Skip to Content
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Log In
Bicycling

Save the Date: CalBike Summit Coming in October

The 2015 CalBike Summit's theme is equity. Photo: Melanie Curry
false

The California Bicycle Coalition's 2015 Bike Summit will take place in San Diego in late October, providign an opportunity for bike advocates from across the state to gather and discuss issues of this year's theme: equity.

Executive Director Dave Snyder pointed out that equity is becoming a focus in California, especially in the legislature, where climate change legislation increasingly includes requirements to consider fairness across income groups and locations.

“Bicycling is one solution to addressing inequities," said Synder, "and the more that legislators and the people who elect them understand this, the more success we’ll have in making all our communities healthier, safer, and more prosperous."

The summit will feature three days of learning sessions and networking events, starting on Sunday, October 25.

"It's a chance to bring together all of the advocacy organizations around the state to share information and learn from each other," said Stephan Vance, a planner at San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) and a member of CalBike's board of directors. "It also includes a professional engineering and planning component. Our advocates are very savvy about these topics, and can share information about what cities are doing around the state to help meet our goals. It's the convening of a high-powered advocacy group with the addition of a professional bike planning and engineering conference."

Or, as Snyder put it, “It’s our state’s version of three national events, combining the professional quality of the national ProWalk ProBike Conference with the political savvy of the National Bike Summit and the advocacy expertise of the Alliance [for Biking & Walking]'s Leadership Retreat."

Session topics will include better bikeways, open streets events, and best practices in political advocacy, communications, economic development, education, enforcement, and encouragement. "All of these topics can be looked at through an equity lens," said Snyder.

CalBike will offer a number of free and reduced-price scholarships to help bring in grassroots and community activists who otherwise wouldn't be able to attend. "We want to make sure there's an opportunity to learn from people who may not identify as bicyclists but are interested in community health and other issues where active transportation plays an important role," said Vance.

“We need to move beyond attending to the interests of just those of us who are focused on bike issues, and include people who just want good ways to get around their communities," he added. "We want to bring awareness of street safety and health impacts of active transportation to those groups, and learn from them."

And, said Snyder, that can strengthen the bike advocacy movement. “We are strongest if we do our job organizing around the equity impacts of bicycling,” he said.

"That means all of us, whether we're most interested in the environment, in equity, or even making money; we all need to be on the same page.”

The summit will also include opportunities to have fun, including a party in the Silo in Maker's Quarter, an emerging part of downtown within San Diego's Innovation, Design, Education, and Art—or IDEA— district. There will also be bike tours of local bike facilities, with a chance to ride around San Diego Bay on separated bike paths.

“And we can probably guarantee good weather,” said Vance.

2015 California Bicycle Summit
October 25-28 in San Diego
Registration is open now, with an early bird rate before June 30.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog San Francisco

Letter to Readers: Happy Holidays and Thoughts on the Year’s Takeaways

2024 will be remembered as a seminal year for San Francisco streets

December 21, 2024

Remembering Another Person Killed by Traffic Engineers and Politicians

If there isn't money to make a project safe for everyone, regardless of how they get around, then there isn't enough money to build it. Period.

December 19, 2024
See all posts