Sporting a business suit, MTC
Commissioner and San Jose City Councilman Sam Liccardo makes the
rounds in San Jose, stopping by a couple of Energizer Stations on his
way to the office. (Photo: Dave Beaty)
MTC Commissioner and Orinda City Councilwoman Amy Rein Worth gets
into the Bike to Work Day spirit by passing out messenger bags at
the Orinda Energizer Station (Photo: Karl Nielsen)
San Francisco Supervisor and MTC Commissioner David Campos participated in a couple of events in San Francisco (Photo:
Noah Berger)
Friday, May 13, 2011
Among the 304 Energizer Stations passing
out freebies and refreshments around the nine-county San Francisco
region on Bike to Work Day yesterday morning, which one was the best?
MTC Planner Susan Heinrich, our in-house coordinator for the annual
regional event, could nominate a couple in the South Bay, where she
arrived on bike just after dawn yesterday after catching the 5 a.m.
Caltrain from San Francisco. Her top pick would be the one at San
Jose State University Library, where volunteers at the Energizer Station
were giving out free bicycle helmets, and fitting them to cyclists'
heads. And a close runner up would be the Energizer Station at the Google
campus in Mountain View, where they were offering free breakfast
burritos and massages to employees who pedaled to work.
Leading the
way on the San Jose tour was MTC Commissioner Sam Liccardo, who is
also a San Jose City Councilman as well as an avid cyclist who commutes
to work on two-wheels two to three times a week — usually in
a business suit. MTC Commissioner Amy Rein Worth also got into the
spirit, helping to hand out Bike to Work Day messenger bags and other
goodies at the Energizer Station in Orinda, where she serves on the
City Council. And in San Francisco, MTC Commissioner and city Supervisor
David Campos participated in a group ride and the San Francisco Bicycle
Coalition press conference with fellow supervisors and the mayor.
Meanwhile, MTC planner Heinrich was making a bicycling statement
of her own, trading her normal flat shoes for high heels, and wearing
a stylish business suit with trousers for her ride — just to
make the point that you don’t need
to invest in Spandex or switch clothes to pedal to work.
Bike to Work
Day officially got under way before dawn at the Golden Gate Bridge
vista point, where Diana Rohini LaVigne, who orchestrates Bike to
Work Day events (under contract to MTC) and also serves as executive
director of the Bay Area Bicycle Coalition, briefed the media on
the day’s activities and goals.
On the scene with her was veteran TV reporter Mark Jones, who filed
a story for MTC (also see Jones’ Bike
to Work Day preview
story from San Jose earlier this week, with MTC Commissioner
Liccardo demonstrating the art of cycling in a business suit).
Blue skies made for optimal
conditions for Bike to Work Day, with many Energizer Stations doing
a brisk business. LaVigne
estimates that some 1,400 people around the region volunteered to
man the Energizers Stations yesterday. One of their tasks was to conduct
rider counts: So far, Alameda County has reported an uptick of 4.5
percent over last year’s Bike to Work
Day, while Santa Clara County has reported a 13 percent increase.
We deployed photographers to capture scenes around the region, and
are posting their shots on
the 511 site.
Team
Bike Challenge continues through the end of May. As of early this
week, 2,400 people and 618 teams had registered for the friendly
competition. You can track their progress online.
Currently in first place is Sangamo Cyclers, representing Sangamo
BioSciences in the city of Alameda. So far they’ve logged 205 points and
1,117 miles.
Bike to Work Day is presented by MTC, MTC’s 511
project and Kaiser Permanente. — Brenda Kahn, with a field report from
Susan Heinrich
MTC Planner Susan Heinrich shows off her Bike to Work Day "uniform": a dressy business suit and high heels. Her point? That you don't have to spring for Spandex to bike to work. (Photo: Dave Beaty)
Bike to Work Day dawns at the Golden Gate Bridge Energizer Station, where two volunteers show off one of this year's giveaways. (Photo: Noah Berger)
An early-morning cyclist makes his way across the Golden Gate Bridge. (Photo: Noah Berger)
Bikers in South Bay hit the jackpot at the San Jose State University LIbrary, where volunteers were passing out free bike helmets -- complete with a customized fitting. (Photo: Dave Beaty)