Tuesday, October 9, 2012

My (carfree mom's) Love Affair with the Automobile

Today I'm an Active Transportation Activist.  But that wasn't always the case. I loved my Matchbox car collection, visited car museums, enjoyed high speed car chases on TV, toured a car factory or two, and dreamed of driving a fancy car one day.

young me coveting some stranger's Rolls
Reflecting back almost two years after our breakup, I can date my early attachment to the car back to my potty training days.  The tiny bottomless chair would fit amid luggage in the trunk of the ’68 Olds on roadtrips from our Connecticut home to destinations south and west in preparation for emergency stops along the highway (where the roar of vehicles was thunderous enough to scare the crap out of any toddler.)  Shorter journeys north sometimes involved a family convoy of grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins to Vermont and New Hampshire for fall foliage, maple syrup, hand crafted cheese, and hiking boots.  My personal childhood favorite route ended at Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts, where, wearing the pioneer dress sewn by my grandmother, I journeyed back to a simpler time without modern conveniences such as automobiles.  Needless to say, we wouldn’t have made the 100 mile journey as often without one.

me at the print shop                   the blacksmith's                and the meeting hall
In the fond fogginess of childhood memories I can recall the wide expanse of the back seat, the blackness of the interior, the smell of the heater, the warm vibration of the driveshaft hump in the middle of the floor, and the sticky feel of the vinyl seat against the back of my legs in summer.  As an only child, I was ruler of the back seat.  Without as much public awareness about seatbelts or booster seats in the 1970’s, I could lie across the seat for a nap, lulled to sleep by the rhythmic clickety clack of the highway and the static drone of AM talk radio, only occasionally rolling to the floor upon stopping short.  Or I could find mischievous entertainment kneeling on the seat and alternatively waving or sticking my tongue out at the driver behind.  Sometimes I would keep a list of the different state license plates of our fellow highway travelers.  Since Oregon plate sightings were a rarity, I concluded that the state must but a great place to live since Oregonians didn’t bother traveling to east coast vacation destinations.

not my childhood crush, but a close likeness (click for Oldsmobile's 1968 "Youngmobile" ads)
There were other special adventures that helped me form a close childhood bond with the sky-blue sedan whose dent in the right rear fender (from backing into a tree) I would trace with my finger and whose smiley face scratched into the driver’s side window reflected the artistic genius of my toddlerhood.  Once, out of curiosity, I opened the back door while the car was moving, and was scared out of my wits by the power of the air pushing back against the door.   Another time I thought it would be amusing to play peek-a-boo with the driver (my father) by covering his eyes with the removable lid from the Styrofoam ice chest.  I remember climbing in and out of the crank rolled windows yodeling “yeeeeeehaaaaaw” like Bo and Luke on the Dukes of Hazzard while the car sat in the driveway.  One evening I sneaked out of the house during a driving rainstorm to use the windshield and hood as a high speed (albeit short) waterslide.  When the time came in the 5th grade to trade up to a more practical Datsun station wagon, I was sad to say goodbye.

What in taaaaarnation was I thinkin'? (click to be entertained)
By adolescence, the automobile was transforming from an icon of happy family memories to my sought after means of escape.  In (boarding) high school I didn’t even have a drivers’ license let alone a vehicle, but easily found off-campus misadventures with peers who lived within commuting distance.  My first driving experience occurred shortly before my 16th birthday in a friend’s father’s midlife crisis (red Corvette convertible) with a light tap on the accelerator nearly taking us through a neighbor’s stone wall, which would have been devastating for my babysitting career at the time.  Identifying friends with driving privileges became a top priority for summer vacations at home, where teenage life with the ’rents was feeling ever more oppressive and unbearable.  I didn’t much care about the destination or the driver’s safety record as long as I could get away from home.  I longed for fall, college, freedom, and roadtrips.

again, not the same car, but a good proximity
Truckin! (click for music)
Before leaving for the institution of higher learning, I earned my driver’s license but not the means to pay for a vehicle or insurance.  As an avid user of the Student Union’s rideshare board, however, I could be a virtual hitchhiker from West Philadelphia to almost anywhere I couldn’t reach by foot, mass transit, or Greyhound.   When my roommate wrangled possession of a mechanically functional clunker from her parents to keep near campus, life was good, bringing downtown restaurants and out of town Grateful Dead shows within easy reach.  The fun lasted until the car was stolen off the street, a situation that took the roommate some explaining to her parents, since she had redirected the allowance they gave her for secure garage parking to the college party fund.  With the mastery she exhibited manipulating the truth of that incident, it’s no wonder she became a successful attorney including a stint as Assistant D.A. in Manhattan.

Jaws of Life
On July 14, 1990, I found myself at life’s crossroads on the side of a Rhode Island highway, being extricated from a mangled car by the Jaws of Life.  Actually, I “found myself” about a week later in recovery following a memory-devoid stay in the ICU with only brief intervals of consciousness.  The driver, a “friend” who later admitted he was driving under the influence of prescription drugs (unbeknownst to me), had lost control of the vehicle on Interstate 95 and smashed into an abandoned, hippie sticker covered VW bus in the breakdown lane.  The unwitting Flower Power mobile had contributed to a violent event, pinning me inside with a pneumothorax, broken ribs, lacerated liver, and bilateral concussion that kept me hospitalized for two weeks.  At the time, I didn’t denounce the cars or the driver because I was too busy figuring out how to get back to Philadelphia without a ride and how to pay tuition now that my summer wages had hit the brakes too.

a different VW bus, artful and peaceful outside the library
Long story short, I took a leave of absence from school and moved in with a friend whose parents provided plenty of rent, food, and spending money (in addition to a vehicle) to cover living expenses for two while I got back on my feet.  Nearly dead in the passenger’s seat in July, by August, with just a few scars for evidence, I was in the driver’s seat of a full-size Ford Bronco, learning how to maneuver the massive vehicle through narrow streets, receiving instruction on highway intimidation of smaller vehicles, and reviewing the four-wheel -drive instructions before winter.  Because of the parking hassle, I usually chose walking for downtown destinations and the city bus for uphill trips to Cornell campus (where I transferred in ’91).  Even so, my allegiance to the automobile was stronger than ever, with the big bad black Bronco making me feel far more powerful than my diminutive 5’4” frame, a hero to fellow students struggling through deep snow, and a rock-star to families I worked with in rural areas.

don't miss the ice scraping
After graduation, my car dependence increased.  I commuted from New Haven, CT, to NYC for grad school because fueling the drive was less expensive than paying rent in the City or taking the train.  Even if I had used mass transit to get to class, a vehicle was required for the social work field placement that soon after became my full-time job.  I quickly racked up the miles driving to clients’ homes (families referred by Child Protective Services for Intensive Family Preservation Services), also providing them with transportation as necessary.  My ride, a white VW Jetta with a sunroof and the first vehicle under my own name and credit, was my noble steed, carrying me on a mission to stop child abuse and neglect, my partner in crime-fighting. 

Jetta & me pregnant with #1*
Or so it was until a 3/10/95 car accident brought me to yet another of life’s crossroads.  In the second accident as in the first, I was a victim.  The double rear-ending during rush hour seemed mild in comparison, but the impact left me with post-concussive syndrome (compounding the 1990 TBI) and a worker’s compensation case that didn’t settle until 2001.  In the meantime, I completed a second master’s degree, co-founded Resources for Health with Moses and assistance from Yale Law, and gave birth to four of our five children, bringing us to a mini-van dependent lifestyle.  By this time we had moved from CT to AZ, and other than some local walks with the stroller, could conceive of no other way to travel with little ones in the scorching desert heat than with full air conditioning.  When Moses hurt his back and knee in 2003, we certainly didn’t see any other options.  With his physical mobility severely limited for the next 7+ years, carfree was not in our vocabulary or thinking.  If not previously, we were officially car dependent then.  The minivan – a.k.a. the rolling shitbox – was a necessity.  
ok, sometimes it was a rolling citrus box donating 300 pounds of gleaned fruit in Phoenix
If you're still reading and interested, please stay tuned for the next episode to find out how our Carfree Family migrated from handicapped parking space to bike rack!  Like us and stay in touch on Facebook, too.

* at 2271 Ridge Road in North Haven, former home of Ruth Emerson and "Tommie the Commie," in whose class Hillary and Bill met

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Of Awards and Warnings on Cinco de Mayo

Ninja on a Bicycle, by Rob Sol
According to my unverified Wikipedia source, “the functions of the ninja included espionage, sabotage, infiltration, assassination, and open combat in certain situations.”  BTA, do you really think we’ll have to resort to these tactics as we’re “building the future city?”  Rob Sadowsky, are you challenging Moses to the role of sensei?  OK, I admit that circumstances sometimes feel that dire, but we’ll do more study along the lines of Wing Chun Kung Fu first.   
Moses chats with Adam from Coventry Cycle

 That much said (playfully of course), our family graciously and humbly thanks Rob and the BicycleTransportation Alliance for a 2012 Alice Award. All four Alice awardees are credited with demonstrating “outstanding achievements and dedication to building the future Oregon where bicycling is safe, convenient, and fun.”  The BTA tasks us specifically with “shaping the future of Washington County and transforming attitudes about who can ride a bike.”  Challenge accepted! But not even Justin Bieber gets away without a helmet in our future city, especially not caught on film.


Washington County, and more specifically Hillsboro, is an exciting place to live as champions of active transportation.  The insights we’ve gained from attendance at recent meetings for the proposed Hillsboro Stadium, CPO7, and Tanasbourne Stakeholders’ group have helped shaped our understanding of the challenges and opportunities not only to active transportation, but also to public health as a whole in our community.   And we’re ready to put our experience and credentials where our feet are to pedal a whole new health promoting paradigm.  

We like the BTA's vision of the future city!
In case you’re worried that we’ll use ninja tactics in a fanatical quest to rid the city of all motor vehicles while Depave-ing all the parking lots and strip malls to create the carfree mecca we envision, never fear.  Unlike the years of overt and covert marketing and advertising, reinforced by numerous social institutions, that convinced Americans to buy into the car-centric dilemma we find ourselves in, we will warn you up front of the possible side effects of going carfree. 

carfree kids look down from the silent auction balcony



silent auction bidders helped raise $205,000 for the BTA

If you missed the disclaimer in the May 5th Alice Awards, here it is our acceptance speech again:

Thank you for this honor and allowing us time to warn you of the possible effects of going carfree.  You may experience:
results may vary; we're pleased with ours
·         Weight loss
·         Fewer expenses
·         Improved physical fitness
·         Less stress
·         Smaller carbon footprint
·         Improved air quality
·         Reduced noise pollution
·         More wildlife sightings
·         Enhanced sense of overall well-being
·         Stronger connection with community and nature
·         An urge to commit random acts of compassion, love, acceptance, and peace
·         Renewed sense of balance, abundance and gratitude
·         Never having to hear “are we there yet?” again

See our photos on Carfree Family on Facebook
Enjoy more event photos by Alice winner Will Vanlue
Learn more about the BTA
Watch the Prudent Cyclist's "Alice Awards in 1 Minute"

Fabulous photos of the von Borg Cycling Seven, thanks to Will Vanlue, the Prudent Cyclist:



 

Friday, May 11, 2012

Future Hillsboro Stadium a Potential Field of Dreams?


Carfree life, especially the active transportation piece of it, has inspired us to become far more involved as citizens in our community.  Here is my response to the Oregonian article about a proposed baseball stadium in Hillsboro:
carfree family at Hillsboro Stadium, summer '11
I attended Monday’s information session, read the fact sheet distributed there, and raised concern that the “facts” presented provide no analysis of the project’s impact on community health.   At a glance, the proposed stadium presents both challenges to and opportunities for health promotion in our community.

CHALLENGES
  • Traffic – increases air pollution and risk of harm to cyclists and pedestrians along Evergreen Parkway and 229th Ave, especially at their intersection, and more so due to alcohol consumption at games.  With the proposed stadium opening in June 2013 and Kaiser Permanente’s Westside Medical Center opening in August 2013, we could expect a substantial increase in traffic along Evergreen Parkway between 185th and 229th Avenues.
  • Parking – encourages driving rather than active or mass transportation choices as well as destroys life giving earth by covering it with asphalt.
  • “Soft-drink pouring rights” and other food concessions – contribute to the nation’s childhood obesity epidemic, not to mention tooth decay and other nutrition related health concerns.
  • Alcohol from the "beer garden" – increases risk of traffic accidents, violence, reckless behavior, and a host of related health issues, plus demonstrates to young people that sports is more about entertainment than physical fitness. 
  • Merchandise, gas, and other concession sales – will most definitely increase trash and litter in the area.
you sell this crap to kids and families?
OPPORTUNITIES
  • Off-season use – can offer physical fitness opportunities for youth and families.
  • Team involvement with the community – can provide encouragement, inspiration, and support for youth and families to be physically active.
GFRC's existing system of walking trails
At the meeting I was told that revenue sources such as fast food, soda, alcohol, and merchandise concessions were a necessity for the stadium’s economic success.  I maintain that these “necessities” will cost our community health more than they will earn in revenues.  The Council and community can work together to limit the community health challenges and enhance the opportunities of the new stadium in these ways and more.
  • Decrease parking to encourage active and mass transportation – Shuttle services from Orenco/NW 231st Ave Max Station, approximately 2 miles away, would not only limit traffic, but could encourage creative solutions such as bike-sharing, pedicabs, and walking groups.

    from PremierPedicabs
    Manufacturer of T.I.P.K.E. Pedicabs NW
  • Healthy food – Will the stadium really fail if it doesn’t serve junk food?  That would be a sad prospect in regard to childhood obesity, and I believe Hillsboro can set a better standard for our children.  Many parents will agree and appreciate the availability of healthy choices without the tease of unhealthy options.
  • Sustainable drinks – are easy when people are encouraged (provided incentives?) to bring re-fillable bottles, and filtered drinking water is readily available.
  • Alcohol – If it won’t be eliminated, a police and breathalyzer presence would be greatly appreciated.
  • Accessibility for youth – Safe bike/ped routes to the stadium from schools and residential areas such as Tanasbourne high density housing should be enhanced, as well as bike parking and facilities, to ensure safe travel and expanded use by youth and families during off-season.
  • PSA’s  –  The stadium can feature health-promoting messages about nutrition, physical fitness, and environmental stewardship designed to reach young people.
  • Innovative solutions – How about an area set aside for a food forest (instead of parking?), such as Seattle’s seven-acre plot of land in the Beacon Hill neighborhood to be planted with edibles.  Mmm…  I can almost taste the fresh fruit smoothies (served in place of soda and alcohol) now.
iStockphoto.com
Designers of a food forest in Seattle want to make blueberry picking a neighborly activity.
The Hillsboro Stadium neighbors the prospective Tanasbourne area districts as detailed in the Tanasbourne Town Center Plan, including a “medical/commercial district.”  I propose an alternative vision of this area as an extended “health district.”  Instead of complimenting Kaiser Permanente’s medical services with commercial opportunities, let’s develop the area with a health promotion focus to serve the diverse population of individuals and families living in the Tanasbourne high density housing “residential district” and other adjoining neighborhoods.  As for the economic feasibility of this alternative healthy vision, I heard somewhere that if you build it, they will come.  As long as the Hillsboro Council maintains a focus on community health, the future Hillsboro Stadium is a potential field of dreams.  
our field of dreams is safely accessible by cycles or foot


Sunday, May 6, 2012

Thanks, Hal!

We were surprised recently to learn that Hal Ballard had left the Washington County Bicycle Transportation Coalition, and regret that the March 26th article by Casey Parks, Hillsboro/Aloha community champion, slipped past us until now.  Below is our comment posted on the Oregonian, reprinted here with photos from the WashCo summer 2011 bike photo scavenger hunt.
Jacob helps with ride skills as Hal gives out free helmets to a crowd at the tent in Sept. '11
Our family first met Hal at WashCo on a cold, dark December night in 2010 after deciding to get rid of our motor vehicle. Hal personally outfitted the 7 of us with helmets at a price we could afford and took time not only to provide safety education, but also to talk with us about cycling's role in our carfree journey ahead. Throughout 2011, Hal was almost always our first point of contact at WashCo for repairs, reconstructs, and upgrades for our 7 second (or third) hand bikes. He encouraged our participation in Tour de Parks, the photo scavenger hunt, and additional bike education, all of which played a huge role in our confidence to travel greater distances to a greater diversity of locations by cycle. A couple of us also volunteered last fall at a school-based ride skills/helmet giveaway event, where we saw Hal at his very best inspiring kids of all ages and ethnic backgrounds to ride safely and joyfully.
safe ride to a joy filled photo at Hillsboro Stadium
Casey Parks picked up our story at the end of 2011, and now in 2012, thanks to Hal’s encouragement, Casey’s publicity, and a nominator unknown to us, we have accepted a 2012 BTA Alice Award and been credited with demonstrating “outstanding achievements and dedication to building the future Oregon where bicycling is safe, convenient, and fun,” charged with “shaping the future of Washington County and transforming attitudes about who can ride a bike,” and even been dubbed “suburban bike ninjas.”
with Hillsboro's finest prior to our ninja status
Although it is true that our decision to go carfree was largely motivated by a desire to be better environmental and community stewards, fewer living expenses have been an understated motivation. What’s more is that our household economic predicament was such that we knew when we chose to cut this “living expense,” second only to housing, we would not be able to afford a replacement motor vehicle any time in the foreseeable future. The decision to ditch the minivan was, for all intents and purposes, final.
cycling fuel from the Hillsboro Farmer's Market
Perhaps it makes sense to the reader now why we first met Hal on a cold and dark winter night to prepare for carfree life in the suburbs beginning at the wettest, coldest time of the year? Hal Ballard not only played a huge role in equipping us for our carfree journey, but also treated us with kindness, compassion, warmth, and respect at time when the journey ahead was still an unknown, scary place as much as a challenge to be embraced. We’re grateful to have Hal as an advocate for cycling in Washington County, and thank him for inspiring us to become active transportation advocates as well.
mass transit: an active transportation supplement
Annee & Moses von Borg
Hillsboro's Cycling Seven

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Wheel Solutions

first test drive of the Bikes at Work trailer
Since the last blog entry (so very long ago, it seems) we've been hard at work figuring out the most effective way to benefit the community with a cycle delivery service.  Below is the best graphic we've come up with so far (thanks to one talented 14 year old) to explain our vision for Wheel Solutions, a nonprofit program of Resources for Health
Please click through to read more and to find out how support the program with CSA share delivery by cycle in the Tanasbourne, Amberglen, Orenco, and Rock Creek neighborhoods. Check out our current farm partners: 

  
 
Look for more exciting developments soon! If you're on Facebook, please like
Resources for Health and Carfree Family for the latest updates.
consulting about design of sponsor panels for trailer