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Originally published August 23, 2010 at 5:37 PM | Page modified August 24, 2010 at 5:44 AM

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Bicycles banned in Colorado town

The quaint old mining town of Black Hawk, Colo., took an unprecedented step for a mountain community here: It banned bicycles from its main streets.

Los Angeles Times

BLACK HAWK, Colo. — At first glance, this quaint old mining town looks like many others that dot the hills and canyons of this mountainous state.

There are old brick storefronts, quaint Victorian homes on the hillsides and winding, narrow lanes corkscrewing up to the sky. But instead of Lycra-clad fun-seekers and shabby-chic shops, Black Hawk is filled with tour buses and casinos.

And this summer, the town took an unprecedented step for a mountain community here: It banned bicycles from its main streets.

It's the Colorado equivalent of outlawing motherhood and apple pie. The sports-crazy state's influential cycling organizations are horrified and vow to challenge the city ordinance both in court and in the Legislature. But Black Hawk, population less than 100, isn't backing down.

"It's an important issue to us, and we believe that Black Hawk should have the right to control its streets," said City Manager Mike Copp.

The problem: The roads were built for horses and buggies more than 100 years ago. Now they hold an armada of tour buses on the weekends.

The Legislature, at the prodding of cycling groups, passed a law in 2009 requiring that motorists give bikes 3 feet of space if passing. That would force traffic in parts of Black Hawk to veer into the wrong side of the road, Copp said.

Or, countered Dan Grunig, executive director of Bicycle Colorado, motorists could do what they are required to do on other narrow thoroughfares — treat bicycles as any other type of vehicle and simply wait behind them.

Part of the reason for the furor is that this speck of a town sits in the middle of one of the main bike touring routes through the Rockies.

The town's twisting main artery, Gregory Street, links Interstate 70 — the central east-west route through Colorado — with the scenic Peak-to-Peak Highway, which meanders north through aspen glades and glacial peaks before ending outside Rocky Mountain National Park, where riders can pick up roads back to Denver.

"It's a pretty wonderful street to bike on," Grunig said of Gregory Street. "A lot of communities would kill to have a street like that."

The only alternative route in Black Hawk is to either ride a gravel road or a 46-mile paved detour over the Continental Divide.

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Black Hawk's Board of Aldermen approved the bike ban last year and it took effect in January, but police didn't begin to hand out tickets until June, when cyclists started their seasonal rides through town.

Jamie Webb was the first rider to get cited. She didn't notice the signs along Gregory with the image of a bicycle and a red slash through it, and figured she was being pulled over for speeding. Instead, Webb got a $68 ticket.

"I just don't see why they would do a thing like this," Webb said. "It's such a wonderful route."

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