Originally published Thursday, May 12, 2011 at 8:12 PM
Comments
(0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Cascade Bicycle Club leader quits for $95,000 job with Seattle mayor
David Hiller, advocacy director for Cascade Bicycle Club, announced his resignation Thursday on the club's website. He is taking a $95,000-a-year job with Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn.
Seattle Times transportation reporter
![]()
David Hiller, the bright, sometimes confrontational advocacy director for Cascade Bicycle Club, is resigning his post to take a $95,000-a-year job with Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn.
"It's been eight years of being on the front lines. I've had to take a lot of abuse. Other times, it's just hard work," Hiller told The Times.
Hiller will start in his new job May 18, and will work for both the Seattle Department of Transportation and the Mayor's Office organizing community events and working on general transportation issues, according to McGinn spokesman Aaron Pickus.
"He has a really long history of working on transportation issues, complete streets and general mobility," Pickus said.
The city policy called "complete streets" calls for designing nearly all road-construction projects for bicycles and pedestrians as well as for vehicles.
Hiller will fill one of two vacant positions in the mayor's office, said Pickus, who also noted that the mayor's staff is taking budget cuts next year along with other city departments.
Hiller started work for Cascade in 2003, and previously was with the Connecticut Bicycle Coalition.
He ranked behind only McGinn as a lightning rod for people who resent bicycle activism. But in recent months, Hiller has taken a lower profile, lobbying in Olympia for bike and pedestrian issues.
He said he hopes to volunteer with Cascade and give advice. "Maybe I'll even ride the STP one day," he said on the club blog. Normally, Hiller sets up the Seattle starting area and works in a support vehicle during the annual July ride to Portland.
The club has more than 13,000 members and wields some clout in local politics.
He and other Cascade members worked alongside Seattle officials who produced the 2007 Bicycle Master Plan, which called for 19 new miles of trails, 118 miles of bike lanes, overpasses, bike parking and signs.
At one point, when the city seemed to backpedal on plans for bike lanes on Stone Way North, he warned that then-Mayor Greg Nickels would seem hypocritical and in "the dark ages of traffic engineering," unless the city followed through, which it did. He also has advocated for the proposed "missing link" trail in Ballard, where bicyclists say they run a dangerous gantlet, and local industries object to mixing trails with trucks.
This year, a state "vulnerable user" bill, SB 5326, passed the Legislature to toughen penalties for motorists who negligently kill bicyclists or pedestrians.
That win made it easier to leave his position now, Hiller said.
Mike Lindblom: 206-515-5631 or mlindblom@seattletimes.com

- Madrona dad killed by a bullet as he drove through Central Area
- Matt Flynn has good day in Seahawks' 3-way QB competition
- Why dealing for Kellen Winslow makes sense for Seahawks | Steve Kelley
- Facebook messages trigger melee at Whitman Middle School
- Komen controversy hurting Race for the Cure
- Ex-boyfriend sought in death of Renton girl, 17
- Driver fatally shot in Central Area
- Brandon League looks out of his own for Mariners
- Opponents of gay-marriage law get unexpected aid: from Muslims
- Juror alternates' actions have court on red alert
- Opponents of gay-marriage law say they have enough signatures
871 - Mariners look to get back on winning track against Angels
475 - Madrona dad killed by stray bullet as he drove through Central Area
332 - Komen controversy hurting Race for the Cure
221 - Typical CEO made $9.6M last year, AP study finds
153 - Fact check: Ad exaggerates Obama's debt
96 - Seattle police twice face hostile crowds at scenes of violence crime
80 - The Seattle area's scandalous lack of adequate transit capacity
69 - May questions, volume seven
50 - Brandon League looks out of his own for Mariners
47
- Madrona dad killed by a bullet as he drove through Central Area
- Driver fatally shot in Central Area
- Facebook messages trigger melee at Whitman Middle School
- Downtown building fetches $55M, thanks to Amazon effect
- Opponents of gay-marriage law get unexpected aid: from Muslims
- Get a sitter — please — for these 10 great date-night restaurants | All You Can Eat
- Komen controversy hurting Race for the Cure
- Rescued teen tells author how story helped him survive
- Sounders FC salaries released for 2012 season | Sounders FC Blog
- 520 bridge builders pledge to look into beer drinking



The bigger story is that the guy is going to work for Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn on... (May 12, 2011, by Steve M)
Read more




