Policies for a Shareable City #3: Bike Sharing
09.29.11, 9:20am Comments (1)

Bike sharing is now the fastest growing form of transportation. What can a city do to get with the trend?

The Biggest, Baddest Bike-Share in the World: Hangzhou China from Streetfilms on Vimeo.

  1. Adopt or subsidize a city-wide bike-sharing program: Paris, France, set a great example with its impressively large-scale bike-sharing program, and now Hangzhou, China, is a model for all cities with 50,000 shareable bicycles offered throughout the city. Other cities in Europe -- including Stockholm, Copenhagen, and Barcelona -- also have model programs.

  1. Tinker with the helmet laws: Mandatory helmet laws could present a barrier to city-wide bike-sharing programs. Bike-sharing programs have yet to solve the challenge of how to make clean and fitted helmets available to bike riders. It’s difficult to think of a perfect solution other than asking, but not mandating, that bike riders take responsibility for their own safety by carrying a helmet with them. As Sightline Institute recently outlined, the Pacific Northwest is particularly strict with helmet laws and, thus, lags behind in bike sharing.

  1. Encourage biking by improving bicycle infrastructure: Even with shared bicycles offered throughout cities, many people still feel nervous about or discouraged by the prospect of biking. Bike routes are often circuitous, crowded, narrow, or unsafe. A city could encourage bicycling by increasing the number of designated bike lanes and bicycle routes, and generally improving bicycle infrastructure. Little things like bike signage can go a long way toward boosting safety.

  2. Bike sharing should be included in public transit worker benefits: Bike-sharing is transit. Workers who use bike-sharing services around the U.S. should benefit from the Commuter Choice Program which allows employers to give their employees tax-free money towards commuting. Source: Paul DeMaio of The Bike-sharing Blog.

  3. Real estate developers should support bike sharing: New residential and commercial developments in a city with a bike-sharing service should be required to pay for their own bike-sharing station, based on the expected demand for that location. In cities without a bike-sharing, the development proffers could be requested presently for when the city implements a bike-sharing service. Source: Paul DeMaio of The Bike-sharing Blog.

How else might a city foster bike sharing? Please post your thoughts below and help us build this collection of policy proposals. Thank you!

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Comments

Cities should be working on better communicating biking benefits (environmental, health etc) to women. They will have the most influence in bringing about mass societal change in that direction. Seeing more women out there will make the whole idea more accessible. They can influence their friends and make it "the way we do things" for their kids. Reaching more women will help remove the "lycra essence" from the topic and guide more people to begin living a more sustainability-oriented lifestyle. This is a passion for me, on a national level.

POLICIES FOR A SHAREABLE CITY

What policies can a city adopt to help residents share and support each other? Shareable and partner Sustainable Economies Law Center are engaging readers in that question through a 20-part series. Each post will focus on a different topic and offer policy proposals for ways that cities can support sharing, co-production, and mutual aid. We'll cover transportation, housing, food, governance, entrepreneurship, and more. There's a lot of ground to cover, so we'll need your help. Please add to our policy proposals by posting ideas, sample policies, and resources in comments. 

The Sustainable Economies Law Center facilitates the growth of sustainable, localized, and just economies through education, legal research, and advocacy to support practices such as urban agriculture, sharing, cooperatives, barter, local currencies, community-supported enterprises, local investing, and eco-villages.