The Los Angeles City Council approved a proposal to move a bike lane from Westwood Boulevard to Gayley and Midvale avenues Friday, pending approval from the mayor and the Los Angeles City Planning Commission.
The bike lane proposal, a part of the Mobility Plan 2035, will add bike lanes, bus lanes and sidewalk improvements across the city over the next 20 years. The council voted 10-1 to move the proposed bike lane from Westwood Boulevard to Gayley Avenue, which becomes Midvale Avenue south of Wilshire Boulevard, between Le Conte and Ohio avenues.
City Council member Paul Koretz, who represents Westwood and surrounding neighborhoods, said he proposed the change because he thinks Westwood Boulevard is too dangerous and congested to safely accommodate a bike lane. He added he thinks the city should be encouraging cyclists to use different streets, such as Gayley and Midvale avenues.
“I don’t think anyone’s thought maybe (Westwood Boulevard) isn’t the safest route,” Koretz said. “Maybe there’s a reason there’s been dozens of accidents.”
If Mayor Eric Garcetti and the commission reject the change, the City Council would need a three-fourths vote to implement it, said LA city planner Claire Bowin at the council’s transportation committee meeting Wednesday. Council member Mike Bonin was the only member to vote against the change at Friday’s meeting.
Bonin also voted against the proposal at a previous meeting, because he said he thinks it’s important for the bike network to be continuous, as it was created. The planning commission recommended the planned Westwood Boulevard lane remain in the network at a public hearing in February, and Garcetti previously supported conducting more research on the lane’s impacts before removing it from the plan.
At previous meetings, the planning commission and pro-bike residents said they opposed Koretz’ proposal to remove the lane on Westwood Boulevard from the plan, because they thought it would create a gap in the network.
Koretz said city officials will still study Gayley Avenue and other alternatives, but he wanted to remove Westwood Boulevard from the plan sooner because he may not serve on the council by the time the studies are complete.
“Even though there’s going to be much more discussion, I don’t want to advantage the route I think is most dangerous,” Koretz said.
In the past, representatives from UCLA Transportation and the Westwood Village Improvement Association said they did not support changing the plan to allow for future study, because they think Westwood Boulevard is the most direct route.
Koretz said he doesn’t think moving the bike lane one block west would inconvenience cyclists.
Bonnie Bentzin, UCLA’s deputy chief sustainability officer, said at the Wednesday meeting she thinks Gayley Avenue is too narrow and curvy to accommodate cyclists effectively.
After the planning commission and the mayor vote, the full City Council will revote to finalize the change.
Koretz thinks Westwood is dangerous through the village, but rather than employ proven methods to improve that situation, he prefers to throw up his hands and say “What do you expect me to do?”
Nice leadership there, Koretz.
This is what happens when you let people who have no training, expertise and obvious windshield perspective dictate where they want things – based solely on input from even more ignorant people (local business owners, speeding motorists, etc.) and in direct opposition to the advice of people who actually know (and care) about such things.
Westwood Blvd. is dangerous because of wide road design. Not sure where the confusion is coming from since there are literally hundreds of white papers and ample data showing that wide streets promote accidents and that bike lanes INCREASE SAFETY.
I wish I had a job where I could completely ignore data and just do stuff based on hunches, anecdote and emotional reasoning.
Unfortunately my boss demands that we rely on data and expert opinion …
Councilman Koretz, his homeowner BFFs in the Holmby-Westwood Property Owners Association, and the entire LA City Council should be REQUIRED to ride bikes throughout Westwood and Los Angeles for a period of time to see what it’s like! While they’re at it, they should ride public transport and forgo personal vehicles before they make decisions which affect their constituents. Armchair/car seat politics at best in this city!