The majority faction on West Hollywood City Council bucked the passionate pleas of residents Monday night asking them to put the brakes on a plan to build protected bike lanes on Fountain Avenue, instead voting 3-2 to accept a multi-million dollar grant that will fund the project.
Vice Mayor Chelsea Lee Byers led Mayor John M. Erickson and Councilmember Sepi Shyne in siding with the bicyclist organizations who lobbied hard for the Fountain Avenue streetscape project, which will hand them lucrative contracts for outreach and marketing.
Erickson, weary of the public pushback, vigorously defended the plans.
“I cannot tell you how many times I have had great cups of coffee with my neighbors over watching someone who’s mangled get dragged out of a car, seeing a biker who’s been hit by a car, seeing a woman with her child have to walk on the road because the sidewalk is not wide enough,” Erickson recalled.
Genevieve Morrill, representing the Chamber of Commerce, expressed opposition to the proposed grant for the bike lanes on Fountain Avenue, citing the lack of outreach, data, and consideration of potential negative impacts on parking and businesses. Morrill stated that while they had initially supported the grant for multimodal transportation development, the absence of comprehensive data has left their position unchanged, as the presentation to their Government Affairs Committee lacked critical information. She reiterated that the Chamber cannot support the project without further clarity and data.
Tod Hallman, a former East Side Neighborhood Watch captain, explained that he had been asked by staff to write a letter of support for the project, believing it was merely for potential approval of a grant. Hallman claimed that he never endorsed the initiative and complained that his involvement has since caused him unnecessary political attention.
Kevin Burton, a representative of the West Hollywood Bicycle Coalition, commended staff for securing the competitive grant and emphasized its importance in funding a variety of projects like Vision Zero and bicycle lanes. Burton highlighted the city’s lag in implementing its 2017 Bicycle-Pedestrian Mobility Plan, mentioning that despite the plan’s approval, only minimal progress has been made. He stressed that this grant would help resolve funding challenges and create a more connected network of bike lanes, which would encourage more residents to bike around the city.
Laura Batti, a resident living near Fountain Avenue, opposed the bike lanes and offered a different perspective. Batti noted that West Hollywood is not like bike-friendly cities such as Amsterdam or Copenhagen. She shared her concerns about the lack of demand for bike lanes and the potential traffic disruption caused by their installation. Batti humorously commented on those who believe the bike lanes would lead to reduced car usage, suggesting that they may be overly optimistic. She also warned of potential increases in traffic on surrounding streets and the danger posed to pedestrians and cyclists due to displaced drivers seeking alternative routes.
David Eyer, another Fountain Avenue resident, also opposed the grant, expressing confusion about the specifics of the city’s agreement regarding the project’s requirements. Eyer emphasized the importance of transparency and noted that some letters supporting the grant had been proven invalid. He questioned the lack of community involvement in the early stages of the project, particularly the exclusion of Fountain Avenue residents. Eyer also critiqued the logic behind reducing lanes to lower emissions, suggesting that increased congestion would have the opposite effect.
Kimberly, a resident living just south of Fountain, raised concerns about the impact of the project on parking, particularly for residents of Hayworth House, a senior housing building with limited parking spaces. She pointed out the challenges caregivers and residents face in finding parking and emphasized that removing parking on Fountain would exacerbate the situation. Kimberly also highlighted the increased danger on side streets due to frustrated drivers speeding through residential areas and urged the Council to consider safety measures like traffic-calming solutions.
Stephanie Harker echoed the opposition, pointing out that while many residents support wider sidewalks and electric vehicles, there was no community support for bike lanes, particularly on Fountain Avenue. Harker noted that the $8.2 million grant application misleadingly claimed that the community backed the bike lanes. She emphasized that the project would remove 56% of street parking on certain stretches of Fountain Avenue, which was not disclosed to residents. Harker criticized the exclusion of residents from the steering committee and urged the Council to reconsider the grant application.
George Nickle raised concerns about the lack of consultation with emergency services regarding the project. Nickel shared that the assistant chief of L.A. County had not been briefed on the bike lanes and referenced the dangers reduced response times could pose in emergencies. He cited the tragic example of Paradise, California, where bike lanes impeded evacuation during wildfires. Nickel urged the Council to engage with first responders and reconsider the project’s potential impact on public safety.
David Lewis expressed confusion about the city’s parking policies. He recounted how, years earlier, the city proposed removing a park for parking, a suggestion he and his neighbors opposed. Now, the city seems to want to reduce parking by 60%. He voiced concerns about the project’s impact on local businesses, response times for emergency services, and the proposed bike lane on Garden Street, which he noted is a crucial route for emergency vehicles. He questioned the city’s lack of community consultation and the potential dangers the plan poses to public safety.
Brand Coffman took a different stance, emphasizing the need for change, even if it’s challenging. She pointed out that resistance to new transportation measures is nothing new, citing historical opposition to carpooling in Los Angeles. Coffman argued that the proposed changes, including bike lanes, would make streets safer and encourage alternative transit options, ultimately reducing greenhouse gas emissions. She criticized the focus on parking and traffic concerns, urging the city to prioritize safety and sustainability.
Sun Su, a nurse and longtime bicycle commuter, urged the council to support the project, emphasizing the importance of safety and mobility for cyclists and pedestrians. Su noted that public space should be used for public benefit, not to store private vehicles. She called for prioritizing transit, walking, and biking over single-occupancy car use.
Zekiah Wright expressed frustration over what they perceived as the predetermined outcome of the vote. Wright criticized the lack of community involvement in the planning process and pointed out that many of his neighbors were unaware of the project. While supportive of bike lanes in general, they argued that the current proposal is flawed. Wright, a candidate in the City Council race, ended by encouraging voters to elect new councilmembers who would listen to the community.
Mimi H., a Los Angeles resident, shared her positive experiences of biking in the city, despite the challenges. She supported the bike lanes on Fountain Avenue and other streets, describing them as a way to make West Hollywood more accessible and enjoyable. Mimi highlighted the potential of the new bike lanes to improve safety and promote healthier, more environmentally friendly transportation options.
Helen Kreer, a West Hollywood resident, shared her experiences living near Fountain Avenue. She described the dangers posed by speeding drivers and road rage incidents, even recounting a fatal altercation she witnessed. Kreer emphasized the need to redesign the street to make it safer for all users, including drivers, pedestrians, and cyclists. She urged the council to approve the project and reduce preventable deaths on the street.
Jordan Beard, another resident, echoed Kreer’s sentiments, emphasizing the need for safer streets in West Hollywood. Beard noted that the city’s current road design prioritizes cars at the expense of cyclists, pedestrians, and disabled individuals. They argued that the solution to traffic problems is not to add lanes but to encourage alternative transportation options. Beard supported the project, urging the council to reclaim the streets for the benefit of all residents, not just drivers.
Summer, a resident near Gardner Street, also supported the project. She shared their difficulties with biking on Fountain Avenue due to aggressive drivers and unsafe road conditions. Summer emphasized that the current design of Fountain Avenue treats it like a major street rather than the residential road it is. They expressed hope that the new project would make the street safer for both cyclists and pedestrians.
Claire Schmid, a long-time West Hollywood resident, spoke about the unsafe conditions on Fountain Avenue, including narrow sidewalks and speeding cars. She shared her desire to bike but expressed discomfort due to the lack of bike lanes. Schmid argued that protected bike lanes would not only reduce fatalities but also promote mental and physical health. She urged the council to accept the $8.2 million in state funding for the project, believing that West Hollywood has the potential to be more than just a city dominated by cars.
While reading all the article and comments regarding the proposed changes for Fountain Ave.,I wondered if the following idea would be acceptable to residents of the city: Maybe it is time to divide Fountain Ave. into smaller streets.
Close off sections of Fountain Ave. so that through traffic is stopped.Many on here claim the street is for residential use.I think cutting off traffic that should belong on Santa Monica and Sunset Boulevards could be a solution.Both streets are geared for heavy traffic anyway. With this move,the proposed bike lanes and wider sidewalks talked about can be done more easily.
👏🏽 Applauding the courage of the City Council of the Great City of West Hollywood for supporting the Public’s right to Protected Bike Lanes in-spite of violent opposition from some highly entitled millionaires thinking they have exclusive access to public land for parking their massively destructive statusmobiles that they use to endanger Pedestrians & Cyclists as a hobby. It’s good to see Democracy triumph over sociopathic plutocracy❗☮🎉
“… highly entitled millionaires …”?
Most of the people who’d be affected by the loss of street parking are renters living in rent-stabilized units, not millionaires. There are a number of residents in that area who get up every morning and drive to some workplace that’s inaccessible via public transit.
Perhaps some eminent domain in your neighborhood would have a public benefit.
How many renters fit this description? For sure monies need to be slotted for more robust public transportation.
Yet another reason to vote John Erickson out of office on November 5th!
I want to commute on my electric pogo stick. Where’s my dedicated lane?
So many anti-bike people you’d think West Hollywood was in Texas!
Not anti-bike just anti-stupidity. You don’t create a situation where you lose parking, create congestion on the road that also hampers emergency vehicles all to accommodate some bike riders. You add bike lanes where it makes sense. On this Avenue it does not. To say that people are anti-bicycle because they’re against this idea is ludicrous.
It doesn’t “make sense” for Fountain to be used as an arterial road for speeding car drivers when its mostly residential. Fountain Ave needs to have wider sidewalks and bike lanes over the convenience of mostly single occupant car drivers. Bike lanes DO NOT hamper emergency vehicles, it’s car drivers that slow them down by not getting out of the way.
They have a litany of rehearsed lies and assumptions. When those don’t work they simply call us names.
JF1: you don’t get it re: car dependency and lack of safe & efficient proper alternatives. Not only are your points wrong (except the losing parking spots part) and/or unsubstantiated but you miss the bigger picture of induced demand, ie. decongestion. Its the ONLY long term way to decongest a city. The opposite of what you suggest. That’s before you get to the numerous other benefits!
You are not stuck in traffic. You are traffic.
Your argument is with car congestion not alternative transportation like walking and biking.
It definitely seems odd given how “progressive” West Hollywood is, but I was pleasantly surprised how many people voiced their support at the meeting for safer streets and improved bike infrastructure in West Hollywood.
What you are seeing are postings of internet trolls and attorneys hired by the anti-bike/anti-pedestrian millionaires who want a free place to park their massively destructive statusmobiles❗
There have been at least three major events that could serve as a rallying cry: 1)The squatting situations that lead to fires on North Sierra Bonita and later on Fountain Avenue. 2)The deliberate delay by the City Council to submit a Housing Element Plan on time, which opened West Hollywood up to oversized, Builder’s Remedy developments. 3) The bike lanes on Fountain Avenue.
Neighbors in these areas of West Hollywood are angry and motivated. Voter turnout will be high this November. So educating people as to what has happened in the past year is crucial. Otherwise, name recognition will win.
This entire fiasco fits the ongoing divisiveness occasioned by the toxic ideological brain rot of minority thinkers who current hold a majority on council. There is zero creativity, rather there is ongoing us v. them that their small minds cannot reconcile. Simple solutions start with situational awareness of all users of public right-of-way, including drivers, bikers, pedestrians, scooter users, delivery people, and busses. Learn to live in harmony by learning personal responsibility. Also high on the simple solutions is the need to enforce traffic laws that are on the books! Lack of enforcement is a significant factor in the unsafe… Read more »
👏👏👏👏👏
So then why is LA hosting the Olympics if cities like West Hollywood would rather be like car-centric Houston than multi-modal Paris?
West Hollywood — tiny 1.9 square mile section of greater Los Angeles that his home to 36,000 people. West Hollywood is not an island. Los Angeles is hosting the Olympics, not West Hollywood. Apples to oranges comparison, JCB.
I recommend for those who want to make West Hollywood their own version of the worst kind of suburb where you have to drive everywhere no matter your age/ability, simply move to the worst suburb in the US so you can sit in car traffic w/every other single occupant car driver.
I suggest that the only people trying to make West Hollywood their own version of anything are the folks who are hostile to the reality of cars in the broader megalopolis in which West Hollywood is but a tiny speck of land that naive utopians want to wall in and create an island. West Hollywood was part of the reality of a megalopolis long before ideological brain rot infested its political narrative.
Can we go back to when Shyne, Byers, and Erickson were running for office and find out what they did to get elected? We must be on the look-out to make sure no one ever wins again by using their methodology, whatever it was. What made them so attractive that they actually won? As I am again in this cycle, I got phone calls from perfectly reasonable sounding men asking for my vote for Erickson, and it was just shortly before election day. And Byers ….. how in the world did she pull off a win? I think Sepi’s intersectional… Read more »
Yes. Interlopers highjacking the city. They have three puppets on council in the form of Erickson, Shyne and Byers; let’s not give them another.
So the millionaires who hired you to push their agenda were unable to buy off “Erickson, Shyne and Byers❓” That sounds like a ringing endorsement to me❗
Where was City Council candidate Danny Hang? To Streets For All Danny has been singing the praises for the Fountain Re-Design “Plan”, (which supposedly is not actually a “plan” but a very rough vision for a new Fountain). When Mayor Erickson says there is “no plan” is simply lying: the plan is to install protected bike lanes and reduce Fountain to one lane in each direction. Yes, not all the final details are worked out, but there was enough of a plan to apply for a grant. The fact that residents may lose 250 parking space or only 235 parking… Read more »
If accusing residents of lying wasn’t bad enough, interrupting a fellow council member’s legitimate questioning of staff was also out of line.
He’s gotta go!
EXACTLY!
Our mayor reduces Disagreement to NAME CALLING! It is so childish….oops, I guess that is name calling too, or is it?
Honestly, I am sick and tired of it and I won’t take it any more!
No resident is “losing” street parking b/c it was never theirs to “lose” Public space is for public use, not for storing private property.
The Fountain Re-design is giving back public space for public use- to walk, bike and safely drive over the current situation- a dangerous, polluting, loud unpleasant streetscape for the convenience of mostly single occupant car driver to drive thru the neighborhood instead of a street for the neighborhood.
“Erickson, weary of the public pushback, vigorously defended the plans.
“I cannot tell you how many times I have had great cups of coffee with my neighbors over watching someone who’s mangled get dragged out of a car, seeing a biker who’s been hit by a car, seeing a woman with her child have to walk on the road because the sidewalk is not wide enough,” Erickson recalled.”
I don’t believe a word of this! This is the king of lie politicians tell all the time. They make it up!
When Erickson starts his commentary with the his overused “I can’t tell you” preface, it usually means he really can’t tell because the anecdotes are in his head. How many times has he said I was almost this, or I was almost that.
He’s actually telling the truth here. Living on Fountain means seeing accident and accident, where cars flip over, hit walls, hit buildings. Just because the solution might be flawed doesn’t mean that there’s not a problem with safety. Let’s not criticize Mr. Erickson for being concerned about this, he should be.
But he just happened to be sitting there having coffee with friends when there are these mangled bodies appearing and motorcyclists being hit!
He lives right on Fountain, so this is a likely scenario. Like everyone who lives on Fountain, you hear a crash and then go out to investigate and see if you can help. As mayor, he probably makes a cup of coffee since he knows he’s going to be out there for a while, and it’s usually 3:00 AM. I’m sure neighbors come out and ask when something is going to be done, it’s that bad.
Install speed bumps!
Problem solved!
Totally agree. So many posts on Nextdoor and elsewhere have near constant complaints about car crashes, speeding, destruction of public/private property, finding their car hit/run, lives lost/maimed/permanently disabled and yet when potential known solutions are brought up- modal filters, reducing travel lanes to make car drivers pay attention and slow down- the same people complain…
Glad my public comment on voting yes was recorded! Shame that all these pro-car people want to turn West Hollywood into Houston.
Get a referendum on the ballot.
Only way!
So are you all finally ready to dump these grifters, or do you all love the drama too much. Stop kvetching and start voting!
Trump voters hate ideas that get people out of their cars. You must be in fun company!
Perhaps not everyone who disagrees with the toxic ideological brain rot is a Trump voter. Perhaps that’s just part of the name-calling brigade that attempts to shut down diversity of thought on any issue by simply calling those who differ as MAGA, or right wing, or Trump voters. It’s kinda cute, but intellectually lazy.
It’s so tired to hear people say they must be Trump voters every time they don’t agree with some harebrained idea. If that’s your best counter argument you need to sit down and think some more.
That requires the ability to think critically.