What is San Luis Obispo doing to its streets?

March 22, 2023
T. Keith Gurnee

T. Keith Gurnee

Opinion by T. Keith Gurnee

In recent years, the City of San Luis Obispo has spent millions of dollars reconfiguring many of its streets to accommodate protected bike lanes. In the process, the city is essentially “tagging” its streets with garish and unsightly “road graffiti” that is impairing the functionality of our circulation system while diminishing the livability of our neighborhoods.

Driven by the all-powerful bike lobby that dominates the Alternative Transportation Commission, the city has been making a joke of its streets. With their exclusive bike lanes and the veritable pantheon of visual clutter that adorns them, it’s a bad joke at that.

With swaths of bright green paint bounded by bright white lines, these bike lanes beg the question: has the city cornered the market on green paint? Throw in some bristling, shiny white plastic pylons and black and white striped lumps bolted to the street, the city has been transforming its roadways into an embarrassing mess that is an insult to our senses.

How are these so-called “improvements” negatively affecting the safety and convenience of our road network? For example, take the following:

1. Installing protected bike lanes along downtown Higuera and Marsh streets required reducing the number of travel lanes from three to two lanes, thereby constraining the loading zones for truck deliveries. On Higuera Street, delivery trucks often park in one of the remaining travel lanes to load and unload, requiring cars to use only the leftmost lane to get by.

When that loading and unloading takes place, it has essentially turned Higuera Street into a congested one lane road. For cars trying to park on the left side of Higuera creates further congestion and passengers can’t open and exit their right-side doors in the face of oncoming traffic.

2. The new tortured entrance to the post office on Madonna Road won’t allow left turns out onto Madonna Road. Instead, cars must turn to the right out of the post office, drive to a traffic circle a quarter-mile away, and then drive back to make a left turn on Madonna Road. Crazy!

3. Then there’s a bike path in the sidewalk along the north side of Madonna Rd. that puts bikes and pedestrians in conflict with each other. Isn’t riding bikes on a sidewalk illegal?

4. And then there’s the “lovely” entrance to Costco with its painted raised concrete islands which force abnormally wide turning movements into and out of the complex.

5. As for those bike lanes protected by concrete curbs, they’ll probably eventually require special equipment to sweep the lanes free of debris. As of now, they will have to be swept by hand, placing another burden on the city’s maintenance personnel.

What’s inexplicable is the outrageous expenditure of taxpayer’s funds to accommodate the surprisingly few cyclists who actually use these pricey facilities. Yet the city is so proud of itself that it’s sponsoring a celebration of the Higuera/Marsh mess sometime next month. Go figure.

But more has yet to come. The Alternative Transportation Commission has plans to ram exclusive bike paths to wipe out on street parking in a number of San Luis Obispo’s residential neighborhoods. The first one of these is the so-called North Chorro Street Greenway through the historic Anholm tract.

On March 7, our City Council approved $6.3 million – nearly six times the original budget for the project – to build an utterly unnecessary set of exclusive bikeways along the inherently and historically safe Chorro and Broad Street corridors that will eliminate over 90 heavily used on- street parking spaces in the neighborhood. Where will those cars park when this is done?

When this idea came up back in 2016, 74% of the neighborhood overwhelmingly opposed it. Vice Mayor Jan Marx was the only council member who supported the neighborhood. The other four were giddy in approving it.

Part II of this piece will examine the absurdity of this project which amounts to little more than a city sponsored act of vandalism against a peaceful neighborhood.

After all, neighborhoods used to matter in San Luis Obispo. Previous City Councils respected our neighborhoods, but this one doesn’t. Driven by a selfish, single-minded, and powerful special interest group of ideologues determined to impose their will upon the residents of a peaceful neighborhood, this City Council has bought into this zany and fiscally irresponsible idea lock, stock, and barrel.

If this can happen to the Anholm neighborhood, your neighborhood could be next.

T. Keith Gurnee is a former San Luis Obispo councilman who has been involved in local politics for more than 40 years.


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Don’t listen to the “Hospital Guy”, we ARE Listening! And obvious by previous SLO Votes, looks like most just go with the same-ole, same-ole..afraid of change?

And now you know why its such a mess! I for one appreciate and Respect your Common Sense!

I have Never Ever even seen a bike at the Costco intersection. And I avoid the insanity at the SLO post office at all costs!

There is a saying in Manufacturing that coincides with what is going on in SLO….”Engineer, Engineer why’s your brain so out of gear?”

I get it, wanna-be Bike City. I get the Bikers need to be safe too! And I agree there should be cohesive, safe bike lanes. But didn’t SLO also want to protect the enviro, by forbidding drive-thru businesses, right? Then why would they create such a cluster on Marsh? forcing cars to participate in traffic jams? Doesn’t make sense. And now with the changes in the Anholm track..won’t those cars be driving around more, looking for parking? And the mess at the Post office? now the cars have to drive further just to get out of the mess to head in the direction they need to go?

hmmm how counter-productive.


My family USED to love going to SLO and shopping until they put in the stupid parking meters and bike lanes. We haven’t spent a single dime there for a long time and most wont ever shop there again. How do the merchants like what the City Council has done to their city?


In Santa Margarita we have a wild pig problem, they are less problematic than those skinny people in SLO or is it SLO just wants skinny people?


You ran an entire mayoral campaign on this one issue and lost by 70% of the vote. No one is listening. Your opinion doesn’t matter.


That is correct, and now we have tyranny of the majority.


Run the hipsters out of city government!


I can’t believe people down vote you for being honest.


I miss the old SLOtown. Back in the days when common sense and not political activism nor money reigned supreme.

The only time I come near SLO is driving thru on the 101. I am happy however to have grown up there in the 70’s thru late 80’s.

A much simpler time.


More people, more cars and the same roads isn’t a solution, it’s a recipe for more road rage and more injuries. Safer bike ways means more people will be more comfortable using bikes. Better bike visibility means more bikes and then the people who cannot use a bike will have more road to themselves.


Seems really sensible. Stay in your car if you want, just allow bikes to be a safe alternative.


I don’t agree with you much, but on this, I do. Watching the T1 firetruck, EMS services, delivery trucks, and vans downtown is cringe-worthy. Further, watching my sons speed along riding their bikes in the drainage gutter to and from school as it’s the new bike line makes no sense. Working downtown and watching Higuera out my window is a folly of near misses as driver open their doors into traffic.


Dalidio and its post office make no sense. Anyone that would like to turn into the western portion of the Madonna Shopping Center from the Laguna side must drive down to the 101, to a new round-a-bout, turn around, and double back, to turn right… where you began. If I drop mail off at the post office, yet live in the adjacent neighborhood, I have to circle back to the 101 to turn around or, go through the new neighborhood all the way down to LOVR, an almost 3-mile diversion.


The bike crazies reign supreme. Neighborhood residents get the shaft. Nice welcoming city we live in.


“… the all-powerful bike lobby”

LMAO, absolute mush-brained idiocy.


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