This week's National Bike Summit culminated in an ambitious new campaign to recruit a million bike advocates and the unveiling
of a new Google Maps bike feature. But in a Wednesday session dedicated
to the outlook for federal bike investments, cycling advocates
hesitated to declare that they could secure new commitments from
Washington.
"If
Congress is going to act" on a new long-term transportation bill,
Rails-to-Trails Conservancy president Keith Laughlin said, "it's
definitely going to be our year. If we are ready."
Laughlin's
phrasing was aimed at stoking cyclists' appetite for lobbying Congress
in favor of pro-bike legislation, such as Rep. Earl Blumenauer's Active Community Transportation Act. But his caution also reflected the ongoing uncertainty surrounding how lawmakers plan to pay for a new long-term infrastructure bill expected to cost at least $450 billion.
Even if bipartisan support
can bring the White House on board for a new bill this year, it remains
to be seen whether bike advocates can secure the $2 billion in
competitive federal grants that Blumenauer has proposed.
Tyler
Frisbee, an aide to the Portland lawmaker who spoke to the Summit on
her personal time, was careful to praise House transportation committee
chairman Jim Oberstar (D-MN) as a friend of bicyclists.
But Oberstar's transport legislation, Frisbee said, is "not the bill we
want for another eight years ... cycling will be light years behind
Europe [if it passes]."
Frisbee warned fellow bike advocates that Oberstar views the Blumenauer bill as an expansion of the Non-Motorized Pilot Program that directed $25 million to four trail projects in the 2005 transportation law.
Describing her boss' legislation as separate from that spending,
Frisbee said a Senate version would be introduced soon by Oregon
Democrat Jeff Merkley.
Despite the hazy outlook for
congressional action on transportation reform, Rails-to-Trails is
continuing to push ahead with its long-term agenda. Laughlin said the
group's 10-year goal is to help pay for bike trails within three miles
of 90 percent of American residences, while doubling existing federal
bike spending to $9 billion over six years.
"If the bill
comes up for a vote, we have a fighting chance, but to win" requires
sustained and increased focus on grassroots lobbying of lawmakers, he
said.