dkazzed
Active Member
You can never get rid of stupid. Seeing cars traveling in separated bike lanes in Vancouver was almost a daily occurrence.
- Administration estimates it would need between $20 million and $65 million to upgrade the lighting on 86 kilometres of its active transportation routes to meet current requirements. The lower end of the range would see lighting improved on district connector routes, while the higher end of the range would include neighbourhood routes. Administration said council could fund the lighting upgrades through the $100 million active transportation fund that was approved in the 2023-2026 budget, but that could mean up to 60 kilometres of new active transportation infrastructure would be cancelled. A report detailing the lighting enhancement options is scheduled to be presented at the urban planning committee meeting on April 9.
I think at this stage we skip lighting for most routes. Most people ride most in the summer, which we thankfully have very long daylight hours during. Anyone biking at night is already required to have lights and a nice $80-120 light for bikes works incredibly well.![]()
On the agenda: Night mayor, lights for bikes, cleaning the core
This week, councillors are set to discuss a nighttime economy strategy, upgrades for lights on active transportation routes, and enhanced cleaning services in the core.edmonton.taproot.news
I complete agree. Lighting is important, but not nearly as important as getting the network expanded and connected.I think at this stage we skip lighting for most routes. Most people ride most in the summer, which we thankfully have very long daylight hours during. Anyone biking at night is already required to have lights and a nice $80-120 light for bikes works incredibly well.
No routes should be cut from being built to add lights unless somehow severely needed.
I don't think I would say "unneeded lighting", lighting plays a big role in many women's sense of safety in public spaces. If we want to make our public infrastructure comfortable for everyone it has high value. But I would agree it shouldn't come by redirecting planned expansion. Rather, lighting should come from the same budget as lighting upgrades on roads.Knowing the way this city council operates, they'll cut routes in favor of unneeded lighting.
City is dragging their feet on licensing again this year--recall in 2022 they didn't provide licenses till mid May, and those licenses were good for 20 months (so up until roughly December 2023). Last year they returned right around early April and the weather hasn't been much different this year so they'd be out if the City allowed them.Anyone know when shared scooters, e-bikes will be available? I assume Lime and Bird are likely providers again?
I posted my frustration with this in 2022 and the fact they're repeating it again is beyond aggravating. The season is 5-6 months long for these e-scooter companies to profitably operate, going from April-October yet the City bureaucratic incompetence has to get in the way and cut 1/3 off the operating season.End of May - what a joke.
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On the agenda: Citadel, e-scooters, entertainment district
This week, city council will discuss a proposed new lease with the Citadel Theatre, who will operate our e-scooters and e-bikes, and the proposed downtown entertainment district.edmonton.taproot.news
Administration said it will announce which companies will be permitted to offer e-scooters and e-bikes for Edmonton riders by the end of May. The company or companies the city chooses will be engaged until 2027, an urban planning committee report said. The city said it will install visible parking locations and no-parking zones, and that suppliers can fine users for improper parking. The city is also introducing new compliance fees for suppliers that it said will help deal with improper parking. In 2023, shared e-scooters and e-bikes were available in early April, in early June in 2022, and in late March in 2021. Scooters are already on streets in Spruce Grove and St. Albert.




