Brooklyn's Bedford Avenue bike lanes remain a contentious issue as Mayor Zohran Mamdani pushes to complete the project. The 3-block stretch of unprotected bike lane has pitted the neighborhood's powerful Orthodox Jewish community against street safety advocates who see Mamdani as an ally.
The bike lane controversy began last summer when former Mayor Eric Adams abruptly removed a section of protected bike lane between Willoughby and Flushing Avenues in an apparent bid to win support from the Orthodox Jewish community. The move came after an e-bike rider slammed into a small child in the bike lane, sparking widespread outrage.
Mamdani has since criticized Adams for prioritizing special interests over street safety projects. However, he also accepted key endorsements from influential figures within the community, including Rabbi Moishe Indig, who lobbied Adams to kill the protected bike lane.
Street safety advocates and activists are now waiting to see what Mamdani will do next. Some, like Ben Furnas of Transportation Alternatives, are willing to negotiate and find solutions that balance street use with community concerns. Others, however, are more critical, urging Mamdani to move aggressively on the project to avoid further delays.
The fate of the Bedford Avenue bike lane is a microcosm of the complex relationships between local politics, community interests, and transportation policy in New York City. As Mamdani navigates this issue, he faces pressure from both sides, with some viewing him as an ally committed to street safety and others seeing him as beholden to special interests.
In a city where bike lanes are increasingly seen as essential infrastructure, the outcome of this controversy could have broader implications for urban planning and transportation policy in Brooklyn.
The bike lane controversy began last summer when former Mayor Eric Adams abruptly removed a section of protected bike lane between Willoughby and Flushing Avenues in an apparent bid to win support from the Orthodox Jewish community. The move came after an e-bike rider slammed into a small child in the bike lane, sparking widespread outrage.
Mamdani has since criticized Adams for prioritizing special interests over street safety projects. However, he also accepted key endorsements from influential figures within the community, including Rabbi Moishe Indig, who lobbied Adams to kill the protected bike lane.
Street safety advocates and activists are now waiting to see what Mamdani will do next. Some, like Ben Furnas of Transportation Alternatives, are willing to negotiate and find solutions that balance street use with community concerns. Others, however, are more critical, urging Mamdani to move aggressively on the project to avoid further delays.
The fate of the Bedford Avenue bike lane is a microcosm of the complex relationships between local politics, community interests, and transportation policy in New York City. As Mamdani navigates this issue, he faces pressure from both sides, with some viewing him as an ally committed to street safety and others seeing him as beholden to special interests.
In a city where bike lanes are increasingly seen as essential infrastructure, the outcome of this controversy could have broader implications for urban planning and transportation policy in Brooklyn.