In Los Angeles, The los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition does the heavy lifting in this department.  leaving us at the Bicycle Kitchen to focus on wrenching and empowering more regular folks to just ride their bicycles.  This creates a larger pool of potential allies and advocates increasing the chances that the more politically minded among us will meet and the necessary magic will transpire.

Like build it and they will come, 
wrench and they will roll!! 


jim



--- On Sat, 5/4/13, Jason Tanzman <jason.tanzman@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Jason Tanzman <jason.tanzman@gmail.com>
Subject: [TheThinkTank] Question - Role of Community Bike Shops in Bike Advocacy
To: thethinktank@lists.bikecollectives.org
Date: Saturday, May 4, 2013, 12:37 PM

Hey all,

I'd love to hear stories of community bike shops explicitly involved in bike advocacy. I interpret "bike advocacy" pretty broadly but am thinking along the lines of fighting for bike lanes, changing bike-negative laws, pushing for complete streets policies, etc.

I'm spending some time thinking about the role of community bike shops in the bike advocacy movement. One theme I've been reflecting on - and I welcome people's thoughts, comments, push-back, etc - is this. The bicycle advocacy movement is limited in its potential in part because of the lack of diverse community leadership and participation from traditionally under-represented communities (we/they are a bunch of old white men). Community bike shops have an incredible diversity of experiences and connections to traditionally under-represented communities, but a lack of intentional engagement in policy work limits community bike shops' ability to have a broad-reaching and long-term impact. I'm trying to understand how really grassroots organizations can have a more broad-reaching impact - and where community bike shops have succeeded (or failed) in using our networks to involve people in influencing legislation or government investments.

I welcome any stories that in any way touch on the relationship between community bike shops to advocacy initiatives!

Jason Tanzman
Cycles for Change

--
Development and Outreach Director
612-232-2737 (cell)
651-222-2080 (shop)
www.cyclesforchange.org
The mission of Cycles for Change is to be an open, accessible space to educate and empower people to use bicycles as transportation, helping to build a sustainable environment and community.  Volunteer with us to help build a bicycling movement in the Twin Cities!

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