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Introducing Bike Planning to AICPs and PEs: A Continuing Education Seminar Ed Barsotti League of Illinois Bicyclists 630-978-0583 [email protected] www.bikelib.o rg
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Session #21 - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers: A Continuing Education Seminar"

Jan 13, 2015

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Education

Sharon Roerty

Last winter, the League of Illinois Bicyclists conducted a 2.5-hour "Introduction to Bicycle Planning" continuing education seminar in ten locations. Nearly 500 local planners, engineers, consultants, and others attended – most having no prior training on the range of technical and strategic topics presented. In this talk, our experiences and
suggestions are offered for those wanting to replicate such a program, including seminar content, attracting intended audiences, resources, and more.
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Page 1: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Introducing Bike Planning to AICPs and PEs:

A Continuing Education Seminar

Ed BarsottiLeague of Illinois [email protected] www.bikelib.or

g

Page 2: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Outline

1) Introduction– goals and motivation, drawing target audiences

2) Seminar content– list of topics covered

3) Seminar details– tone, logistics, publicity, finances, attendance

4) Wrap-up– university course, resources for replicating

Page 3: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Primary advocacy goal: Educating staff

• Lack of local staff (planners, engineers, …) knowledge on bicycle issues a problem

• Education dispels myths, builds buy-in

Page 4: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Deciding to conduct our own seminars

• Earlier experiences in partnering with others

• One statewide event vs. many regional sessions

• “Introduction to Bicycle Planning” seminar

Page 5: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Other advocacy goals

• Building org’s credibility, exposure as a resource

• Marketing for bike planning consultant work

• Making some “profit”, perhaps adding members?

Page 6: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Luring target audiences: Continuing Ed

• Local planners, engineers; consultants; DOTs, …

• Need continuing ed credits, but lower travel budgets

Page 7: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Planners – AICP details

• APA charges small non-profits $995/year to provide AICP CM credits

• Not as many AICP attendees as hoped

Page 8: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Engineers – PDH (Professional Development Hours) details

• In IL, PDHs required by law to maintain standing

• No provider certification (yet), just “expert” in field

• Increase credibility as provider by partnering?

Page 9: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Outline

1) Introduction– goals and motivation, drawing target audiences

2) Seminar content– list of topics covered

3) Seminar details– tone, logistics, publicity, finances, attendance

4) Wrap-up– university course, resources for replicating

Page 10: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Opening discussion

• Introductory questions?

• Motivations, products, process of bike planning

Page 11: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Bike safety lesson

• Types of cyclists, where/why they ride

• Traffic Skills 101, car-bike interactions, crash causes

• Break myths, build case for infrastructure discussion

Page 12: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Bikeway network

• Standards and guidelines

• Overview of bikeway types; costs; selection process including general applicability, objective planning tools

• Strategic guidelines and examples of selections

Page 13: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Other infrastructure

• Signal actuation; drain grates; skewed RR crossings

• Bike parking & policies; reducing intersection conflicts

• When to do at-grade vs. separated grade crossings

Page 14: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Non-infrastructure

• Quick overview, examples of “other E’s”

• “Resources are readily available”

Page 15: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar content: Implementation

• Complete Streets policies

• Internal, external funding; grant-seeking advice

• “Top 10 List” to avoid real-life pitfalls

Page 16: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar handouts

• Copy of Power Point slides

• LIB’s “Guide to Municipal Bicycle and Pedestrian Planning”

Page 17: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Outline

1) Introduction– goals and motivation, drawing target audiences

2) Seminar content– list of topics covered

3) Seminar details– tone, logistics, publicity, finances, attendance

4) Wrap-up– university course, resources for replicating

Page 18: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar “tone”

• Professional learning experience, not a perceived advocacy “attack”. Praise=specific, criticism=general

• Solutions recognizing other engineering needs. Use objective approaches, engineer/planner language.

Page 19: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Seminar logistics – 10 seminars

• Partnered with MPOs, who hosted, publicized

• 2.5 hours, morning; winter Tuesdays and Fridays

• Short breaks, occasional Q&A throughout

Page 20: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Publicizing seminars

• Advertisement postcard pointing to webpage sent to 250 cities (admin, plan, eng/PW), 250 consulting firms

• MPO publicity; APA website; our newsletter

Page 21: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Registration fees, membership

• $25 fee. Free for LIB members, MPOs (& IDOT)

• Optional membership for free – 210 joined

Page 22: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Attendance

• 488 total for 10 seminars, ranging from 32 to 95

• Most: gov’t (from 125 towns, other agencies), then: consultants (80 firms), others. 90% professionals

• Estimated 75% with no prior info on bike issues

Page 23: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Expenses

• Travel; postcards and postage; copies of handouts; AICP provider fee; some room rental & refreshments

• Netted several thousand dollars (not incl. staff time)

Page 24: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Outline

1) Introduction– goals and motivation, drawing target audiences

2) Seminar content– list of topics covered

3) Seminar details– tone, logistics, publicity, finances, attendance

4) Wrap-up– university course, resources for replicating

Page 25: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

University mini-course (4 weeks)

• U of Illinois-Chicago, 2009, 2010 – adjunct lecturers

• Seminar content, plus public input exercise, more

• Group project: brief bike plan, presentation for actual suburbs/city wards

Page 26: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

“Packaging” for others to replicate

• Seminar video, power point slides, other handouts

• 4-page detailed writeup (also online)

• www.bikelib.org/bike-planning/bike-planning-instruction/ continuing-education (or just www.bikelib.org)

Page 27: Session #21  - "Introducing Bike Planning to Planners and Engineers:  A Continuing Education Seminar"

Thank you…

Advocacy Advance grant from Alliance for Bicycling and Walking