Lisa Caruso, writing in the National Journal Transportation Blog asks the above question relative to Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood's pronouncements two weeks ago at the National Bike Summit.  Writes Caruso: 
" With all the attention last week focused on extending the surface  transportation law and Federal Aviation Administration programs, Transportation  Secretary Ray LaHood's announcement of a major policy change regarding the way  bicyclists' needs are treated in the transportation planning seems to have  received little notice. 
"People across America who value bicycling should have a voice when it comes  to transportation planning," LaHood wrote on his Fast Lane blog March 15. "This is the  end of favoring motorized transportation at the expense of  non-motorized. We are integrating the needs of bicyclists in federally-funded  road projects." LaHood's blog post includes recommendations for how states and  communities can accomplish this, such as "treat walking and bicycling as equals  with other transportation modes" and "set a mode share target for walking and  bicycling."
LaHood called the new policy a "sea change," but is it a good one? Should  non-motorized modes of transportation be treated as equal to other modes,  particularly when modes like driving and mass transit are at least partially, if  not primarily, self-funded? Or is it the essence of DOT's evolving 21st-century  mission to give people more mobility options that, according to LaHood, are  relatively fast and inexpensive to build, are environmentally sustainable,  reduce travel costs, improve safety and public health, and "reconnect citizens  with their communities"?"
Read the article and comments that follow here.
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