Marin supervisors back Richmond-San Rafael Bridge bike-lane experiment – The Mercury News

Marin County supervisors are supporting a plan to remove the bike lane on the Richmond-San Rafael bridge four days a week on a trial basis.

The supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to write a letter to the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission urging that a pilot study be initiated to evaluate the effects of such a change.

The Bay Area Toll Authority’s commissioners voted to move ahead with the plan on May 8. The multiuse lane on the westbound shoulder of the bridge would be opened to motor vehicles Monday through Thursday during the morning.

The San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission, known as the BCDC, must approve the proposal. It is scheduled to take the matter up at its meeting this month or next. If the commission approves it, the plan will be implemented early next year and run for about 12 months before it’s re-evaluated.

The westbound shoulder lane, which is on the upper deck of the bridge, was converted to a multiuse lane for bikes and pedestrians in 2019 as a four-year pilot project. The prior year, a part-time third traffic lane was opened on the eastbound lower deck.

“Morning congestion has not increased since the movable barrier was put into place,” Talia Smith, the county’s legislative director, told supervisors on Tuesday. “However, the incidence of traffic accidents has increased 33% since the multiuse path was put in place, and the effect has been an increased variability in morning commute times from the East Bay into Marin.”

The moveable barrier, which separates the multiuse lane from motor vehicles, prevents minor accidents or stalled cars or trucks from being immediately moved out of the path of traffic. Smith said that a number of local employers have told the county that the difficulty crossing the bridge in the mornings has affected their ability to recruit and retain employees.

The proposal to open a third lane four days a week was supported by the Bay Area Council, the North Bay Leadership Council, the San Rafael Chamber of Commerce, Kaiser Permanente, MarinHealth, BioMarin, Marin Sanitary Service, the Marin County Office of Education and the Marin Association of Public Employees.

“The commuters traveling on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge don’t have remote work options, and they don’t have transit options,” said Joanne Webster, chief executive officer of the North Bay Leadership Council. “These are commuters that typically work in the service sector. They’re construction, manufacturing, hospitality and health care workers. These sometimes unpredictable commute times can make employees late to work.”

Mark Shotwell, chief executive officer of Ritter Center in San Rafael, said, “The overwhelming majority of our staff live in the East Bay and have to travel across the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge every day. The commutes on the bridge can range from 45 minutes on a good day to 90 minutes or two hours or longer when there’s an accident on the bridge.”

Max Perrey, director of policy for Aliados Health, a network of community health centers, said Marin Community Clinics has about 160 employees — 29% of its workforce — who live in the East Bay and commute over the bridge.

“Any additional time it takes to cross the bridge during commute hours has a real impact on those employees’ lives,” Perrey said. “This in turn has a real effect on the health center’s ability to attract and retain a diverse workforce and to ensure continued access to care for patients.”

Smith, however, said the proposal was opposed by the Marin County Bicycle Coalition, Bike East Bay, Save the Bay, the San Francisco chapter of the Sierra Club and other nonprofit organizations.

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