A Vancouver Transportation Story

For my post this week I was originally going to write about the concept of reputation, with a particular focus on Lebron James and his classless, drunk-on-ego Superfriends performance (filtered nicely through the thoughtful lens of two heroes, Alexandra Samuel and Steve Nash). And then I was going to argue that rural living is superior to urban living in every way. And then I was going to discuss the ridiculousness of how 90% or more of medical, financial, delivery, and professional services operate on a 9-5 time line, which is exactly when most of their clients are working.

But that all changed after an epic 99 B-Line bus ride from Commercial Drive to UBC.

Here is the Cast of Characters who made up our commuter community today:

The Bus Driver of Bus Number R8061: a fortysomething man clad in a hipster hat and in possession of a pocketful of righteousness.

Broadway Bike Rider: a woman dressed all in black, wearing a helmet, fearless, full of conviction.

Jack Sparrow with a Bicycle: nice guy, we chatted logistics as we put our bikes on together at Commercial Drive (mine went on first because I was getting off at UBC)…and he looked like a pirate.

Thoughtful Young Commuter: glasses, short haircut, clever looking backpack: everything about the kid looked smart.

Engaging Senior Citizen: a very “big picture” thinker who tried to find common ground amongst our Wednesday morning commuter community.

The Chorus: the background opinions and verbosity that echoed the primary dialogue and also piped up to fill the heavy silences.

It happened exactly like this, more or less:

Suddenly, there was a fierce braking by the driver followed by a long, loud, incessant honk of the horn (not me, the bus’s horn).

“You’re in the middle of the lane!” said the Driver.

“Whoa, whoa, whoa!” said Jack Sparrow. “What are you doing?! That was not right. You’re only a foot and a half away from her! Jesus. You could’ve killed her.”

“She’s gotta share the road,” replied The Driver.

The Chorus: “What happened? What happened?”

“She is sharing the road,” spat Jack Sparrow.

“She’s in the middle of the lane. It’s a bus lane,” spat back The Driver.

“You might not agree with what she’s doing,” piped up Thoughtful Young Commuter (TYC). “But that’s no way to deal with it. What if your brakes failed? Hell, what if one brake failed? You would’ve run her over.”

“Look. Right there. It says ‘BUS AND BIKE LANE’!” pointed Jack Sparrow.

The Chorus: “Did you see it? Did you see it? Should we just call Translink or the police, too?”

The bus pulls up to the stop sign.

“Hey! You can’t take up a whole lane. It’s for buses,” The Driver shouted out the window to the Broadway Bike Rider (BBR), who was on his left. “Share the road.”

The light turns green and the BBR sped out in front of the bus. As she rode, the BBR pointed to the “Bus and Bike Lane” signs that dotted the street every 15-20 meters. Interesting.

Honking continued.

“They shouldn’t have a shared bike and bus lane. It causes problems like this one right here,” the Engaging Senior Citizen (ESC) contributed to the discussion, which was very lively at this point.

“Fine, honk at her when she’s 100 meters away, that’s fine,” Jack Sparrow was coaching The Driver on proper techniques. “Keep your distance. Fine. Let her know you’re coming and use the other lane to swing out and go around her.”

“She’s not sharing the road,” repeated The Driver.

“Look, she’s allowed to ride three feet from the curb. It’s her right,” said TYC.

“Okay, here, look to your left. Just pull out into the next lane – even just a little bit – and pass her. See, it’s just that easy. No need to act the way you’re acting, man.” The Driver was steering, but Jack Sparrow was pretty much driving the bus.

Red light. The doors fly open and the BBR finds herself – yet again – to be the target of The Driver’s verbal barrage.

“This is a lane for buses. You can’t ride in the middle of it. Get out of the road before something bad happens,” yelled The Driver.

“The sign clearly says it’s a bike and bus lane. We share it. You can go around me easily,” yelled back the BBR.

“So share it,” retorted The Driver.

The Chorus: “Why isn’t she riding on tenth? It’s a bike street. This guy is an asshole! I’d be riding in front of the bus too if he tried to hit me. What? Do you want to get run over by a bus?”

Dramatic re-creation of the Character "Jack Sparrow...on a bike"!

“There shouldn’t be a shared lane for bicycles and buses,” offered the Engaging Senior Citizen. “It doesn’t make any sense. Especially on Broadway.”

“[INSERT SEVERAL EXPLETIVES HERE],” expressed Jack Sparrow. “You’re encroaching on her! You’re pushing her against the curb!”

Sure enough, the 99 B-Line was inching ever so slightly on an angle towards the curb. Out of the corner of my eye I notice a cyclist on the sidewalk – on the wrong side of the road – weaving through pedestrians. A wry, ironic smile creeps across my lips.

“Do you understand what you’re doing?” asked TYC. “What do you think this is doing to the rider? She’s getting scared. You’re making her an enemy of buses. Stop it now. You’re already in enough trouble. Just stop it.”

Exiting Chorus Members on their phones: “Yeah, the bus number is R8061…”

“You need to get out of the bus lane!” chided the unrelenting Driver, mostly to himself, as the doors were now closed.

“[INSERT MORE EXPLETIVES]!” Captain Jack Sparrow was getting close to vigilante justice. “You’re a terrible person and I hope you lose your job for this.”

Away went the BBR, ahead of the bus, continuing to point at the bus/bike lane signs. The Driver, as he held down his horn, moved out around the cyclist, back into the bus/bike lane, and continued along Broadway (later he would produce another long, angry horning, but it was because of a confusedly-parked driver and, folks, that’s another story for another time). The Driver – clearly – was having a very  bad day.

THE END

Vancouver is an interesting place to cycle (and, apparently, take the bus!). In the past year the city’s built landscape has changed a fair bit because of the bike-friendly creations on the Burrard Street Bridge and the Dunsmuir Viaduct. These things are supposed to make cycling safer. And we’re supposed to be future-living in the world’s greenest, most bicycle-oriented city. Or at least that’s the idea.

In the past few weeks one of my pedaling friends was hit by a car and another was hit by pavement after avoiding a car. This year I’ve seen half-a-dozen sprawled-out, injured cyclists at the horrible Clark-and-Tenth intersection, too. And then there’s Kurt Heinrich, whose casual cycling through stop signs and traffic lights has earned him over $300 in tickets. I confront annoying sidewalk-bike-riders on Commercial Drive nearly every time I go outside. And then there’s this – the above tale of a very overzealous bus driver. No matter how you spin or slice it, cycling is a messy business here in Vancouver.

So there it is. This story is just part of the larger fabric. And I bet ten more just like it pop up in your lives by the end of the week.

-  JCH

Alexandra Samuel

Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, welcome to an ongoing segment here at The Daily Gumboot. It’s called “Get to Know Your Community” and, basically, it goes like this: each and every Sunday we will profile someone from a community somewhere. Each person is asked the same five questions (see below as well as in the “Ideas from Everywhere” page). At the end of the profile, the Gumbooteer (member of this blog’s Editorial Board) who found the person will list their three favourite things about the highlighted community member. Savvy?

Here are some ideas from everywhere. Here is one way that we try to build community. Have fun with it!

Funnily enough, Alexandra Samuel is scared of robots and four other kinds of technology...

Funnily enough, Alexandra Samuel is scared of robots and four other kinds of technology, including the kind that allows cars to parallel park themselves...

1. Who are you?

I’m a social media geek, entrepreneur, and working parent. I’m the Director of the Social + Interactive Media Centre at Emily Carr University, which is a new applied research centre that helps BC businesses tap the knowledge, skills and creativity of ECUAD’s faculty and students. I’m also the founder and principal of Social Signal, one of the world’s first social media agency.

2. What do you do for fun?

I make stuff. Sometimes I make stuff online (online communities, blogs, campaigns, videos). Sometimes I use the Internet to help me make stuff offline — like looking at mermaid pictures so I can sew a mermaid swimsuit for my daughter. Sometimes I make stuff without using the Internet at all (tonight I made fresh pasta!) but to be honest, that hardly ever happens anymore.

3. What is your favourite community and why?

The nonprofit technology community — which often refers to itself as NPTech. There’s no one site, event, or center for that community, but it has on- and offline gatherings all the time. The first nptech gathering I attended was the Aspiration nonprofit developers camp, and I had this experience of feeling like, oh, HERE are my people! Since then I’ve had that same experience in working with TechSoup to build NetSquared.org, in connecting with the Web of Change community, in attending NTEN’s nonprofit tech conference, and in connecting with all sorts of social change/nonprofit technologists. What I love about these folks is that we all intersect on two planes of geekiness: tech geekiness, and save-the-world geekiness. These are people who can have a serious conversation about the relative pathologies and strengths of the social justice and environmental movements, and then two minutes later switch into a passionate argument about the relative merits of iPhones vs. Android phones. I love them.

4. What is your superpower?

I am a truly amazing parallel parker. We drive a massive boat of a minivan, but I can get it into a parking space with less than a foot of room on each end — often much less. And what is particularly amazing about this skill is that it seems to be completely disconnected from every other aspect of my brain. I’m just an averagely competent driver, and I have pretty much zero spatial perception — I can barely get through a door without bashing into the frame, and in fact I can barely park in a regular parking lot space. But somehow I’m a parallel parking savant. I’ve literally had strangers applaud my parallel parking.

5. How do you use your superpower to build community?

There’s a close relationship between my parallel parking abilities and my sense of connection to our local community. Because I can parallel park in about 10 seconds, I often pop into a store for a quick errand on my way home. So my local shopkeepers see me a lot, and because I’m a friendly person, I tend to use those micro-interactions to exchange a little bit of news along with the purchase of some flowers, or kids shoes, or whatever it is. So much of our lives are lived in interaction with people who aren’t part of our closest circles of family, friends or colleagues, so it’s easy to stay anonymous. But when you choose to abandon that anonymity in favor of a real conversation — about how your respective businesses are doing, what your family is doing for vacation, or even about the party you’re shopping for — it strengthens our community just that little bit. Whenever you have a chance to connect to another person a little more deeply, take it: they’ll feel better, and so will you.

My three favourite things about Alexandra Samuel are…

1. She actually talked to us: when it comes to blogging, creative currency and building online communities, Ms. Samuel and hubby Rob Cottingham are second to none. And don’t even get me started on how her parallel parking story reflects this woman’s true humility and amazing sense of humour/social-justice (our chat about the community-building nature of parallel parking may or may not have taken more than an hour). Needless to say, the Daily Gumboot is lucky to have been graced with her presence!

2. Alex is a bit of a history nerd, too. Sure, her PhD dissertation about “hacktivism” includes some powerfully awesome techno-geekishness, and it also addresses very important, very meaningful big picture socio-political issues and ideas that certainly set standards for internet pirates (and the people trying to stop them) everywhere. See, history does matter! And Alex will tell you that the past – from time to time – dictates our future.

3. Two words – entrepreneurial spirit: This young lady has it in spades, and, let me tell you, it’s always inspiring to meet someone who possesses this element of the human condition in a way the we know will bring innovation, inclusion and downright goodness to all that she touches. And that’s a beautiful thing!

as told by John Horn…