“I see no need for it” said a local man named Tom Ogonoski.
“The only people riding bikes around here are the ones stealing your stuff in the middle of the night” he added.
“We want the Alberta government to interfere and protect us” said resident Kimberlee Dawn.
Their storage problem shouldn’t be everyone’s problem, though.
When I look, I see garages + driveways, and the driveways are empty. Also, how many cars would each of those homes have? The residents are all apparently elderly and/or disabled, so it would be unbelievable to me that they would have 3 - 5 cars per home.
Regardless, public roads are NOT the place for them to be parking on a permanent basis.
Again, this is a self-created problem. The personal inconvenience of one shouldn’t be the inconvenience of all. If front-entry parking is needed, the homeowners should be allowed to convert their lawn into a driveway (via by-law).
Funny, because this would have come up during the city’s extensive public consultation rounds, and alternatives would have been provided for feedback.
Those alleys are designed for residents to be able to access their parking area, and not as a road for transportation. While I’m sure you could take a detour through those alleys on a bike, it would be inappropriate to assign them as “bike lanes”. Also, it would create conflict for people who actually want to visit the front of homes, forcing them to use the road anyway. Not ideal for anyone.