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July 8, 2023. In this issue: News about bike lanes on Concord Ave., an interview with a Belmont Voice Board member, and how you can help by hosting a small gathering.


Let us know what you think about us starting to publish news stories!

Battle for the Road Over Bike Lane Changes

by Kevin Sullivan, Belmont Voice Board Member

Concord Ave in front of the Belmont Post Office There is a car in the travel lane cars parked in the parking lane and a person walking on the sidewalk No one is in the bike lane

Photo credit: Hal Shubin


On Monday night, the Belmont Select Board will consider two changes along Concord Avenue that some residents say are pitting seniors against cyclists. (See below for a link to the agenda.)


The proposed changes could alter the protected bike lane created last summer. Town leaders say the lane was designed to make the road safer for drivers, cyclists, and pedestrians by moving bike riders to the right of parked cars along the curb. But now, the town is considering abandoning the new design at two key spots: near Underwood Street and in front of the U.S. Post Office building. 


The Select Board discussed the possible changes at its June 26 meeting. 


The first change would create accessible parking to provide better access to the Belmont Veterans Memorial at Clay Pit Pond. The Transportation Advisory Committee, or TAC, presented three possible locations for an accessible parking spot. Two options would be along Concord Avenue and the other would be on Underwood Street. 


Residents at the meeting quickly became emotional. 


“I’m gonna cry,” said Carole Williams, a Belmont Town Meeting member (Precinct 3). “Not one of you knows what it’s like to sit in a wheelchair.” 


Williams advocated for a spot on Concord Avenue which would require moving the bike lane to the left of parked cars, so she and others wouldn’t have to dodge bikes to get to the sidewalk. 


“Move the darn bike lane, and have them go around. End of story!” she said. 


Margaret “Peg” Callanan, Town Meeting member (Precinct 7), felt the issue was dividing town residents. 


“I’m really disappointed, saddened and appalled quite frankly that there is a discussion that … pits veterans against cyclists,” she said.


Town leaders say any change to the roads requires compromise. 


“We are looking to find a balance,” Select Board Member Mark Paolillo told The Belmont Voice. “We are not looking to pit anyone against anyone else.” 


Mary Lewis, Town Meeting member (Precinct 1), told the Select Board that she is the daughter of a World War II veteran, but is also worried about kids who ride their bikes to school. 


“We have to consider that just as it is dangerous for the veteran to get out [of the car], it is also dangerous for children on their bicycles,” she said. “It’s bad enough to be doored as an adult, but a small child could go flying out into traffic and be run over immediately.”


TAC recommended putting the accessible spot on Underwood Street, so it wouldn’t interfere with Concord Avenue traffic or require changes to the protected bike lane. 


But during the most recent Select Board meeting another option emerged: to carve out one to two accessible spaces along the grass on Underwood Street, and reverse the one-way flow of traffic, so it spills out onto Concord. Under this plan, visitors using the accessible spot would be able to access the Memorial without crossing a street or a bike path.  


The Select Board referred the matter to the Middle and High School Traffic Working Group. The group met Friday and voted 4–3 to approve that plan, according to working group member Lawrence Link. The Select Board will consider that recommendation Monday night.

Title is cutout for handipcap accessible parking on Underwood
Left image shows an aerial  view of the street
Right image shows a view of the proposed space from the perspective of someone standing on the street

Image source: TAC


Meanwhile, during the June 26 meeting, the Select Board voted 2 to 1 to remove the protected bike lane in front of the Post Office after hearing concerns that it was a dangerous spot to exit your car.


“I think it’s unsafe, especially for seniors,” said Paolillo, who voted to change the bike lane, along with Select Board Member Roy Epstein. “We’ve gotten more complaints there than anything else we did [on Concord Avenue].” 


Paolillo has supported the new bike lane and the plan to create better bike access throughout Belmont. But he said this change will improve overall safety.


TAC Chair Dave Coleman disagrees. 


“The perception is that they [seniors] are scared of getting out of their car, it is a very subjective statement,” he told The Belmont Voice


Coleman said that people aren’t used to checking before they get out of their car. He said if drivers got into the habit of looking over their shoulder when exiting their vehicle, everyone would be safer.


Select Board Member Elizabeth Dionne voted against removing the protected bike lane, because she worries about cyclists weaving in and out of parked cars to accommodate a change. 


“I don’t love the new Concord Avenue bike lane. I never have,” she told The Belmont Voice. “But if you increase complexity, you increase the opportunity for conflict between bikes and cars.”


Most residents and town officials we contacted did like one change that came with the protected bike lane. By narrowing the road for vehicle traffic, motorists tend to reduce their speed. This is known as traffic calming. 


Dionne hopes the town will soon test out another idea: adding cameras to some traffic lights to discourage drivers from running red lights and speeding through town. She says that probably won’t be considered until the spring. 


Even though Coleman didn’t agree with removing the protected bike lane in front of the Post Office, his group did come up with a plan. TAC will recommend to the Select Board Monday night that the town shifts the bike lane to the left of parked cars from the Post Office parking lot to the Belmont Center underpass.

Aerial view of Concord Ave in front of the Post Office
Text on left points to handicap space
Text on right indicates a 50 to 70 foot transition area for the bike lane shifting away from the curb

Image source: TAC


He says the biggest challenge the town faces to improve traffic safety comes down to one thing: money. And he believes everyone’s heart is in the right place.


“There are no bad guys here,” he said before hanging up the phone. He spoke to The Belmont Voice while on vacation in Turin, Italy, where he says drivers are much more attentive to cyclists. 


“Tomorrow I will be picking up a bike and going into the hills of Italy to ride a bike,” he said wistfully.


For details about the Select Board meeting on Monday, July 10, 2023, see the agenda on the town’s website. It is a hybrid meeting, and the agenda includes information about attending in person or online.


Let us know what you think about us starting to publish news stories!

Interview: Why do we need a new newspaper?

Board members Bob Rifkin and Lucia Arno-Bernsen were at the Belmont Farmers’ Market recently. Watch this interview with Bob, where he talks about the need for a new newspaper in Belmont.


“There's no information [in the Belmont Citizen-Herald] about the local government, elections, or important things that are going on in Belmont,” he said.

Board member stands in front of the Market Manager's tent at the Belmont Farmers’ Market.

Video: Alisa Iskakova. Interview: Claire Hlotyak

Help by hosting

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If you’re interested in helping us in this way, please contact Suzanna Krmzian at [email protected]. We want to reach every corner of Belmont, so please consider lending a hand!

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