see you then!
cheers,
Beth
925-3772
* * * * *
Association of Pedestrian and Bicycle Professionals (APBP) presents:
Resolving Conflicts at Complex Intersections
*Wednesday, June 20 | 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. CST*
The webinar will focus on mitigating bad geometry at awkward intersections,
including how to address skews, multi-legs, unusual bicycle and pedestrian
movements, and interchanges. [image: image]Through an overview of
engineering tools and many examples, partipants will learn how to realign
skewed intersections, get rid of extra legs, place crosswalks, design
corner radii to reduce speed while accommodating turning trucks, and use
islands and medians to make a complex intersection safer and more
pedestrian friendly. Several signal phasing topics will also be covered,
including exclusive pedestrian phases, leading pedestrian intervals,
banning RTOR, and bicycle signals.
Presenter: Michael Moule, PE, TE, PTOE, has over 18 years of progressive
traffic and transportation engineering experience, including traffic
calming, conceptual design for Complete Streets, and the planning of
improved bicycle and pedestrian facilities. His projects accommodate all
modes of transportation in order to help cities and states meet their
mobility, economic development, safety, and quality of life goals. He has
significant innovative design experience and specializes in improving
conditions for non-motorized users without degrading motor vehicle
capacity. Michael routinely leads community planning processes and training
sessions to give citizens the basic skills they need to develop and review
street design solutions.
--
*Beth McKechnie* | Workplace Commuter Options
<http://greenactioncentre.ca/>Green Action
Centre<http://www.greenactioncentre.ca/>
3rd floor, 303 Portage Ave | (204) 925-3772 | Find us
here<http://greenactioncentre.ca/content/ecocentre-directions-and-travel-options/>
Green Action Centre is your non-profit hub for greener living.
Support our work by becoming a
member<http://greenactioncentre.ca/support/memberships/>
*Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario*
*Cycling Death Review:
A Review of All Accidental Cycling Deaths in Ontario from January 1st, 2006
to December 31st, 2010*
Road safety is a global public health issue. In the 2004 World Report on
Road Traffic Injury Prevention co-authored by the World Health Organization
and the World Bank, it is estimated that by the year 2020, road traffic
injuries will become the third greatest contributor to the global burden of
disease and injury. In terms of mortality, cyclists are among the most
vulnerable road users worldwide...One of the hypotheses of the Cycling
Death Review was that all cycling fatalities are preventable. This
hypothesis held true in each and every death we reviewed.
Read the report
here<http://www.mcscs.jus.gov.on.ca/stellent/groups/public/@mcscs/@www/@com/docu…>
.
For anyone who is attending Velo-City this year or know of anyone attending
please considering registering or passing along this message about a
fantastic pre-conference workshop *Velo-Talk Bicycle Advocacy Workshop*,
held on *June 25th, 2012 from 12:30-5pm.*
*Workshop Details*
*Do you want to share ideas about how to get even more cycling happening?
Please join HUB at Velo Talk, a satellite event of the Velo-city Global
cycling conference in Vancouver. Join in Vancouver's cycling excitement in
this afternoon advocacy workshop the day before Velo-city starts (June
25th) with an optional morning bike ride and evening social. See
http://bikehub.ca/civicrm/event/register?id=48&reset=1 and the attached
flyer. This event has limited registration, so please sign up soon.*
Please contact Kerry Hamilton if you would like more information:
kerry(a)hastebc.org
--
*Shoni Litinsky* | Active and Safe Routes to School
Green Action Centre <http://greenactioncentre.ca/>
3rd floor, 303 Portage Avenue* | *(204) 925-3773
Green Action Centre is your non-profit hub for greener living.
Support our work by becoming a
member<http://greenactioncentre.ca/support/memberships/>
Find us here<http://greenactioncentre.ca/content/ecocentre-directions-and-travel-options/>
Stolen bikes not on police radar Another opportunity lost to catch a
bicycle thief in city
By: Gordon Sinclair Jr. <gordon.sinclair(a)freepress.mb.ca>
Some questions have been raised this week as a result of something that
happened to one of the thousands of people who have their bikes stolen each
year in this city.
The questions are these:
How much does the Winnipeg Police Service really care about finding bike
thieves? And how much does it really care about finding and returning your
bike? The questions were raised -- to a level just shy of a scream -- after
Rejean Robert, a 33-year-old Fort Rouge resident contacted the Free Press
about the theft of two bikes last Saturday afternoon; a $700 mountain bike
he rode to work and a $600 model belonging to his fiancée. Initially, the
police response appeared positive. Within a few hours, two patrol officers
took a statement from a witness.
Actually, the witness had done more than just watch, he took photos, and
then followed the thieves for six blocks to a walk-up apartment block on
Corydon Avenue near Confusion Corner, where he saw them take the bikes.
Rejean thought, given that kind of lead, police would follow it. And fast.
But they didn't.
So the next day, Rejean and his fiancée, Brenda, decided to follow the lead
themselves, right to that apartment block on Corydon.
With the help of the caretaker, they not only found Brenda's bike, but a
large stash of other bikes and bike parts in a basement locker and
second-floor apartment. All of which suggested they had stumbled on a
stolen-bike ring that was operating a chop shop out of the building.
I wrote about all of this on Tuesday.
By Wednesday, police, who had assigned detectives to the case on Monday,
had executed a search warrant at the apartment block.
By that time, the bikes were gone.
But police arrested one suspect there and another the next day downtown,
both of whom were charged with possession of property obtained by crime
under $5,000. They're still looking for a third suspect.
The arrests make police -- or at least these officers -- look better.
Except the police service had known for weeks that a bike ring was at work
in the area, and according to what the caretaker told Rejean, they had been
alerted more than once about the suspicious goings-on at the Corydon
apartment.
But police hadn't responded.
What's even more disturbing is this doesn't appear to be an isolated case.
Ruth Smith owns a 16-suite apartment block on St. Mary's Road, and when she
read about Rejean's experience, she sent me an email.
Late last month, Ruth said she discovered 12 bikes and assorted bike parts
stashed under a basement stairwell in her building. So she took it upon
herself to investigate, much like the witness did in last weekend's case.
"I proceeded to phone and talk directly to every tenant in the 16-suite
block," Ruth wrote.
Fifteen of the tenants told her none of the bikes belonged to them. But
when Tenant 16 didn't get back to her, Ruth decided to record all the bike
serial numbers and call police.
But when she called police, they brushed her off.
"They said they wouldn't come to check as there was no proof of illegal
activity."
There's more.
"When I offered to record the serial numbers, they said I could but someone
could just say they found them. Basically, they said, never mind."
The next day, Tenant 16 was spotted removing the 12 bikes and bike parts
from the basement. Later, he would tell Ruth he took the bikes to his
brother's place. On hearing that, Ruth called police again, and again got
the brush-off. He could be repairing friends' bikes or buying and selling
bikes, police told her.
"And they had no reason to investigate."
We all know there are lot of good cops doing a lot of good work, and
there's a never-ending load of work to do. I also know it's not uncommon
for general-patrol officers to find bikes, run their serial numbers and
then stuff them in their trunks and return them to their owners.
But then there's what appears to be institutional apathy about bike theft,
as if it doesn't matter. Police don't even track stolen bikes as a separate
theft category, leaving the city to estimate reported cases at 3,000
annually, which means there are probably another 3,000 stolen that go
unreported. On a national scale, the number is more like 200,000, which
amounts to losses in the tens of millions of dollars.
Of this much I can assure you: If it were a bank being robbed at that rate,
police wouldn't be telling citizens such as Ruth Smith that their tip
didn't matter. But we're not talking about banks, we're talking about bikes.
Big wheels, versus little ones.
And that's just the way the world goes around.
gordon.sinclair(a)freepress.mb.ca
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/stolen-bikes-not-on-police-radar-159…
Why police didn't bust bike thieves
By: Gordon Sinclair Jr. <gordon.sinclair(a)freepress.mb.ca>
Everyone can relax now.
Well, maybe not everyone.
Winnipeg police want you to know they are hot on the trail of what appears
to be a ring of bike thieves.
Although they didn't appreciate my writing about the case Tuesday, the
suggestion being that by alerting the thieves, I've made finding them more
difficult.
More difficult?
Let's just do a little backtracking here. Back to around noon last Saturday
when four locked bikes were stolen from under an apartment fire escape in
Fort Rouge. As it turns out, there are a lot more than four bikes involved
in this investigation.
And a lot more at stake for police.
That's because of what happened after the four bikes were stolen and what a
couple of patrol officers did -- and didn't do -- about it.
What they did was respond promptly later that Saturday afternoon to the
apartment of Rejean Robert and Brenda Harder, who were without their two
bikes.
Police responded because a witness had reported what he'd seen.
The witness, a 32-year-old neighbour, not only saw what happened, he took
photographs of the thieves in action and then followed two members of what
appears to be a stolen-bike ring and chop-shop operation.
The witness not only tracked the thieves to a walk-up apartment on Corydon
Avenue near Confusion Corner, he recovered one of the four bikes and
prevented another bike from being stolen by interrupting the theft in
progress.
Pretty impressive.
But it was tracking them to the apartment that would turn out to be the big
score. Because, the next day, using a lead provided by his good neighbour
the witness, Robert went to the apartment block and recovered his fiancée's
bike.
By that time, his bike -- the one he used to get to work -- was long gone.
It was the block's caretaker who first led Robert to a basement locker full
of bikes and bike parts and then took him upstairs where the caretaker
knocked on a door behind which were more bikes and bike parts.
Why would Robert put himself at risk like that?
Because of what the two patrol officers didn't do after they responded to
his home to take a report on Saturday.
The officers didn't go to the apartment block on Corydon where the witness
saw the thieves take their stolen bikes, one worth $700 and the other about
$600.
It was the patrol officer not following the lead to the apartment block on
Corydon that outraged Robert and prompted him to contact the Free Press.
"I told them I had the address," Robert recalled Wednesday when we spoke
again.
"And what they told me was they can't go knocking on doors."
No?
That's also what Winnipeg Police Service public information officer Const.
Jason Michalyshen suggested to me when we spoke earlier this week, although
he put it slightly differently.
He said police can't go kicking in doors, at least not without a search
warrant.
"There's a process we have to follow."
He said he understands the victim's frustration, but sometimes police can't
act as quickly as they'd like to.
"We can't snap our fingers," is how Michalyshen put it.
All true, but not totally true.
When I spoke to a former senior Winnipeg police officer, he said if the
patrol officers had driven the six blocks from the scene of the theft to
the Corydon apartment, they could have secured the scene and sought a
search warrant.
So, why didn't they go?
Michalyshen said he didn't know.
I asked him something else.
According to Robert, the caretaker said he had reported suspicious activity
at the apartment to police more than once, prior to last weekend.
But police hadn't responded.
I asked Michalyshen if he could verify that.
He said he couldn't.
What he could tell me, though, was that prior to last weekend, police in
District 6 had been aware there had been a rash of stolen bikes in the Fort
Rouge area.
And beyond.
Last month, Gord's Ski & Bike on Donald Street had been hit by professional
thieves three times for a total of eight bikes, including a couple worth
$8,000 each.
And by Tuesday, when the column appeared, Robert quickly learned he wasn't
alone because of Facebook messages from others in the neighbourhood who'd
had bikes stolen.
Were the two patrol officers aware there had been a rash of stolen bikes in
the area?
Michalyshen said he didn't know.
What the WPS spokesman could tell me about how police handled the case was
this:
The officers in charge of the patrol officers who took Robert's report on
Saturday are "very pleased" with the thoroughness of their work.
And, police made no mistakes.
But then, when do they ever? Or at least, ever admit they did?
But we should give the last words to the victim. Words that cut through all
the police we-don't-knows, to what Rejean Robert knows:
"We had a witness, pictures, an address... what more do they need to help
protect the property of citizens?"
gordon.sinclair(a)freepress.mb.ca
*STOLEN BIKES BY THE NUMBERS*
3,000 -- estimated number of bikes reported stolen annually in Winnipeg.
1,500 -- estimated number of bikes recovered annually.
10-12 -- percentage of recovered bikes returned to owners in Winnipeg.
100,000 -- estimated number of stolen bikes reported stolen annually in
Canada. 200,000 -- estimated total number of bikes stolen annually across
Canada.
Sources: City of Winnipeg, TD Insurance
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/why-police-didnt-bust-bike-thieves-1…
[Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: cid:image001.png@01CC88E0.FA0A1B80]
For Immediate Release
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
OurWinnipeg - The Conversation Continues
Winnipeg, MB - Today, the City released the first "OurWinnipeg: Report to the Community" which tracks progress in implementing its long-term development plan. The planning document, OurWinnipeg, came into effect nearly one year ago, following a multi-faceted public engagement initiative known as SpeakUpWinnipeg and has won several awards as well as broad community support.
Highlighting progress to date, the City will use the successful SpeakUpWinnipeg platform to continue engaging the public in dialogue about OurWinnipeg and efforts towards its implementation.
OurWinnipeg is the City's blueprint for the future in all key policy areas, particularly land use and development. The plan was developed through SpeakUpWinnipeg, a massive, multi-faceted public engagement initiative through which city planners reached out to citizens and stakeholders - over 42,000 of them - to determine their vision of what Winnipeg might look like in the future.
Having officially come into effect in August 2011, the City has already made substantial progress towards bringing various public initiatives, policy directions and departmental operations in line with the plan's vision and moving it forward.
The City will be promoting the report at various locations throughout Winnipeg with staff on-hand to answer questions and talk about how the plan is being moved forward in key areas. These "SpeakUpWinnipeg On the Spot" engagements will take place until Wednesday, June 20, culminating with an Open House at the Millennium Public Library on Thursday, June 21.
The report, together with various engagement opportunities are available to the public online at SpeakUpWinnipeg.com
-30-
Media inquiries should be directed to the City of Winnipeg Media Inquiry Line at 204-986-6000 or via email at MediaInquiry(a)winnipeg.ca<mailto:MediaInquiry@winnipeg.ca>
Follow us on Facebook: facebook.com/cityofwinnipeg<http://www.facebook.com/cityofwinnipeg>
Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/cityofwinnipeg<http://www.twitter.com/cityofwinnipeg>