I am from Toronto, Canada, not much use for you

I have done some research in this field. I have used Stat Can to show ridership in the suburbs. The social economic requirements of riders is evident. Its ten percent all around my city of Toronto, not faulting or fluctuating. The suburban populous ride their bikes not because they want to, but because they need to. Transit is three bucks a ride. People are forced to ride their bikes without bicycle infrastructure. It becomes evident with bike on car casualties in the suburbs and  poor and migrant people riding their  bikes in winter.

Toronto has a huge migrant population, they know bikes better then anyone, they speak the universal language of bike. We work with them, they help us with bikes and we help them with English skills.

 One reason that boost bike theft is the level of impoverished ridership, the demand for used bikes on the part of the impoverished class boost bike theft. Our recycle bike groups try to under price  stolen bikes for sale.

We give poor people money to volunteer in our shop, we give bikes to shelters and employment resource centers. We try to understand the poor commuter and work to meet their needs. They can teach us allot about how the city works. Relying on public transit us madness.

Give me shout if i can help you more. Im with the www.communitybicyclenetwork.org. I worked with BIKESHARE,  the yellow bike program that lends bikes out to people in need. We scrapped the program just to focus on recycling used bikes and mechanical skill sharing. We also give out free cooked food cause people think and ride better on a full tank. Hehe.

Geoffrey Bercarich
York Environmental Studies
vous.je@gmail.com

On Feb 17, 2008 9:24 PM, Cris Shirley <cgshirley@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey!
So I'm taking a class at Yale on Inequality and American Democracy, and the writing component of the class requires that I find well established community member to work with in developing an academic paper (about 20 pages long) about how bikes help combat poverty in America.  If you would be interested in working on this with me please email me back.  Your role would be an adviser that would push me to create a paper that would be beneficial to both bike collective community as a whole and to the New Haven Bike Collective by meeting with me on the phone making suggestions and recommending any research that you are familiar with. (Need a response soon!)
Thanks!
Cris

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--
"Cycle tracks will abound in Utopia" - H.G. Wells