By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News staff

As principal planners for the Rhode Island Division of Statewide Planning, Lindsey Langenburg and Drew Pflaumer spent nearly a year and a half working on the state’s Bicycle Mobility Plan. Some seven months into their work, however, they said they knew their efforts were in trouble, after a longtime Division of Statewide Planning staffer told them they work for the executive branch, not the public.

Pflaumer said state “logic” behind its unwillingness to do projects — such as putting bicycle lanes on the new Pine Street Bridge in Pawtucket — stems from concerns that they don’t connect to anything else, at least not immediately.

“If that’s the reasoning behind every single project, then you’ll never have any things to connect to,” he said, noting that transportation work is never going to be done all at once.

The Bicycle Mobility Plan “seeks to safely and efficiently connect people and places so that bicycling in the Ocean State becomes safe and fun for all ages.”

The 113-page draft document lists eight goals: connect and expand the state’s bicycling network; integrate bicycling with transit and other modes of transportation; develop stronger statewide bicycling policies; promote equity in bicycle planning and funding; increase bicycle safety with policies and programs; leverage bicycling to promote economic development; improve public health through bicycling; and promote bicycle transportation for Rhode Island employees.

The bike plan is expected to be voted on by the State Planning Council this fall.

Neither Langenburg nor Pflaumer believe bicycling in Rhode Island is a safe option.

“Before I moved here, I was a daily bike commuter in Brooklyn,” said Langenburg, a Michigan native who worked as an urban designer for the New York City Department of Transportation for more than a year. “In Brooklyn I got hit by a car and rode my bike to work the next week. I’m willing to bike there after getting hit by a car. I’m not willing to bike in Rhode Island. There are plenty of people that move here or have been here who would be happy to bike if it felt like a safe option.”

The bike plan, at least to those in charge of writing it, was about a connected transportation network. Pflaumer said those behind the plan were “really excited about a transportation focus rather than a fun thing to ride your bike on on the weekends in the woods.”

“As it turns out, if you want people to ride a bike for transportation you have to make it go from where people live to where they need to go … like schools and grocery stores. I was a bike commuter here for little over a year and it was miserable every day,” the Providence resident said. “Nobody would acknowledge that you could ride your bike for fun on the street and you could ride your bike to work on a bike path.”

ecoRI News spoke with the two planners Feb. 19 at a coffee shop in Pawtucket to talk about what it would take to make Rhode Island a leader in alternative modes of transportation and what such an endeavor would look like.

Neither of the former Division of Statewide Planning employees sees much hope that Rhode Island will significantly or even adequately improve bicycle and pedestrian transportation at the state level under current leadership.

“We were really pushing the idea of instead of fix it first you can fix it better,” Langenburg said. “We’re not saying let our roads and bridges crumble. We’re saying when you fix something you can fix it better. That’s an opportunity to do something different that aligns with all of our other goals as a state. I completely understand that it is very important to reach a state of good repair, but there is absolutely nothing that says we have to do a one-to-one repair.”

They said the biggest obstacle to improving transportation for those not in cars is the state’s attitude, specifically that of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT).

Just last month RIDOT requested a major amendment to Rhode Island’s 10-year Transportation Improvement Program that included a substantial funding cut, about 33 percent, to bicycle and pedestrian projects in the Transportation Alternatives Program. The request would have delayed, reduced, and eliminated nearly $28 million in funding to some three dozen alternative transportation projects statewide.

RIDOT withdrew its amendment on Feb. 22, noting that an unexpected influx of nearly $70 million in federal money allocated to Rhode Island though the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 2019 negated the request. The Transportation Advisory Committee public hearings on the RIDOT amendment scheduled for Feb. 25 and 28 have been canceled.

During the drafting of the Bicycle Mobility Plan, Langenburg and Pflaumer said RIDOT officials would often argue that this bike-lane proposal or that pedestrian project would be “impossible” to do.

Among the projects RIDOT considered “literally impossible,” according to both Langenburg and Pflaumer, would be the addition of a path for pedestrians and bicyclists on the Pell Bridge — a plan the Rhode Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority has determined to be feasible.

“It’s not impossible,” Langenburg said. “You just don’t want to do it.”

They noted that last spring a RIDOT official told them that Rhode Island spends too much money on bicycle and pedestrian projects. Less than 3 percent of Rhode Island’s transportation budget supports bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure.