Charleston may get tough on scofflaw bikes
Some say city should offer more bike-parking options
By David Slade
Charleston could soon take a hard line against illegally parked bicycles, with proposed regulations that would allow the city to immobilize or seize bikes found locked to traffic signs, street trees and the like.
Just as a motorist might find their illegally parked car with one of the those big yellow "boots" attached to a wheel, rendering the vehicle useless until a fine is paid to remove the device, cyclists could find a city lock on their illegally parked bike until they pay a $45 fine.
Staff
A proposed Charleston city ordinance would prohibit locking bikes to parking meters and other public property on sidewalks, and violators could see their bikes confiscated until they pay a $45 fine. Bikes that appear abandoned, like this vandalized one that hasn't moved from Calhoun Street in months, could be seized and disposed of after seven days' notice.
City Council will consider the measure at a meeting scheduled to start at 5 p.m. today in City Hall.
"I think this probably goes a little bit too far in discouraging the use of bicycles, if it is enforced," said Tom Bradford, director of the cycling advocacy group Charleston Moves.
"We pay so much attention to whether there is sufficient parking for cars, and at the same time, we want people to be more active," he said. "But if you make it very difficult to park a bicycle, then you're cutting off your nose to spite your face."
The parking rules are part of a broader bicycle ordinance that would give the city authority to seize and dispose of abandoned bikes, would eliminate a widely ignored regulation that all bikes must have a one-dollar city license, and spells out when and where people can ride bikes on sidewalks. Generally, children 12 and younger could ride on sidewalks.
"As long as we tell people about the rules and we are fair about enforcing them, then I think it makes sense," said Councilman Mike Seekings, an avid cyclist who was involved in developing the proposed regulations. "One of the things we have noticed downtown, and particularly in my area, are bicycles parked, and often abandoned, where they should not be."
Seekings' council district includes much of the College of Charleston area, where bikes are routinely locked to signs and parking meters along city sidewalks, and where vandalized, abandoned bikes sometimes remain where they were last locked up for months.
The proposed crackdown on bike parking comes at a time when city officials have been working to increase the use of bicycles to reduce the use of motorized vehicles and improve residents' fitness. The city has, for example, been designing plans to add a bike lane to the Ashley River bridge, and plans to spend $669,000 improving the West Ashley Greenway.
Regulating bikes
The current city regulation for bicycle parking:
No person shall park a bicycle upon a street other than upon the roadway against the curb or upon the sidewalk in a rack to support the bicycle or against a building or at the curb, in such manner as to afford the least obstruction to pedestrian traffic.
The proposed regulation:
Bicycles shall not be secured or otherwise locked to street trees, street lights, stop signs, boat docks, or other legal encroachments and public property located in the public right-of-ways.
At the city's Charleston Civic Design Center, where a nine-bicycle storage locker is under construction, mostly for staff use, center Director Michael Maher said city residents should be using bike racks for parking but that there is a shortage of those.
"If we are going to be more strict about where you can park your bike, I think we need to make resources available to encourage people to ride their bikes," he said. "Some people look at bikes as a blight, as it were."
Seekings, who rides his bicycle to City Council meetings, said he agrees that more legal bike parking options are needed.
"If you look around the city, it's difficult to park a bike, and that's why people chain them to trees and poles," he said. "The city also needs to provide facilities, and we don't."
Seekings said he wants to see a plan to provide more bike parking, before the new regulations get approved. City Council could take an initial vote tonight, but it takes at least three votes over the course of two meetings to approve an ordinance.
The proposed ordinance.
City Council Agenda (with proposed ordinance, pages 27 to 32)
As written, the ordinance would apply throughout the city, not just on the peninsula. The city limits extend from the Cainhoy peninsula to Johns Island.
"Are we firing up a big howitzer to tackle a problem in a limited part of the city?" Bradford asked. "Are we making a city-wide regulation to solve a downtown problem in the commercial area around King Street?"
Megan Cahill, director of communications for the Washington D.C.-based League of American Bicyclists (and a former College of Charleston student) found the proposed bike-parking regulations unsurprising.
"It's not a new concept -- tons of colleges and universities do it," she said. "Nobody enjoys getting their bike confiscated or getting a ticket, but there could be issues with blocking street signs and things like that."
Reach David Slade at 937-5552 or dslade@postandcourier.com.
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Notice about comments:Postandcourier.com is pleased to offer readers the enhanced ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Postandcourier.com does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not postandcourier.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website. Read our full Terms and Conditions.
Users can now build user-to-user connections, follow friends' recent posts, add an avatar that fits their personality, and more. If you have posted here before you'll need to sign up again, or if you've never posted before, start now by signing up!
- Most Commented
- Most Emailed
- Shared
- Crash claims Citadel grad
- Will Charleston snuff out its only cigar bar?
- ADRENALINE RUSH: A look inside South Carolina's only Level 1 trauma center at MUSC
- Graphic artist brings creative designs to life
- Businesses face 1099 questions on tax forms
- Clemson plans architecture site
- Rick Barnes comes to the rescue of Georgetown boys home
- Developer withdraws Gregg Tract application
- Chef Robert Carter opening new restaurant
- 3 arrested in meth-lab bust in Mount Pleasant



