Sunday, May 22, 2011

Hybrid Power

Since moving to Ferndale, I'm commuting about sixteen miles round-trip, four days a week, to my barista job, about the same distance I was riding to the full-time job I was laid off from last September.  I'm riding in the opposite direction now, heading toward Bellingham in the morning, and returning northbound in the afternoon.  I've had headwinds in the morning this week, but riding home after work has been a breeze.  On weekdays I can cheat a little and load my bike on a commuter bus on the way home, but on Saturday and Sunday bus service to Ferndale is too limited, so I have no back-up mode of transport.  Some service cuts are due to be restored in June, but I'm not sure yet what difference that will make on the weekend.

Meanwhile, I still rely on my trusty old hybrid bike.


The ride is more rural and woodsy now, but near my new job there's an interesting new feature in the landscape.  Alpha Engineers has installed a hybrid wind and solar power generator on Airport Way.
According to the company web- site, the station is used to charge electric vehicles.  It was completed in the spring of 2010.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Bike to Work & School Day

This Friday is Bike to Work & School Day.  Earlier this winter I volunteered to help out, but when my landlord troubles progressed from mean notes from the managers to legal notices, I decided to concentrate on my own issues.

When my landlady first began complaining about my bike, I tried some creative problem-solving.  I contacted some housing assistance offices and people connected with cycling advocacy groups or bike clubs, proposing some sort of bicycle-friendly co-op housing.  The response at the time was resounding silence, though eventually I did get in to my new place on the recommendation of a friend who is active in bike and pedestrian advocacy and transportation planning.

I know that clubs or advocacy groups can't be all-purpose support groups, but I've come to feel that events like Bike to Work & School Day are really just pep rallies, and I don't want to proselytize unless I'm able to offer some real support to anyone I might convert.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Poverty Sucks

I'm in a new apartment now, but posting from the public library because my internet service isn't up yet.

On Thursday, April 7 I returned home from work to find the locks changed and a sheriff's notice on my apartment door.  My landlord let me back in long enough to capture my cat and grab a few other personal things.  I left that night with a change of clothes and some toiletries, some personal papers, my bicycle, and my cat in a front-loading baby-carrier-type pack.  I took a sleeping bag, too, in fear that I would end up sleeping in a park, but in the end I resorted to the conventional middle-American solution:  the magic of plastic.  I left my bike locked up outside the public swimming pool and walked a mile or so to a hotel.  (A good choice, too, because there was frost over night and when I returned for my bike the next morning, there was ice on the saddle.)

Now I'm a little disgusted with myself, feeling I've managed to trivialize homelessness.  I spent three weeks holed up in motels, running up an ugly tab on my REI VISA card (but earning rewards points and dividends).  After a few days, I began to feel the best answer to any problem was to go back to my room and hide under the bed covers with my cat.

I did develop more sympathy for the young women and men with small children I see at the transit center, trying to get around town on the bus, with babies and all their gear.  My cat was unhappy and traumatized, but at least I knew he was safe and comfortable, not starving and shivering in the woods.  I didn't have to carry him around with me all the time, in all weather, knowing it's a rotten kind of life for him, fearing I'm not competent to care for him or myself, trying not to take it out on him.

The worst part of the experience was the months of legal wrangling with my landlord.  Every time I found another note or legal paper taped on my door, or received another lawyer's letter in the mail, my stomach would begin to burn and knot up, and I could barely choke down food - I lost five pounds easily for every notice I received.  I dreaded opening my door in the morning, or returning home to find another paper on the door.  And once I was out of my apartment and lost access to my computer and most of my papers, my ability to defend myself and prepare a case fell apart.

It still seems so unbelievably stupid and unnecessary.  All along I've tried to second-guess my landlord's motives - maybe they thought I'm a lesbian, or a drug-dealing prostitute, or maybe they just thought I was getting too uppity and needed to be put in my place.  Or maybe they didn't want it to work out this way, either, they just weren't too smart.

I was balanced on the edge of real poverty and homelessness, walking around the real thing.  But I keep thinking of the lesson of the concentration camps - that the altruistic, compassionate, self-sacrificing people are not the survivors.  How can I live like a decent human being?