I was happy to read Jon Tevlin's April 30 column about bike lanes. I have been perplexed by their proliferation in my south Minneapolis neighborhoods.
I think biking is an important step we can take in lessening our dependence on fossil fuels. For three decades, I commuted by bike to my job at Abbott Northwestern, though not in winter. Those were years when there were no bike lanes. For safety, and in avoidance of inhaling exhaust fumes, I mostly used side streets. Now, in my late 60s, I am a fair weather biker at best, and I still use side streets.
I have heard that up toward 16 percent of our populace commutes by bike. It's hard for me to believe that number when I travel down Park, Portland or Blaisdell avenues in bumper-to-bumper traffic, seeing one to two bikes at best. At the recent precinct caucus, my City Council person promised me a link to the "Bike Master Plan," which I have yet to see. I can't imagine what that plan will look like, and how it will choke even more car traffic.
I think it would be wise to pause and look at the entire city's transportation plan before proceeding further with bike lanes. From a clean-air perspective, cars idling on our streets waiting at traffic lights harm our air quality. We live here.
I ask for some common sense as we move forward. Citizen input would be a good thing. We don't need to prove how groovy we are by reaching for designation as the No. 1 bike-friendly city in the nation. We are already groovy.
Dick Rueter, Minneapolis
VACCINATION RATES
Worse things than autism, and better things than measles
I applaud Dr. Michael Osterholm for his years of tireless work increasing vaccination rates and educating the public about the danger of the anti-vaccine movement. While I agree with most of his May 4 commentary ("Unfounded fears about vaccine put kids' lives at risk"), I take issue with one sentence. He stated that "[e]very parent's nightmare is receiving a diagnosis that their child has autism, regardless of severity." My son was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder last August, and I can think of many worse things. With proper treatment, we anticipate that he will be a thriving member of the community. Because of the baseless fears stoked by the anti-vaccine movement, an important part of increasing immunization rates will be reducing the stigma surrounding autism.
State Rep. Mike Freiberg, DFL-Golden Valley
The writer is chief author of HF96, legislation pertaining to immunizations.
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