LAPD
Streetsblog LA
RIP: Buffered Bike Lane in Front of LAPD Headquarters
This weekend, the Bureau of Street Services will be repaving parts of 1st Street in Downtown Los Angeles. After the repaving, the street will be repainted. Part of the repainting will include removing the buffer from the 1st Street Buffered Bike Lane in front of LAPD headquarters between Spring and Main Streets.
March 1, 2013
VROOM! Speed Limit Increases for Sunland Boulevard Roar Back to Council
It's been nearly a year since a speed limit increase was brought before the City Council Transportation Committee, but a new proposed increase on for chunks of Sunland Ave in the San Fernando Valley will be heard tomorrow at 2 p.m. The ordinance would establish speed limits of 40 and 45 miles per hour on Sunland Boulevard from Nettleton to Tuxford Streets; between Nettleton Street and Sunland Park Drive, and between Nohles Drive and Foothill Boulevard I Newhome Avenue; between Foothill Boulevard and Tuxford Street; and, between Sunland Park and Nohles Drives.
February 12, 2013
Eyes on the Street: Sepulveda Blvd. Bike Lane Turning Into “Express Lane” for Scofflaws
In May, Streetsblog reported that new bike lanes were painted on Sepulveda Boulevard between Venice Boulevard and National Boulevard. The new lanes could connect all the way to the Expo Line Station scheduled for Sepulveda and Exposition, about a half mile north of where the lanes now end.
December 11, 2012
LACBC Starts Save the 1st Street Bike Lane Campaign and Some Alternate Designs for the “LAPD Lane”
Last night, the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition e-mailed an action alert to members, asking them to write LAPD Chief Charlie Beck, Mayor Villaraigosa and others asking them to save the 1st Street Buffered Bike Lane that runs in front of LAPD Headquarters. The bike lane has become a de-facto parking lane for LAPD cruisers, as documented by Streetsblog contributor and author Roger Rudick. While complaints mounted, the LAPD responded with a request that the buffer be eliminated so that the lane run against a "car stopping" lane for the police.
December 7, 2012
It’s Official, 1st Street Bike Lane Will Lose Some of Its Buffer
For months, cyclist and writerRoger Rudick rides down the 1st Street Buffered Bike Lane. Often, Rudick stops near LAPD headquarters and snaps a picture of a police cruiser parked in the bicycle lane. Rudick would then send it to a sympathetic ear in the department, be it Sgt. David Krumer or Officer Jeff Kievit. After the complaints were too numerous to be written off as the work of a few rogue scofflaws, the LAPD revealed their internal strategy for informing officers that parking in a bicycle lane is not only unsafe, it's illegal.
December 3, 2012
Sgt. Krumer out, four new LAPD bike liaisons in
There are big changes under way in the way the LAPD deals with the bicycling community.
October 10, 2012
At Pro Walk Pro Bike, Activsts and Police Officers Talk About Working Together
On Tuesday, I was honored to be featured on a panel at the Pro Walk Pro Bike Conference entitled, "Crash Reduction through Advocacy, Enforcement, and Support Programs." In addition to myself, I was joined by Peter Flucke and Rebecca Resman. Since we know most Streetsblog readers don't get to go to conferences such as Pro Walk Pro Bike, Flucke, Resman and I thought we would do our best to bring our small part of this conference to you.
September 13, 2012
What to Do When the LAPD Is Parked in a Bike Lane
Regardless of one's feelings of the LAPD, it's hard to argue that they're not trying to become a more bike friendly law enforcement agency in recent years. From actively supporting group bike rides, to new internal policies and training regarding cyclists and cycling rights and even occasionally appearing at public hearings to testify in favor of smart transportation design the LAPD has been slowly becoming a force for bike safety.
September 11, 2012
Stops and Searches Lead to an Unsafe Feeling on Eastside Streets
(This is the second part in a series on how police actions can make people feel unsafe in their own communities. After all, if one can't be outside in their own space without fear of harassment, be it from the police or gangs, then how can a street be Livable? Read part one, here. - DN)
May 16, 2012