Saturday, June 23, 2007

New Section of Trolley Line Trail Open!

The newest section of the Trolley Line Trail is now officially open. This new section starts at



Rabbit Hill Road, near Cranbury Road, and follows the PSE&G power lines into Community Park. The paved macadam path crosses Bear Brook, by way of a beautiful single span bridge, offering great views of the brook and Grovers Mill Pond in the distance. The path was surfaced on Thursday, but was already being used a lot by local pedestrians and cyclists.



Please be careful where the trail comes out on Rabbit Hill Road. The road is not yet striped to warn motorists about cyclists and pedestrians, and cars tend to speed on this section of the road. There is not much of a shoulder where the path comes out on the road, but further down the road there is a decent shoulder which is slated to be converted to bikelanes in 2007-2008. There is a sidewalk, but it is not yet connected to the path. Please be careful, but enjoy!






Sunday, June 17, 2007

Bike Drive a Success

We had blue skies and perfect weather for our third bike drive for Pedals for Progress and in 3 hours we collected 73 bicycles and more than $800 in donations yesterday morning at the West Windsor Community Farmers' Market, on Vaughn Drive off Alexander Road in the parking lot of the Princeton Junction Train Station. We received bikes in all shapes and sizes, and they will be shipped to a ‘second life’ in Jamaica, where P4P partner agencies will distribute the bikes at low cost to poor working adults. The bikes provide reliable transportation for the recipients, who use them for commuting to school and work, taking produce to market, or accessing heath care and other services.

Thanks to our 21 volunteers, including West Windsor Bicycle and Pedestrian Alliance trustees and members, our student advisory board members and other youth volunteers from our community. Thanks to the WW Farmers' Market board, especially Mireille Delman and Beth Feehan, for working with us and providing a convenient space for us and hosting the drive. And thanks to everyone who donated bicycles and a cash donation (towards shipment cost) to help out this worthy cause.

We also signed up 12 new members to the WWBPA, sold our new bike/ped maps, and a few t-shirts too. More photos:

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Pedals for Progress Bike Drive Saturday June 16

Anyone with an adult or child's bicycle in repairable condition is urged to donate his or her bike to Pedals for Progress for this worthy cause. Bikes can be dropped off from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, Saturday June 16, RAIN OR SHINE, at the West Windsor Community Farmers' Market, on Vaughn Drive off Alexander Road in the parking lot of the Princeton Junction Train Station.

Every year, affluent Americans buy 22 million new bicycles and discard millions of old ones, abandoning many more unused in basements, sheds, and garages; most end-up in our already overburdened landfills. Meanwhile, less fortunate people overseas need cheap, non-polluting transportation to access health care, jobs, markets, and schools.

Pedals for Progress, a New Jersey-based nonprofit, collects over 11,000 bicycles annually and has shipped more than 95,000 bicycles to developing countries in Latin American, Africa, and the Pacific Islands. Partner agencies in these countries train community members to recondition the bikes and distribute them at low cost to poor working adults. The bikes provide reliable transportation for the recipients, who use them for commuting to school and work, taking produce to market, or accessing heath care and other services.

Pedals for Progress cannot accept “bikes for parts” or disassembled bikes. It costs $28 to collect, process, ship, rebuild and distribute each bicycle. A donation toward shipping costs is necessary (suggested minimum $10 per bike). All cash and material donations are fully tax deductible and a receipt will be available at the collection site. PfP also accepts working portable sewing machines.

The drive is sponsored by the West Windsor Bicycle and Pedestrian Alliance. Members and volunteers will help donors unload their bicycles and prepare them for shipping. We collected 105 bicycles (and one portable sewing machine too) along with $1,082 to fund shipment to their destination in Guatemala in 2006. The year before, at this location 130 bicycles were collected and were shipped to a "second life" in Uganda.

Thanks in advance for your support of this good cause!

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Saturday, June 02, 2007

Life in the Fast Lane

Here's to our neighbors in Trenton, in the Mill Hill Section, on their creative idea to "bring home" to the road to emphasize their desire for traffic calming in their neighborhood. Last week they set up a "living room" on the street, complete with a with a sofa, coffee table, bookcase and a running television. Not so average was the location -- on Market Street, between Jackson and Mercer streets, in the Mill Hill neighborhood where, according to residents, motorists habitually speed and run red traffic lights. The "living room" was the most recent and probably more dramatic effort by the Old Mill Hill Society to call attention to the traffic violations they say put neighborhood residents at risk every day. Residents hanging out in the "living room" yesterday passed out flyers to motorists stopped at the light asking them to, "slow down and stop at the red lights, please." A few honked their horns in support."
Read the complete article online.