The quarterly Mayor's Bike Advisory Council (MBAC) meetings are a great place to hear about the city's latest initiatives to make Chicago more bike-friendly, and the meetings are open to the public. Unfortunately, the meetings are almost always held in the late afternoon on weekdays when regular folks who work 9 to 5, i.e. the majority of the bicycling public, cannot attend.
Fortunately, Steven Vance has posted a detailed write-up of last Wednesday's MBAC meeting on Grid.... Read it for the latest on upcoming protected bike lane projects, the expansion Chicago's bike sharing network and a new proposed ordinance to ban cell phone use and texting while biking.
What do you think? Should the bike community lobby the Chicago Department of Transportation to hold MBAC meetings after work hours, when most other community input meetings are held and regular folks can attend?
Keep moving forward,
John Greenfield
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A 4:30 or 5 pm start time would be nice, but the bigger question is what is the value of me (or other interested individuals) being there? Is there a chance to provide meaningful input during these meetings, or is it just information being dispersed? The ideas Steven talked about in his blog entry ("breakout sessions") may make these meetings more meaningful.
Yes.
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