Cascade Bicycle Club

The Cascade Bicycle Club is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) community organization based in Seattle, Washington in the United States. It is the largest statewide bicycling nonprofit in the United States with more than 17,000 members. It is run by a volunteer board of directors, 36 professional staff and more than 1,000 volunteers.[1]

Cascade Bicycle Club
Formation1970 (1970)
TypeNGO
Legal status501(c)(3)
PurposeBicycling recreation, education and advocacy
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington
Location
  • 7787 62nd Ave. NE, Seattle WA
Coordinates47°41'17.3"N 122°15'53.4"W
Region served
Washington state
Membership
17,000
Executive Director
Richard Smith
Staff
36
Volunteers
1,000
Websitewww.cascade.org
Commuter outreach booth
Helmet promotion event
The Cascade Bicycle Club training series

Major events

Cascade hosts several major riding events every year including Chilly Hilly, Seattle Bike-n-Brews, Ride for Major Taylor, Flying Wheels Summer Century, Woodinville Wine Ride, Seattle Night Ride, the Red-Bell 100, Seattle to Portland (STP), Ride from Seattle to Vancouver and Party (RSVP), Ride Around Washington (RAW), High Pass Challenge (HPC), and Kitsap Color Classic (KCC).

Cascade also organizes off-bike events including a Presentation & Film Series and the annual Bike Swap.

Rides and tours

Cascade volunteer ride leaders lead more than 2,000 free group rides a year. The club also leads regional tours. Cascade rides are open to anyone wearing a helmet.

Advocacy

In addition to producing material for the public on bicycling the Cascade Bicycle Club lobbies local government on behalf of people who ride bikes. Advocacy staff produced a paper titled "Left by the Side of the Road" asserting the shortfall of safe, effective bicycle routes in the region.

From 2009-2011 the club successfully lobbied for a law to increase penalties for negligent drivers who injured or killed vulnerable users of the road, including bicyclists and pedestrians. [2] The club found that under state law, drivers were fined as low as $42. A version of the Vulnerable User Bill passed in 2011 with wide bipartisan support. The bill increased mandatory fines, but allowed the fines to be reduced by a judge, who could proscribe driver safety education and community service.

The Cascade Bicycle lobbies have petitioned for extending and building trails along the Burke-Gilman Trail through the industrial waterfront of Ballard. After local businesses obstructed progress of the project, the club joined the City of Seattle in a lawsuit to move trail construction forward.[3][4]

gollark: I'm sure it would be possible with facial recognition and some massive privacy violations.
gollark: So maybe the i5-11600K.
gollark: You will need a GPU of some sort, to update the BIOS settings and whatever.
gollark: It uses the Linux kernel and accursed userspace.
gollark: You also can't get linear performance scaling from more transistors.

References

  1. http://cascade.org/About/membership.cfm - retrieved 17 Jan, 2008
  2. "SB 5326 - 2011-12". Washington State Legislature app.leg.wa.gov. Retrieved 2019-02-05.
  3. Emily Heffter. "Politics, friction reshape influential Cascade Bicycle Club". Seattle Times. Archived from the original on 2011-01-04.
  4. Bob Young. "A turf war over the Burke-Gilman Trail's missing link becomes a standoff". Seattle Times. Archived from the original on 2010-09-14.
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