CYCLING WHEELS UP THE POLICY AGENDA

WASHINGTON -- Can you imagine several hundred of this capital city's policy wonks turning out for a two-hour discussion of bicycling?
A decade ago, it would have been unthinkable. But this month it happened, sponsored by the esteemed Brookings Institution, at a prime U.S. Capitol-view room of the fancy new Newseum on Pennsylvania Avenue.
It may have helped that the program included musician-artist-cultural innovator David Byrne, whose decades of cycling and observing cities worldwide is reflected in his book "Bicycle Diaries" (Viking).
But the new buzz about cycling is clearly a mark of the times. You can credit snarled traffic, ennui with driving, rising oil prices and/or concern about greenhouse gas emissions. Then there is the growing popular desire to revoke the monopoly control that cars and trucks have on our streets and public spaces. There's a clear tie to the "Complete Streets" movement, advancing the ideas of shared urban turf long espoused by such groups as Partners for Livable Communities and the Project for Public Spaces. MORE

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