Summit 2013 attendees – all 600 photos from the summit have been posted to NJBWC’s Facebook page at: http://www.facebook.com/pages/NJ-Bike-Walk-Coalition/123162004390883
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The 2013 New Jersey Bike & Walk Summit, happening on Saturday, February 23, 2013 is fast approaching. The schedule of the day’s events is now available. Pre-registration closes on February 21 at midnight. Registration will be available on the morning of the summit, for an additional $15 per registrant. Register today!
In this update…
League of American Bicyclists Board Chair to speak at summit
Organizing the New Brunswick Ciclovia – From Idea to Launch
Take our “Shared Responsibility” Survey!
League of American Bicyclists Board Chair to speak at summit
We are pleased to announce that Hans van Naerssen, Chair of the Board of Directors of the League of American Bicyclists, will be among our opening speakers. Hans is a bicycling activist, and an active bicyclist. He is also co-founder and Board Chair, Pennsylvania Walks and Bikes, and Board member and past President of the Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia. He has a Governor’s appointment to the PA Pedestrian and Pedalcycle Advisory Committee, was a citizen member of the regional transportation planning committee, and co-founded his local township Sidewalk, Trails, and Paths committee. He uses these platforms to help make a difference. Before retiring, Hans was Partner of a multi-million dollar international consulting practice, received numerous achievement awards, and was the first to commute by bike to corporate headquarters. He has led and enjoyed biking across USA, in Canada and Europe. His stable includes a Bike Friday for errands and transit-based travel, a recumbent for touring and a mountain bike for thrills.
Building Community Support for Trails
Trails are about much more than bikers or walkers. Trail users are fishermen, equestrians, kids, teachers, persons with disabilities, seniors, people re-habbing from injury or stroke, naturalists, bird watchers, amateur entomologists and astronomers, students and teachers, do g-walkers, parents of toddlers; any of them could be on bike, foot or horseback. To increase sensible, passive access to preserved, open space and other public lands, this is the message to take to public officials and your neighbors: trail users are all of us. Hear how this was accomplished from moderator Michael Gray, project manager of the Lawrence Hopewell Trail and panelists Becky Taylor, Co-President – Lawrence Hopewell Trail Corporation, Charles Latini – Township planner for Ewing Township, and Janice Elsishans, New Jersey Horse Council Trails Advocate, Equestrian Chairperson for the Heritage and Agricultural Association, participant in the Sussex County Trails Partnership and President of the Paulinskill Valley Trail Committee, and Wally Tunison of the Jersey Off Road Bicycle Association (JORBA).
Organizing the New Brunswick Ciclovia – From Idea to Launch
The City of New Brunswick in partnership with New Brunswick Tomorrow will launch the first ciclovia, or “open streets”, in New Jersey in 2013. Panelists include Fatimah Williams Castro, Ph.D. of New Brunswick Tomorrow and New Jersey Partnership for Healthy Kids-New Brunswick, and Glenn Patterson, Director of Planning, Community & Economic Development, City of New Brunswick. The panel will cover key topics such as building support, member recruitment, designing a route, and creating a strong planning team and operating structure.
Take our Survey!
The Morris Area Freewheelers Foundation will sponsor a panel at the summit, “Shared Responsibility,” to begin a dialogue between cyclists, law enforcement and motorists. Your views are important; therefore, please complete the survey “Sharing the Road, Sharing the Responsibility: A survey for bicyclists, motorists and law enforcement professionals.” Results will be shared at the summit.
Post-Summit Cocktail Mingle – At 5:30, take a short walk across the street to Christopher’s Bar in the Heldrich hotel. Cash bar, lots of socializing and networking. Make sure you try a “Derailleur,” a special cocktail being prepared for us by the mixologists behind the bar.
Pre-registration closes on February 21 at midnight. Registration will be available on the morning of the Summit, for an additional $15 per registrant. Register today!
Looking forward to meeting you at the summit!
Our Sponsors and Collaborators


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Just three weeks to go to the 2013 New Jersey Bike & Walk Summit, happening on February 23, 2013 at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Rutgers University. At the New Jersey Bike & Walk Coalition, we are putting together the finishing touches on the summit to make this the best one yet. Time is winding down to register and seats are filling up quickly. Make sure you don’t miss out. Register today!
Join us for…
The Complete Streets Implementation Plan: Translating Policy into Action
Getting from Here to There: Improving the Built Environment through Policy Change
The East Coast Greenway – A National Trail
Safe Routes to School – Mom, Apple Pie and Your First Two-wheeler: Getting Children Back on Bikes and Using Their Feet
Market Street Redesign: Making Newark’s Streets Complete
MAP-21 and Beyond: Our nation’s new transportation bill, and what is next in alternative transportation for America
New Brunswick Bike Exchange Collection at the Summit!
The Complete Streets Implementation Plan: Translating Policy into Action
New Jersey proudly leads the nation in passing Complete Streets policies at all levels of government. Complete Streets are streets designed for everyone – all users, travel modes, and ability levels – balancing the needs of drivers, pedestrians, bicyclists, transit vehicles, emergency responders, and goods movement. Following up from talks at previous Summits, Sheree Davis of the New Jersey Department of Transportation will lead a panel on how NJDOT is now focused on the next step: how to take a municipal Complete Streets Policy and use it as a roadmap for implementing strategies, procedures, plans, and projects in ways that create networks of safe, multimodal streets.
Getting from Here to There: Improving the Built Environment through Policy Change
Darrin W. Anderson, Sr., PhD, CSCS, Deputy Director, New Jersey Partnership for Healthy Kids will lead a panel on how sidewalks, bike paths, parks and playgrounds all increase opportunities for physical activity. Complete Streets, Safe Routes to School and Joint Use policies can help change the built environment and improve the bikeability and walkability of a neighborhood. This session will highlight the activities of the New Jersey Partnership for Healthy Kids and the New Jersey YMCA State Alliance in creating healthier communities where we work, live and play.
The East Coast Greenway – A National Trail
The East Coast Greenway is the nation’s most ambitious long-distance urban trail project. Often called the urban Appalachian Trail, it will be formed by connecting existing and planned shared-use trails. The ultimate vision for the Greenway will be a continuous, traffic-free route, serving self-powered users of all abilities and ages. When complete, the Greenway will be 3,000 miles long and will link Calais, Maine at the Canadian border with Key West, Florida. In New Jersey, the Greenway has made use of a number of preexisting trails, most notably the Delaware and Raritan Canal Towpath. Elsewhere, the trail has been the catalyst of new trail construction such as the Middlesex Greenway, the Lenape Trail in Union County, the construction of Newark’s first road diet with a bike lane on Irvine Turner Blvd, and the first foot and bike connection between Newark and Jersey City. Andy Hamilton, the Mid-Atlantic Trail Coordinator, will discuss how the Greenway has been critical to getting long planned New Jersey trail projects built and much more.
Mom, Apple Pie and Your First Two-wheeler: Getting Children Back on Bikes and Using Their Feet
Leigh Ann Von Hagen of the NJ Safe Routes to School Resource Center at the Alan M. Voorhees Transportation Center will lead a panel of Safe Routes to School experts. Safe Routes to School in NJ continues to build momentum and bring visibility to the benefits of walking and bicycling to school for children, families, schools and communities. This session will help participants understand why Safe Routes to School is important to everyone, highlight successes in NJ, and provide resources including those who can help implement walk and bike to school projects in your neighborhood. Participants will walk away with technical assistance to start or enhance a Safe Routes to School program.
Market Street Redesign: Making Newark’s Streets Complete
Michael Lawson, Bradley Stuart, and Daniel Dominguez, all urban planning students at the Bloustein School at Rutgers University, will introduce a concept design for the redevelopment of Market Street in Newark. Market Street is a vital corridor through the city’s rejuvenating downtown historic Four Corners District. The concept design includes such improvements as a roundabout with fountain and plaza, bike and bus lanes, new greenery and street furniture, lane diets, and intersection and street reconfigurations. Session participants should expect to walk away with the understanding of how design improvements can allow Newark to improve its pedestrian, bike, and bus facility infrastructure by combining urban design and traffic planning techniques.
MAP-21 and Beyond: Our nation’s new transportation bill, and what is next in alternative transportation for America
James Corless is the Director of Transportation for America, a national coalition of over 400 organizations working to promote a new national transportation policy that’s smarter, safer, cleaner and provides more choice. James will discuss how advocates are shaping the next transportation bill to move our nation in a bold new direction of alternative transportation that includes world-class clean transportation, empowered communities with more transportation options and safer streets that ultimately create healthier, more livable places.
New Brunswick Bike Exchange Collection at the Summit!
Donate your old bikes and parts to the New Brunswick Bike Exchange at the Summit. Bring us your old, tired and vintage bicycles yearning to be free from the deep recesses of your basements and garages. The New Brunswick Bike Exchange will be ready, willing and able to accept your donated bicycles at the New Jersey Bike and Walk Summit, so bring ‘em those old wheels looking for a new life and purpose! All bikes that can be repaired and parts that still have serviceable life are welcomed and will be appreciated.
To register for the NJ Bike & Walk Summit, visit the registration page on EventBrite. Pre-registration closes on February 21 at midnight. Registration will be available on the morning of the Summit, for an additional $15 per registrant. Register today!
Our Sponsors and Collaborators


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The Planning Committee of the New Jersey Bike & Walk Coalition, chaired by board member Karen Jenkins, is pleased to announce several of the exciting sessions and events at the 2013 New Jersey Bike & Walk Summit, to be held on February 23, 2013. Come to the Summit and meet many other leaders of walking and biking from New Jersey, the region and the nation. This marks the fourth consecutive New Jersey Bike & Walk Summit and the second year it will be held in New Brunswick in collaboration with Voorhees Transportation Center at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Rutgers University.
Regards,
Cyndi Steiner
Executive Director
Featured Sessions
MAP-21 and Beyond
Creating a regional bike plan: The Philadelphia Regional Circuit
Walk the Walk: Individual & Community Wellness One Step at a Time
Bicycle Friendly America Program
Bicycle Authors Roundtable
Riding Across the USA
Organizing the New Brunswick Ciclovia
Other Featured Presenters
MAP-21 and Beyond: Our nation’s new transportation bill, and what is next in alternative transportation for America
James Corless is the Director of Transportation for America, a national coalition of over 400 organizations working to promote a new national transportation policy that’s smarter, safer, cleaner and provides more choice. James will discuss how advocates are shaping the next transportation bill to move our nation in a bold new direction of alternative transportation that includes world-class clean transportation, empowered communities with more transportation options and safer streets that ultimately create healthier, more livable places.
http://www.newjerseybikewalk.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/circuit1.png
Creating a regional bike plan: The Philadelphia Regional Circuit
A panel to include John Boyle of the Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia and Matt Norris of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign will discuss The Circuit, a regional bike plan in and around the City of Philadelphia and the greater metro area, including the Delaware Valley region of New Jersey. John and Matt will share information on how to create a regional plan and why regional bike and trail plans are important in providing connectivity from one community to another, thereby enabling bicycling as a viable transportation option.
Walk the Walk: Individual & Community Wellness One Step at a Time
To walk is as basic to human life as breathing, eating and other activities we take for granted. This expert panel will explore the intersection between walking and public health, walking advocacy, the behavioral impact of walking and strategies for individual motivation. Learn how to promote unique walking programs in your community and how integrating walking into your daily life can change the way you live. The Moderator is Risa Olinsky, M.A. Certified Wellcoach® and Founder, Count on Yourself Coaching & Integrative Medicine Practitioner with Atlantic Health System. Panelists include Yolanda Savage-Narva, MSEd., Campaign Director at America Walks, Cornelia Santschi, Ph.D, Neuropsychologist, Neuro/Biofeedback Provider and Founder of the Anatta World Health & Education Outreach, and Paul Kiczek, Founder, FreeWalkers.org which challenges New Jerseyans to walk long distances in organized events.
Bicycle Friendly America Program
Moderated by Debbie Kingsland of NJDOT, panelists Nicole Wynands of the League of American Bicyclists, Arthur Chew from Ocean City, NJ, Susan Poliwka from Hoboken and Andrea DeRose of Princeton University will discuss the League’s Bicycle Friendly program for communities, universities and businesses, what the program means, and how you can get your comunity involved.
Bicycle Authors Roundtable
Professor David Burleigh of Stockton State College will host a gathering of some America’s most knowledgeable contemporary bicycle authors. They include:
Riding Across the USA
Moderator Bruce Weber is a New York Times reporter who rode across America twice, once in 1993 and again in 2011. Each time his journeys were featured reports in the newspaper and his 2011 trip became the subject of his book, Life is a Wheel. He will host a panel of cyclists from the Major Taylor Cycling Club of New Jersey who rode across the US using different methods and approaches. Mr. Weber traveled in a slower self-sufficient manner, taking 13 weeks with all of his belongings stuffed into saddlebags on his bicycle. By contrast, two members of the MTCCNJ completed their journey in the summer of 2011 in a mere 28 days with a support vehicle and four more in 2012 self-supported.
Organizing the New Brunswick Ciclovia – From Idea to Launch
The City of New Brunswick in partnership with New Brunswick Tomorrow will launch the first ciclovia, or “open streets”, in New Jersey in 2013. Panelists include Fatimah Williams Castro, Ph.D. of New Brunswick Tomorrow and New Jersey Partnership for Healthy Kids-New Brunswick, Glenn Patterson, Director of Planning, Community & Economic Development, City of New Brunswick and Melissa Selesky, Member, John. J. Heldrich Institute for Leadership Development and Director, Office of Community Affairs at Rutgers University. They will cover key topics such as building support, member recruitment, designing a route, and creating a strong planning team and operating structure.
Other Featured Presenters
Darrin Anderson is the Associate Executive Director of the New Jersey YMCA Alliance, and Deputy Director of the NJ Partnership for Healthy Kids; he is responsible for the daily operations of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation‘s State Program Office for Childhood Obesity Prevention and other YMCA initiatives.
Ken Podziba is the president and CEO of Bike New York, whose mission is to facilitate and promote cycling in New York City through education and public events as well as collaboration with both community organizations and municipal agencies. He joined Bike New York in 2010 and has helped expand Bike New York’s free education programs to include all five boroughs, year round classes, nine summer camp program sites for underserved children and multilingual classes. As a result of his efforts, Bike New York’s education program reached over 12,000 children and adults in 2012.
New Brunswick Mayor James Cahill will open the summit. In 2012, under the Mayor’s leadership, the city installed miles of bicycle lanes and Shared Lane Markings, or Sharrows. His push to increase bicycle safety and access is the natural next step for a city that is the home of one of the nation’s largest universities and complements previous progress by the city to do the same for pedestrians.
To register for the NJ Bike & Walk Summit, visit the registration page on EventBrite. Pre-registration closes on February 21 at midnight. Registration will be available on the morning of the Summit, for an additional $15 per registrant. Register today!
NJBWC testifies at NJ Transit board meeting
Continuing the dialogue with NJ Transit at their December 13 board meeting were NJBWC board member Jerry Foster and NJBWC member Neile Weissman, also representing New York Cycle Club.
In his comments, Jerry focused on the economic development benefits of increasing the ability to bike and walk to transit (including buses and trains) as a competitive advantage NJ can relatively easily implement compared to other states. He requested that NJ Transit work with municipalities and counties to ensure safe routes to transit, including bike lanes and sidewalks within 2 miles of train stations and bus stops.
Jerry further made the point that using public transportation has the potential to save NJ families over $8,000 annually by having 1 less car; it also results in less congestion, less pollution, and improved overall health. As an example of the demand for biking and walking to transit, he described an increase of 18% from 2011 to 2012 in biking and walking at the Princeton Junction train station, according to counts taken by the West Windsor Bike & Pedestrian Alliance.
Neile spoke about how the “spontaneous” increase in Manhattan cycling immediately following Sandy was facilitated by “a decade of relentless and methodical implementation” by NYC government. He emphasized the long-term need in New Jersey to replace the number of trips by car by fully integrating human-powered and mass-transport modes in order to maximize catchment; further that this heightened integration is a necessary component of a disaster-hardened mass transit infrastructure.
Specifically, the requests were:
NJBWC will continue to advocate for increased bicyclist accessibility on board NJ Transit trains. Hurricane Sandy made this agenda that much more critical.
Bike New York’s President & CEO to speak at NJ Bike & Walk Summit
Ken Podziba, the dynamic and creative CEO of Bike New York, will be joining us at the NJ Bike & Walk Summit this year. Ken will chair our featured panel session on working with local politicians. As the former NYC Sports Commissioner in both the Guiliani and Bloomberg administrations, Ken is well-versed in the interworkings of city and municipal governments. We look forward to hosting Ken at this year’s summit! To register for the summit, please access the registration page on EventBrite.
River Road/Hudson Waterfront Corridor Strategy Project- Public Meeting Announced
NJBWC is a member of the Technical Advisory Committee of the River Road/Hudson Waterfront Corridor Strategy Project, a study to design a multi-modal transportation system for the Bergen County portion of River Road (Edgewater to Fort Lee) in order to reduce congestion and improve safety and quality of life along this section of River Road. NJBWC has provided input on the proposed designs – bike lanes, walkways and sidewalks, and improvements to the bus system along this route. We would like to see our constituents also speak up about this project, given that it is highlighted in the latest release from Tri-State Transportation Campaign as one of the two most dangerous roads to ride in Bergen County. There will be a public meeting to review the proposed design on Thursday, January 17th from 4 -7pm, at the Edgewater Community Center, 1167 River Road in Edgewater. We encourage everyone with an interest in River Road to attend. More information is available at the project website.
BTCNJ and NJBWC partner in donation to Newark Bike Exchange
Together with Bicycle Touring Club of North Jersey, NJBWC made a donation of bicycle equipment and clothing to the Boys & Girls Club of Newark Bike Exchange. BTCNJ members donated bicycle gear as part of their annual Shop & Shop held at their December club meeting; NJBWC collected these items and delivered them to the Newark Bike Exchange.
The Boys & Girls Club of Newark Bike Exchange was opened in the past year by the New Jersey Bike Exchange, which runs bike exchanges in Trenton and Plainfield in addition to Newark. The Bike Exchange is an all-volunteer effort that collects, repairs and sells bikes that have been donated to the organization. The mission of the Bike Exchange is to help low income families get bikes at low cost, and to raise money for the Boys & Girls Club. Since it’s founding in 2008, the Bike Exchange has sold 7136 bikes and raised $324,432 for the after-school programs of the Boys & Girls Club.
If your club or organization is interested in donating bikes, bike parts and accessories to the NJ Bike Exchange, please contact the exchange at info@BikeExchangeNJ.org. More information about the Bike Exchange can be found at www.BikeExchangeNJ.org.


Earn your NJBWC patch!
The NJBWC depends on your support to continue our advocacy work. Please consider showing your support by joining the coalition. Memberships start at $35/year for our bronze level. An embroidered iron-on patch of the NJBWC emblem will be sent to you when you join NJBWC at the bronze level or higher. The patch can be placed on clothing, backpacks, panniers, rack bags, or any other cloth item of your choosing.
“The freedom, independence and enjoyment of fresh-air discovery, with all the resulting health benefits, are embodied in cycling. We need a strong advocate for a safe cycling infrastructure to maximize general public benefit. ” Jay Marowitz, chair of the Morris Area Freewheelers Foundation.
Join on-line using PayPal or download and send in our membership form. We look forward to having you on board with us!
Club memberships are $250 annually and include your logo in our newsletters for the year. Shops may also purchase annual newsletter sponsorships for $250. Contact us at info@njbwc.org for details.