United States              Air and Radiation          EPA420-F-97-032
                   Environmental Protection                          December 1997
                   Agency

                   Office of Mobile Sources
&EPA        Environmental
                   Fact Sheet
                   Bicycle and Pedestrian Programs
                   As a Transportation Control Measure
                   The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is working with
                   governmental and non-governmental groups that share the objective of
                   promoting bicycling and pedestrian programs as environmentally
                   sound, viable transportation options.
                   Significance
                   "When I see an adult on a bicycle I do not despair for the future of the
                   Human Race."
                    - H.G. Wells

                   Bicycling and walking are underutilized modes of transportation that
                   offer the potential for significant reductions in transportation emissions
                   while also reducing traffic congestion and demand on petroleum. Addi-
                   tional benefits of using these options include making neighborhoods
                   safer and more friendly as well as reducing other environmental impacts
                   of motorized transportation, such as solid and hazardous waste produc-
                   tion, water pollution, greenhouse gases, noise, and the destruction of
                   open space, wetlands, and other habitats.

                   Since the Federal Highway Administration estimates that 60 percent of
                   all automobile trips are under five miles in length (Transportation Air
                   Quality Selected Facts and Figures; USDOT FHWA, 1996), it appears
                   that the public misses a great many opportunities in which bicycling and
                   walking could be substituted for driving. Several governmental and
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public interest groups are now participating   • Provide outreach to the general public
in an initiative to encourage the public to       and other government agencies concern-
choose bicycling and walking more often.      ing safely increasing bicycling and
                                           walking usage levels.
Initiative Design

EPA is working as part of the Interagency
Task Force on Bicycling and Walking to
support the goals of the National Bicycling
and Walking Study. The study's goals are
to double the current percentages of total
trips made by bicycling and walking while
reducing by ten percent the number of
bicyclists and pedestrians killed or injured
in traffic crashes. (Recent motor vehicle-
related bicycle and pedestrian fatalities
have averaged roughly 7000 per year.) The
task force includes representatives from
government agencies and advocacy groups.
Partners
• U.S. Environmental Protection Agency -
  Office of Mobile Sources

• U.S. Department of Transportation -
  Federal Highway Administration

• Bicycle Federation of America

• League of American Bicyclists


Implementation Plan
• Provide technical guidance in the inter-
  pretation of national transportation
  legislation.

• Include consideration for integration of
  bicycling and pedestrian needs in EPA
  programs and policies.
• Serve as a positive national presence and
  role model.


For Further Information

For more information on this program,
please contact:

  Pat Childers
  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  Office of Mobile Sources (6401J)
  401 M Street SW
  Washington, DC 20460
  (202) 260-7744
  E-mail: childers.pat@epa.gov

  John Fegan
  U.S. Department of Transportation
  Federal Highway Administration
  (202) 366-0150

  Bill Wilkerson
  Bicycle Federation of America
  (202) 463-8405

  Heather Andersen
  League of American Bicyclists
  (202) 822-1333

Additional documents on transportation
and air quality are available electronically
from the EPA Internet server at:

  http://www.epa.gov/oms/traq

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