[TheThinkTank] how do you know when too many is too many?
kyle mckinley
bicirider at gmail.com
Tue May 13 12:37:48 PDT 2008
one thing that hasn't been brought up:in relatively wealthy, high-density
areas--especially near universities--, it can appear that there are, in
fact, too many shitty bikes to deal with. At the same time, folks in rural
areas have no access to even basic tools/tubes/parts. It seems to me that
there must be a way to house bikes off-site temporarily until they can be
moved to a rural facility (where space is less of an issue).
BICAS has a number of highly informal connections with folks that buy our
beaters (real cheap) and take them to Nogales, Mexico.
The Bike Church in santa cruz tries to partner with orgs in agricultural
(chicano/latino) communities to spread knowledge and (bike) resources.
Much more could be done on these fronts.
Though the notion of shipping bikes to africa is, obviously, nobel and
worthwhile for some orgs, it feels totally overwhelming to other projects.
These sorts of semi-local connections might prove more manageable, and most
rewarding.
-kyle
On Sun, May 11, 2008 at 11:46 AM, Mark Rehder <mark at re-cycles.ca> wrote:
> On 11-May-08, at 12:19 PM, veganboyjosh at gmail.com wrote:
>
> i know community cycles is not the only shop on this list that has space
> > issues, nor shortness of volunteer hours....
> >
> > i'm wondering if any shops out there have some kind of "we're all filled
> > up, we can't take any more bikes" policy.
> >
>
> (snip)
>
> We've come close, but have always managed to stave that off somehow. That
> said, we do not absorb police or campus bikes, or even advertise in our
> City's "Take It Back" recycling program, because we would be buried in
> bikes.
>
> We do readily respond to any group that asks for free bikes, as long as
> they take them as is and no work needs to be done by our volunteers. We
> also donate bikes for shipment to Africa twice a year. See:
>
> http://www.re-cycles.ca/bfh2007.html
>
> That helps get rid of bikes AND parts, especially knobby mtn. bike tires.
>
> we've gotten in touch with our local recycling yard, who pretty much
> > takes everything that can be recycled. i personally know that they see
> > several bikes per week in their dumpsters, but they don't have any way to
> > pull those out once they're in, once people dump washing machines, fridges,
> > etc, on top of them. i'd like to see a seperate "bike dumpster" for people
> > to drop them off, and we go and reuse them.
> >
>
>
> Sounds like it would be good to try and talk the recycling yard into
> creating a separate bike drop-off spot. That way you guys could get at
> them, or just people dropping off other stuff could grab a bike for
> themselves.
>
> Mark
>
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>
--
If an Easyrider rides easy, then a bicirider rides bicis
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