Aug.
16, 2012 - After
months of steady dialogue and face-to-face meetings, the leaders of the Alliance for Biking &
Walking, Bikes Belong and League of American
Bicyclists have decided not to pursue full unification at this time. The
three groups continue to operate independently, in close collaboration, to make
bicycling safer and more enjoyable for all Americans.
These
unprecedented unification discussions were marked by goodwill and an open
exchange of ideas. They helped U.S. bike advocacy leaders agree on a shared
vision, goals and strategies that will advance the movement and improve
bicycling coast to coast.
The three
groups continue to work together and have committed to achieving the following
benchmark goals by 2020:
- The nationwide percentage of trips made by bike will increase to five percent (from one percent in 2012), and the diversity of people on bikes will mirror the diversity of America;
- Traffic injuries and fatalities (in all modes) will decrease by 50 percent;
- Half of all Americans will have front-door access to a bicycling network that will take them to destinations within two miles exclusively on low-stress streets, lanes, and trails--protected from high-speed traffic.
The
League and Alliance are developing plans to help state and local advocates get
the most out of MAP-21, the new, two-year federal transportation bill, and will
work with Bikes Belong on this, and other projects. Bikes Belong has initiated a
strategic discovery process to review its overall goals and to refine its focus,
and is engaging the League and Alliance to help shape its future
direction.
The
leaders of all three groups began the unification discussion fully aware of the
challenges of blending unique legal structures, membership bases, project
priorities, and headquarters locations. While these talks didn't produce a
merger, the groups will continue to work together to engage, represent and
connect the many different elements of the bicycling movement. They will focus on federal, state, and local projects
that best improve bike infrastructure and safety in the United
States.
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