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Charlotte Five: Podcast: Knight Foundation’s Charles Thomas has a vision for change in Charlotte

April 7, 2016

Original article can be found here.

By Corey Inscoe | April 6, 2016
Cb1tFBsW0AUethfCharles Thomas took over as the Charlotte program director of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation in February. When I asked him about his vision for Charlotte, he referenced “Star Trek.”

“Personally I do have a vision for the city and for the world which some would say is utopian,” Thomas said, “of where we are all, we get along, we know each other, we know our neighbor, we support one another, that there’s less kind of walls and barriers and fear that separates us and more things that unite us. …

“I think I have kind of a ‘Star Trek’ vision of the world. … This idea of how ‘Star Trek’ was developed of being this place of a united federation of the whole world, so that we’re working as one peoples.”

Thomas joined The Good News Is podcast to talk about his new role and the future of Charlotte.

Listen to the podcast here.

He’s toughtful, full of energy and not afraid to share his ideas for how to improve Charlotte. And the man knows Charlotte. He grew up here, in Grier Heights, and went to school at East Mecklenburg High.

He acknowledges the help he got from people and organizations along the way: teachers, mentors, internship programs, etc. That experience has at least partially shaped the work he’s done as an adult.

“There were so many influential people that helped me that I felt took the time to make a path for me,” he said. “So definitely growing up without a lot of money, without a lot of resources made me thankful for what I had and made me want to create opportunity for others. …

“I want to do that for Charlotte. I have a passion for the city, I have a passion for the city to be open and available to others so that other folks can advance.”

A professional photographer, he was director of education at The Light Factory, a nonprofit “committed to photography and film as a means of enriching lives and transforming communities,” according to its website.

Thomas was also founding executive director Queen City Forward, an hub for social entrepreneurs that aims to “unleash the potential of high-growth, high-impact social entrepreneurs in Charlotte to create sustained economic and social impact that spurs economic development, improves the lives of citizens, and drives a new model of sustainable growth,” according to its website.

Thomas started with the Knight Foundation in February after Susan Patterson retired last year. The Knight Foundation, with communities in 26 cities, aims to foster new ideas to improve journalism, media innovation, community engagement and the arts.

The Knight Foundation has its hands in all kinds of initiatives, from transportation to events like BOOM Charlotte. But Thomas would really like to see the city work on is its creative economy.

“I think we should slow down a little bit and think about what is culture and embrace those artists and creatives that are doing it, and figure out a way to support them and help them to grow and help their organizations to grow,” he said. “Otherwise we’re going to find that we have a big city but we don’t have the cultural soul that attracts people.”

Want to get involved?

Visit knightfoundation.org for more information. And, as Thomas said, just go out and get involved.

“There was a time where people would say there’s not that much going on in Charlotte,” he said. “But there’s a lot going on in Charlotte now.”

Charlotte Talks: Making Charlotte A Bicycle-Friendly City

March 31, 2016

This article originally appeared on WFAE.org.

By CHARLOTTE TALKS STAFF

Listen to the podcast here.

bicycle-laneTraffic in Charlotte becomes more congested with every passing year. Some think part of the answer is more bicycles and the city has been working for years to become more bicycle friendly. Still, it can be dangerous for cyclists to share the road. Sustain Charlotte is now working to bring protected bike lanes to uptown providing a separate space for cyclists – a protected buffer between them and motorists.

Guests

Jordan Moore – Bicycle Program Director at Sustain Charlotte, #IBikeCLT campaign

Ken Tippette – Bicycle Program Manager for Charlotte Department of Transportation

Al Bangoura – Superintendent of Community and Recreation Center Services, Parks and Recreation, Mecklenburg County

Related Events:

The city of Charlotte will be hosting a series of events for “Bike! Charlotte” promoting bicycle awareness and safety April 29-May15. Details here.

Open Streets 704 is a series of four Charlotte events that will temporarily close streets to car traffic so people can use them for walking and bicycling. The first event is May 1. Details here.

The Rise of Open Streets

March 30, 2016

There are hundreds of open streets events in the US, in cities big and small. And while Open Streets 704 will certainly evolve over time and be uniquely Charlotte-Mecklenburg… we thought this was a great way to show how how another open street event looks! Enjoy!

Doctor’s Orders: Read THIS from your Health Director

March 21, 2016

dr-plescia

I want to tell you about an exciting initiative that will be launched on May 1st. It is called Open Streets 704 and it is shaping up to be a vibrant and memorable event that Mecklenburg County can call its own for many years to come.

Designed as an avenue for getting people outside and physically active, Open Streets 704 will provide opportunities for neighbors to interact with one another and see parts of their city from a perspective that many have never experienced – on foot or on a bicycle.

As the health director, I am continually looking at ways to impact the population’s health in a positive and meaningful way. Open Streets 704 does just that.

The Open Streets 704 journey will include 3 miles of roadway that passes through several major parks, including our newest park in the First Ward neighborhood. Included in this journey will be various activities designed for all citizens to enjoy.

I invite you and your neighbors to join me on May 1st as we hit the streets!

Yours in health,

Marcus Plescia, MD, MPH
Health Director
Mecklenburg County

Charlotte Agenda: These streets in Uptown and NoDa will be closed to traffic for one day in May

March 17, 2016

Original article can be found here.

Andrew Dunn | Mar 17, 2016

The city of Charlotte is planning a big event where major streets will be shut down to traffic.

Called Open Streets 704, the project will close down entire streets to cars and turn them over to bikes and pedestrians for an afternoon — May 1 from noon to 4 p.m. This is a Sunday.

The whole thing is inspired by city planner Gil Penalosa and funded by the Knight Foundation.

[Agenda story: 10 tough questions city expert Gil Penalosa posed to Charlotte leaders during breakfast]

open-streets-704-logo

The map of closed streets just got released. Here’s the first look.

open-streets-704-map

Check out a bigger version here (PDF).

The route starts on 7th Street on the east edge of Uptown, goes over to First Ward Park, then heads north on Brevard Street. Then it hangs a right on Belmont Avenue, and back north on North Davidson Street all the way up to 35th Street.

Looks like a good number of neighborhood streets in NoDa will be closed down as well.

open-streets-704-NoDa

There will be a whole bunch of neighborhood activities.

I don’t have information on them yet, though. Stay tuned. Other cities have done some major stuff, though. Atlanta now has 100,000 people participate and holds things like cycling festivals, fashion shows and kids mazes.

Photo by TimothyJ via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Photo by TimothyJ via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Plan Charlotte: Bicycling in the city gets two big pushes

March 4, 2016

Original article can be found here.

Mary Newsom | Mar 03, 2016

Two new, high-visibility bicycling campaigns rolled out this week, each an attempt to get more Charlotteans riding—and with more support from the city.

The most noticeable will be an Open Streets event on May 1, in which a city street, I this instance North Davidson Street, will be closed to motor vehicle traffic but open for bicycling and walking (and dancing, playing and meeting neighbors, add the organizers.) The initial group organizing the event have dubbed it Open Streets 704.  More than 100 other North American cities have held them, as well as cities around the globe, and most cities see turnout in the thousands.

The event will be 12 p.m.-4 p.m. and stretch from the NoDa neighborhood down North Davidson Street to Memorial Stadium at Seventh and Kings Drive. It’s tied to the opening of the 14th annual BIKE Charlotte!, a multiday event whose activities aim to encourage more people to ride.  Open Street 704 is a partnership among Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation, Charlotte Department of Transportation and the nonprofit Partners for Parks. A grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation will fund four Open Streets events over two years.

But if you look at most Charlotte streets, you may notice hardly any cyclists along most of them during most times of the week.  Although the city has made plenty of improvements in recent years, Charlotte still can be daunting for bicyclists with so many disconnected streets, high-volume roads with few bicycle lanes, and speeding vehicles that make even a four-foot painted bike lane feel unsafe to many riders.

For example, plenty of people ride bicycles on the Little Sugar Creek Greenway flanking uptown to the east. People also ride along the Irwin Creek greenway through Frazier Park, a route flanking uptown to the west. There’s even a north-south sidewalk-rail trail beside the Lynx Blue Line tracks in the middle of uptown.

But there’s no on-street way through uptown to get from one greenway to the rail trail to the other greenway—other than sharing the street with traffic.  Yes, some hardy souls bike on the streets and others dodge pedestrians and cars in driveways while riding on the sidewalk. But those numbers are small compared to what you’ll see on the greenways.  An east-west connection is needed.

The local nonprofit group Sustain Charlotte on Thursday announced a campaign asking residents to urge the City of Charlotte to build a protected bike lane through uptown by the end of 2016, to connect east to west.

So … what’s a protected bike lane? It’s an on-street bike lane separated from auto traffic by curbs, planters, parked cars or posts —in other words, by something more than just a stripe of paint on pavement. New York City began installing such lanes in 2007. On streets with on-street parking, for example, pavement was re-painted to place the bike lanes next to the sidewalk with the parking lane next to traffic, using the parked cars as a buffer between cyclists and moving motor vehicles.

“These are protected bike lanes are being built all over the country, and we don’t have any yet in Charlotte,” Sustain Charlotte executive director Shannon Binns said in an interview. “And we think it’s time that we have them too.”

Sustain Charlotte isn’t the only local group pushing for such a connection. Charlotte Center City Partners would also like to see one, CCCP President Michael Smith said.

One key difficulty is the technical complexity, according to interim Planning Director Ed McKinney. How best to find the right route though uptown, and then how best to design the protected lane?

Should the connecter route be on Third and/or Fourth streets, a high-volume pair of one-way streets? Should it be on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, which carries less traffic? What about Stonewall Street, which also carries less traffic, or maybe Seventh Street? Anyone familiar with uptown streets knows each possibility has something to be said for it, but also distinct issues. There’s that freeway interchange at Stonewall and Kenilworth, for instance. Seventh Street has a bridge over Interstate 277 that can’t be easily widened, and Seventh necks down to a narrow two-lane street when it gets to the Fourth Ward neighborhood. And so on.

Of course, in a city where the automobile reigns supreme, any move that may give even just an appearance of shrinking traffic lanes can inspire loud protests. The city’s Department of Transportation has a bicycle program manager and has added miles of painted bicycle lanes on city streets, and has made several quieter, less trumpeted bicycling improvements in a few isolated spots, such as a buffered bike lane—separated from traffic by a painted area on the street—on Remount Road and reverse-angle parking on Commonwealth Avenue in Plaza Midwood. But it has not adopted in a comprehensive way many of the newer bicycle-safety and traffic tools found in other cities.

And while Mayor Jennifer Roberts made an appearance at Sustain Charlotte’s Thursday night announcement/pep rally at Sugar Creek Brewing, she stopped short of endorsing the idea of a protected bike lane.

Sustain Charlotte is launching a drive to win support online (click here to see it) and has set up a web page to explain the effort. Its leaders hope that citizen enthusiasm and pressure can make a difference.

“By 2017, let’s make Charlotte known as the most forward-moving city in America for active transportation,” Sustain Charlotte’s bicycle program director Jordan Moore said in a prepared statement. “We won’t be the world leader, but let’s be the city working fastest towards that goal.”

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