HomeMy WebLinkAboutBicycle Advisory Committee - Minutes - 03/27/2023
BICYCLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
TYPE OF MEETING –REGULAR
March 27, 2023 6:00 p.m.
Hybrid Meeting – Zoom and 281 North College Avenue, Fort Collins, CO
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FOR REFERENCE:
Chair: Dave Dixon
Vice-Chair: Jordan Williams
Staff Liaison: Cortney Geary
1. CALL TO ORDER
Chair Dixon called the meeting to order at 6:00 PM.
2. ROLL CALL (INTRODUCTIONS)
BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT: CITY STAFF PRESENT:
Ginny Sawyer
Dave Dixon, Chair, Bike Fort Collins
Greg Boiarsky, Air Quality Advisory Board
Scott Mason, Land Conservation and
Stewardship Board
Ed Peyronnin, Colorado State University
Campus Bicycle Advisory Committee
Whitney Allison, At Large Member
Kevin Krause, Natural Resources Advisory
Board
Tim Anderson, Fort Collins Bike Co-op
Rob Owens, Transportation Board
Elisabeth Cairnes, At Large Member
Marcia Richards, Parks and Recreation
Board
Bruce Henderson, Senior Advisory Board
David Hansen, Colorado State University
Todd Dangerfield, Downtown Development
Authority
ABSENT:
Jordan Williams, Vice Chair, At Large
Member
Jonathan Crozier, Poudre School District
PUBLIC PRESENT:
Alex Gordon, NFRMPO
Anna Rose Cunningham,
NFRMPO
Alex Broyhill, Trek North
Store Manager
Steve Dielman
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3. AGENDA REVIEW
Chair Dixon stated there were no changes to the published agenda.
4. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
Steve Dielman And Alex Broyhill introduced themselves.
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES – FEBRUARY 2023
Dangerfield made a motion, seconded by Peyronnin, to approve the minutes of the
February 2023 meeting as written. The motion was adopted unanimously.
6. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
a. Joint Safety Stop Committees with CSU Campus Bicycle Advisory
Committee
Chair Dixon noted the subcommittees formed are a joint effort between the
Campus Bicycle Advisory Committee and the City’s Bicycle Advisory Committee.
Peyronnin reported on the adoption of the Safety Stop law and discussed the
formation of the joint committees to address concerns that were raised regarding
its implementation. He stated the three committees formed were on
enforcement, data collection, and education and communication. He outlined the
composition of the committees and discussed the meetings.
Peyronnin made a motion, seconded by Krause, to clarify the three
subcommittees were a joint effort between the Campus Bicycle Advisory
Committee and the City’s Bicycle Advisory Committee in the interest of ensuring
the adoption and enforcement of the new Safety Stop law is consistent within the
city and on campus and to ensure consistent educational efforts. The motion
was adopted unanimously.
7. NEW BUSINESS
a. Future of the Hughes Stadium Site – Ginny Sawyer, City Manager’s Office
Chair Dixon commented on the bike community’s desire for a bike park to be
housed on the Hughes Stadium property.
Ginny Sawyer, City Manager’s Office, discussed the history of the property and
citizen referendum that required the City to purchase the property. She
discussed the public engagement process seeking input as to the best uses for
the site and commented on the ballot language and property zoning. She noted
the City has yet to take possession of the property and there is no dedicated
funding available for uses on the site. She stated another round of public
outreach will likely occur in the fall and a master plan for the site will ultimately be
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formed.
Mason asked if a bike park on the site would be managed by the Parks and
Recreation Department. Sawyer replied in the affirmative and discussed the
funding of the property purchase noting $2 million came from Natural Areas, $2
million from the general fund, and bond funds for the remainder which will be paid
back 50/50 between Natural Areas and the general fund, or differently as
appropriate based on the ultimate use of the property.
Boiarsky asked if there is any planned funding for construction and maintenance.
Sawyer replied in the negative given there are no specific plans for the use of the
site. She noted there is a broader conversation occurring around the need for a
sustainable funding stream for Parks and Recreation maintenance and
operations.
Chair Dixon asked about the cost estimate for restoration of the property to its
original state. Sawyer replied she has not heard a specific number, though it
would not be inexpensive.
Dangerfield asked how much of the purchase price was funded by bonds.
Sawyer replied it was over $8 million.
Henderson asked how staff plans to ensure groups feel as though they are being
heard and their desires are being taken into account. Sawyer replied
relationships have been developed and she stated she believes many uses can
be located on the 164-acre parcel. She stated visual representations will be
helpful and she noted this will be a slow process.
Anderson expressed support for the bike park concept and asked Committee
members if a model of what a bike park might include would be helpful.
Henderson commented on the dangers of showing a plan as some members of
the public would automatically assume that is the design.
Krause commented on the benefits of providing bike infrastructure to increase
ridership which aids climate goals among other benefits.
Boiarsky commented on ensuring uses are compatible with one another.
Anderson commented on the benefits of a bike park primarily being related to the
lack of interaction with vehicles.
Chair Dixon noted the bike park advocates are not requesting all 164 acres of the
property. He stated he would like to see the Committee take out controversy and
put forth to the Transportation Board that it believes recreational bike
infrastructure is good for the community and the City should support the
community on a plan to create more of such infrastructure to increase ridership.
Krause suggested that statement should be made a motion and suggested an
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amendment to add Parks and Recreation to the motion.
Geary noted most Active Modes Plan recommendations are on-street with a few
connections between streets and paved trails. She noted there is a section in the
Plan about creating a culture of support for the development of recreational
facilities. She suggested sending a recommendation to the Transportation Board
to send a memo of support to the Parks and Recreation Board and City Council.
Sawyer also suggested cc’ing the Parks and Recreation Board on the
Transportation Board memo.
Krause made a motion that the BAC submit a memo to the Transportation
Board, advising that it be forwarded to the Parks and Recreation Board and
City Council, commenting on the belief that having adequate and additional
recreational bike facilities, including paved and not paved, that will
encourage ridership, is a positive for the community and supports Active
Modes Plan goals. He noted the goal would be to start having a plan about
what that could look like.
Owens asked if this is specific to the Hughes Property. Krause replied in the
negative stating that would be unnecessarily controversial.
Allison suggested including the City’s Climate Action Plan goals with the Active
Modes Plan. Krause concurred.
Allison seconded the motion.
The motion was adopted unanimously.
Krause asked about the City’s plans for access to the Hughes site prior to the
development of any formal plan. Sawyer replied there are no plans for changes
to access and currently the Parks Department manages the trash and portable
toilet. She stated the access gates that are currently locked will remain so and
specific ownership will not be designated which means disturbance or unwanted
activity calls will go to the Police. Additionally, special events permitting will not
be allowed.
b. Community Capital Improvement Plan Renewal – Ginny Sawyer, City
Manager’s Office
Sawyer commented on the City’s revenue and basic sales tax rate as well as the
community’s history of voter-approved taxes for the construction of specific
projects and infrastructure, including the permanent 0.6% going to the General
Fund, which is not applied to grocery purchases. She noted the street
maintenance tax was renewed as was the community capital tax; however, both
will expire in 2025. She noted the change to November elections means tax
issues can only be called once per year as they cannot be the subject of a
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special election.
Sawyer discussed the improvements that have been funded by the Community
Capital Improvement Plan (CCIP) tax, including Linden Street, the Lincoln
Avenue bridge, and the kayak park. She noted there have been discussions
around requesting a possible new tax on alcohol, marijuana, and tobacco or a
possible increase in property taxes at the 2023 November election; however,
there is a very compressed timeframe from normal tax initiatives. She stated the
work to build a package for the 2024 CCIP quarter-cent tax request will begin in
the next few months.
Peyronnin asked about the City already receiving additional property tax dollars
given increasing property values. Sawyer replied the state put a cap on that
amount, and currently, 67% of what is collected by the City in property taxes goes
directly to Poudre Fire Authority.
Chair Dixon asked if the $160 million price tag of implementing the Active Modes
Plan is included in the funding gap identified by the City. Sawyer replied there is
about a $10 million annual gap identified for Parks, the Transit Master Plan has
about a $14 million gap, and the Housing Strategic Plan and the Climate Action
Plan also have gaps related to achieving their goals. She commented on the
passage of the Active Modes Plan meaning it is elevated in the conversation,
staff can now write budget offers to the Plan for implementation, and funding
could be part of the next CCIP.
c. North Front Range Metropolitan Planning Organization (NFRMPO) Updates
– Alex Gordon and Anna Rose Cunningham, NFRMPO
Anna Rose Cunningham and Alex Gordon, NFRMPO Transportation Planners,
introduced themselves.
Mr. Gordon discussed the purpose of the NFRMPO and outlined the communities
that constitute the organization. He noted a lot of the work completed around
transportation is aiming to improve air quality given we are in a non-attainment
zone. He commented on how biking fits into the MPO and how it is being
incorporated into the different work that is being done.
Mr. Gordon stated the big project currently being undertaken by the NFRMPO is
the long-range Regional Transportation Plan. He outlined the sections of the
Plan.
Ms. Cunningham commented on the public outreach process regarding the Plan,
including an online mapping process. She stated safety concerns have been of
high importance and there is a desire for more transit options and bike and
pedestrian connections. She provided information on social media outreach and
efforts to make plans more accessible. Additionally, she commented on outreach
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efforts aimed at providing transit education.
Mr. Gordon stated the NFRMPO Planning Council has recently been much more
interested in transportation demand management (TDM) regionally. He
discussed the TDM planning efforts and work with the City of Fort Collins on Shift
Your Ride. He stated the MPO is setting up the first transportation management
organization along the US34 corridor and he discussed the efforts of that
organization to be on the ground outreach and communication around active
transportation.
Krause asked if there would be a separate budget and staff for the transportation
management organization. Mr. Gordon replied it is a partnership with the US34
coalition of communities along the highway.
Ms. Cunningham discussed the bike and pedestrian safety reporter tool that was
in initial development last year. Additionally, she discussed funding opportunities
through CDOT, four different federal programs, and the state.
Geary stated a question came through the chat asking why the greenhouse gas
goal specifically calls out E-bikes versus growth of cycling in general and whether
that might be based on extending the range of the rider. Mr. Gordon replied
greenhouse gas strategies had to be compatible with the travel demand model,
and fleet mix is a very important piece of that. He noted E-devices can extend
the range of where riders can go. Additionally, he noted the greenhouse gas
strategies will be updated this summer as part of the Regional Transportation
Plan.
Mr. Gordon commented on the Planning Council’s interest in TDM stating the
mobility program will likely expand as a result.
8. BOARD MEMBER REPORTS
Anderson reported the Bike Co-op is busier than ever and is accepting donations of
parts and new or used bicycles.
Hansen reported on the funding of a trail project that would connect Spring Creek Trail
at the Gardens on Spring Creek up to the Prospect underpass with a more direct trail
alignment which should be advanced into design this summer.
9. OTHER BUSINESS
a. Transportation Board Report
Owens reported he was unable to attend the last Transportation Board meeting.
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b. Staff Liaison Report
• Vision Zero Action Plan
Geary reported the Vision Zero Action Plan was adopted unanimously by Council
on first reading on March 21st and will go before Council for second reading on
April 4th.
Geary stated staff is working to coordinate a Think Bike Workshop with the Dutch
Cycling Embassy in April.
Geary provided an update on grants applied for and received by the City.
c. Future Agenda Items
10. ADJOURNMENT
The meeting adjourned at 8:04 PM by unanimous consent.